Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1967)
Page 4 Summer Nebraska?! Tuesday, July 18, 1967 Midshipman Shaner Topics From Globe-Trotting rl I A y vy - I I i - ,ir ,i(aM.i..-.M....aa,.v MMiJ A Lincoln U.S. Navy Midshipman, Randolph G. Shaner, is taking part in the Midshipman's 1967 Summer At Sea Training Program here with Submarine Flotille ONE. Stationed aboard the submarine USS Caiman (SS-323), Shaner puts to practical use all he has learned Fund Drive Underway For Library of Medicine Omaha The University of Nebraska College of Medicine and its Alumni Association has announced a $350,000 fund drive to help build and equip a new Library of Medicine. Two members of the vol unteer faculty of the Med ical Center are leading the drive. Dr. Leon S. McGoogan, professor of obstetrics and gynecology, is the general chairman. Dr. George B. McMur trey, assistant professor of surgery and president of the Alumni Association, is headng the alumni portion of the drive. "We are planning a li brary that will rank with the best in the Country," Dr. McGoogan asserted. "The library is designed to serve not only faculty and students of the Medi cal Center, but to serve all practicing health personnel in the region, other colleges and universities and science-oriented industries in this and surrounding states," Dr. McGoogan add ed. Volunteer Campaign The campaign is strictly a volunteer one, Dr. Mc Googan said. No profession al fund-raising organization is involved. The Alumni As sociation is paying ex penses of the drive. Thus every dollar contributed goes unencumbered into the building and equiping fund. Members of the faculty and staff of the medical center, alumni of the col- Meat Specialist Is Appointed Dr. Roger W. Mandigo, meats specialist in the Uni versity of Nebraska De partment of Animal Sci ence, has been appointed to an advisory and develop mental committee for a Na tional 4-H Meat Science and Utilization program. This committee will pre pare plans and format for activities in Meat Science and Utilization and develop plans for writing, illustrat ing and publishing litera ture for the National 4-H program. Committee members will be assisted by special con sultants from industry and a Federal Extension Ser vice advisory group. In addition the American Meat Science Association, the National Livestock and Meat Board, the American Meat Institute and the Na tional 4-H Service Commit tee may help develop the program. Ccpitol City Msbils Htm Ssles H Mlqvcrt srs far Great bakes. Vim Dykt, Name mobH Ihhms. UaJ bank financing, deliver throughowt Nebr. 432-0736 2703 West O lege throughout the country and all physicians in the state are being asked to contribute. The faculty portion of the drive, headed by Dr. John R. Jones, is already under way. To date, contributions from fulltime and part time faculty total some $25,000. Dr. Fay Smith, professor of general practice, is in charge of the area meet ings. The existing medical li brary occupies a converted patient ward in University Hospital to which was as signed "temporarily" some 40 years ago. There are at present no individual study areas. The collection is scattered in sub-basements throughout the campus and shelf space is virtually non existent. Despite unsuitable and cramped space for its stor age and display, the li brary's collection has been , NU Coed Wins Trip An essay on "Why I would like to be a Young Ambassador" has won for a University of Nebraska sen ior a six week all expense paid trip to Europe this summer. Miss Jeri Adam of Lin coln was one of 90 win ners selected from over forty thousand entries sub mitted. The winners will travel by bicycle through Europe and will stay in hostels, which are inexpensive over night accommodations lo cated in scenic, cultural or historic areas. A hostel may be in a castle or a villa, or a specially built facility, with supervising bouseparents and local sponsorship. Hosteling groups will con sist of IS members, and are Jed by trained, experi enced adults. The group members will work for a common goal by shopping, cooking and charting the route together; they will come face-to-face with peo ple and new cultures by traveling off the beaten track as well as in major cities. "The Young Ambassa dors" left New York City for Europe on July 14 and will return borne on Au gust 27. "" MM mremmBmimmmBmm i 1 1 Tt-i r-Ttr ' y t-iiirim ir i mi nun nml Hi ii II" li if r i tt 'in tlis closest thing to home . . . I,!cDonE!tTs 5305'0' St " f" if fJiC ; v' !?. .At " ftf- y J; Lii ' . V " y ;! tm i ' s ' " " ' ' ill ' ? hi, in the classroom at the University of Nebraska and performs all the duties required of a junior officer. On the left Shaner works his way through the confining interior of the submarine. He relays a message (right) to the forward torpedo room while standing a watch. described as the rween Chicago best and be- the est Coast. The collection has grown to some 138 thousand vol umes and is one of the most extensively used in the nation. Official Library The library serves as the official library of the Ne braska State Medical As sociation and is an impor tant resource for two other medical schools in the re gion. The proposed library will contain three or four floors, depending on the availabil ity of funds. Three floors would contain space for 283,000 volumes. The library will offer flexible study areas, lounges and a sophisticated electronic system informa tion storage, retrieval and dissemination. t The estimated cost for three stories of the library building is $2,400,000. Dean Cecil L. Wittson of the College of Medicine said an application for fed eral matching funds has received preliminary ap proval. State funds were includ ed in the capital improve ments budget of the Col lege of Medicine with the understanding that part of the matching funds would be raised from other sources. Thus the fund drive was launched, with a goal of $350,000. When funded, the library will be eligible for designa tion as one of the seven proposed regional medical libraries in the country, Dr. Wittson said. "It is fitting to me that we make this effort to build a great medical li brary in tliis, Nebraska's Centennial year," Dr. Mc Googan said. Movie Time Schedule AH p.m. times Cooper Lincoln: 'The Sound of Music,' 2 and s. Nebraska: Hurry Sundown,' 1. !:S0, :40, sad 1:20. State: 'Snow White,' 1. S:M, J: Is, 7:27, and :36. Stuart: 'The Wrty Dozen,' 1, 2:50, 8:40, and :20. Varsity: Ton Only Live Twice,' t 3:66, i:12. 7:08, and :22. tith and O: Cartoons: i:S5; God'i LitUe Acre, t:i; 'The f Busy tway. u:ii. 865 No. 27th St lllllllllllllllllllllllillllllinillllll!IIIHIiailllllllll!f I Only I I One I Bond I There have been a lot of pseudo "Bonds" filling the screen of late, but when you get right down to it there is really only one the original 007 as portrayed by the ini mitable Sean Connery. In "You Only Live Twice," currently at the Varsity Theatre, Connery is his customary dashing, daring, never-say-die self. Here, he is faced with in surmountable odds which he surmounts with ease and aplomb in his super-masculine style. His opponent SPECTRE sets out to realize its un ceasing plot to rule the world by attempting to en tingle the United States and Russia in a holocaust in which they would wipe each other off the earth. They almost succeed before Bond comes to the inevitable res cue. Sean Connery puts on a new face, masters the art of judo and karate, utilizes Bond-fashion gimmicks and still finds time for geishas and sake in this Japanese style picture. Bond proves two lives are almost not enough to con tain all the thrill-packed action he pours into them in "You Only Live Twice." Dr. Meierlienry Will Attend Meet Dr. Wesley C. Meipr benry, assistant dean of the University of Nebraska Teachers College, was one of a group of 13 specialists taking part in a national conference on manpower problems of libraries, spon sored by the American Li brary Association in San Francisco, June 27 to 30. Dr. Meierhenry is a nation al authority in the use of audio-visual equipment and materials. niiiiuiunuHiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHaiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiia Summer Nebraskan Editor Carta Cmnktta Bualneaa Mgr Kuwer Bova Inlnrmatiua ior pohbcattoa may be turned la to Room 2m Nebfaaka Hall or called Ml at The Sil'MMRIt NEBRASKA M publianed n i iHiatiMjr eutfina tne NEED EXTRA COPIES OF YOUR , Thesis or Term Paper?? Join the parede of students who ore having their extra copies reproduced professionally at ECC"1TS. Finest copy nwdiiiM equipment cranes!. Prosrpi awlcd whilt yaw wait! 15c for first copy, 10c far Mch additiMoI capy. 1 BOOMERS I rWnNG COMPANY UUOStrMt 432 2771 INTER NATIONAL MAGAZINE continues Its globe-trotting to report on: Syria on the eve of the Middle East crisis; the is land of Corfu, a new Ta hiti in the Mediterranean; economic revolt in Czecho slovakia; a key ring craze in France; and other time ly topics, Wednesday, July 19 at 9 p.m. THE STRUGGLE FOR PEACE, Thursday, July 20 at 7:30 p.m. focuses on techniques of managing a world crisis. Leading parti cipants in governmental de liberations at the time of two recent crises Berlin in 1961 and Cuba in 1962 discuss the step-by-step pro cess necessary to avert a new world crisis. A lighter note emerges Wednesday, July 19 at 7:30 p.m. in the National Educa tional Television presenta tion of SIBELIUS: A SYM PHONY OF FINLAND. This unique documentary produced in association with the Finnish Broadcasting Company pays a symphonic tribute to the memory of Jean Sibelius the man, the composer, and the spirit of Finland. The program is composed of four parts: "Prologue," "Fulfillment," "Reflections on the heventn Symphony, and "Epilogue." In addition, some of the people who knew Sibelius well participate between, the "movements" of the pro gram. Among these are: Eugene Crmandy of the Philadelphia Symphony Or chestra; Sir Malcolm Sar gent, British conductor; and Jussi Jalas, Sibelius' son-in-law and conductor of the Finnish Radio Symphony Orchestra. FRIDAY FESTIVAL OF THE ARTS, July 21, fea tures the "Warsaw Philhar monic" and the American Conservatory Theatre Com- ' pany's presentation of "Ofoeti." Witold Rowicki conducts the Warsaw Philharmonic at 9 p.m. in performances of Dmitri Shostakovich's "Sym phony No. 5, Opus 47," and Stanislaw Moniuszko's Pol ka irom "The Stone Guest." "Ofoeti," a "modern folk lore tale" at 10 p.m. stars John O. Tragard in the role of a small boy who is spell-bound by imaginative myths, confused by the adult world around him and sets out in search of a troll. As he searches, finds it. ana loses it again nis in decision between a make- believe world and the true world is unfolded. TODAY 12:00 SING H1-S1NG IO Mn. Kenoen puyi tin ruiur ami unKft: Aont Kimy. Mri Jne, ' and otheri. (N'.ET.) 1:M WHAT'S NEW l.m FROM THE SKELDCN CAL LER V i'OO N'.E T. iCVKSKL 1:00 LOTTE LEHMAN MASTER CLASS 4 00 MUSIC FOR YOUNG PEOPLE "A Muiicai ParnlMhip" If to- Ciy' music apprecuiUon k in ET i 4.X ANIMALS OF THE SEASHORE Repent! I:l KINO HI-SING U : THE FRIENDLY GIANT i 111 TlH. POhlN'S GIANTS In. Pous dmcribo the cupari. menu of U.fi. phyicwt Albert Miclwlwia whs uuiiM to diMW rrlMJv Is ornithine cunditif null or whMtur nitbini a IM unlvrraf (Unda OH. (N ET.) 4):M SCIENCE REfOKTER Thtt program fnmaaa VM. plant ior landing a vehicle na the mourn M I T. tnmct Report er Juha Flu reporte from the Crttmmaa Aircraft Esftneetini Corp., Bethpaga, K.Y. IN.E.T.J :M WHAT'S NEW Vwweri luv a feeMnd-the-efwiMS tmtr of the pallM International Airport, la Walking uo. D-C. IN.ET. 7 W THE BOOKSHELF Irr, Darrel E. Berf and a fneat Warren K. Urbom review Fred v Friewlive rodent book aa the teievMHoa mdnetry. "I la Cir rumtin Beyond Our Central. - T:M WHAT'S IS A WORD Bob Smith deacrtbe vm mm dreda at wortit have epnwf Iron conmaia word "a ,Hf artivttie and ctpatiOee of aua and animal; a.f. "vat I M THE FRKVCH CHEF Mre. -nuo maam n.uM j tirnlled 'adda aom Preach 1 M HOUNE AD KHOME Mm J ode Jobnaon Janet Haaa ta ehow Mmamaaare how to 'Iron Out Your Praaa tn ProMemn " (II. tt S.t t ea MKWHrN TEACHES Maetre MMiunla coadtirtt a fnaa lar rlaea on the Beetnavaa Vlo lia Connarta wua twa advanced violla etwwnti Spam AraSabU RAINBOW TRAILER COURT Halfway bttavMit Ag and City campuM. 1101 AtlatM 435 141 7 I X THE GLORY TRAIL , Thli week's program focusea on the key mle played by the rail ., . road In the development ol the , v Weal. (N.E.T.) ' 10 :W MANAGERS IN ACTION . Apl!S? dejeribes the three atepa ' , in "The Management Procesa," how the procesa works. (ETS) 10:S0 N.E.T. JOURNAL WEDNESDAY JULY II , 1:00 CHILDREN GROWING 1J:30 JAPANESE BRUSH PAINTING Mikami teachea how to draw lobsters and crabs a special crab called "Helke." which is found only in Japan. (N.E.T.) 1:00 WHAT'S NEW 1:30 MEN AND IDEAS 1:00 THE BOOKSHELF J'SSH rN W0RD 'Repeat) 3:00 THE FACE OF SWEDEN 3:30 SCIENCE REPORTER 4:00 DISCOVERY Some common crystal mrms: uarts feldspar, mica, obsidian, K&rnet and others are today 'a topic. (N.E.T.) 4:30 JAPANESE BRUSH PAINTING (Repeat) 5:00 HOUSE AND HOME (Repeat) :30 AARON COPLAND: MUSIC IN THE M' :00THE GLORY TRAIL (Repeat) :30 WHAT'S NEW Today'a film visit to Lappland follows a typical "rajd" (the moving of reindeer from win ter to summer feeding grounds ). (N.E.T.) 7:00 DR. POSIN-S GIANTS Dr. Posm describes the experi ments of German physicist Dr. Heiniich Herta who discovered electro-magnetic waves and an alysed tneir nature and speed. (N.E.T.) 7:30 SIBELIUS: A SYMPHONY FOR FINLAND This program symphonic tribute to Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. The four-part study in , cludea excerp performances of several Sibelius compositions and interviews with some musical greats who were his friends. :W INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE David Weber reports a variety of stories from abroad raneini from the deep and documenteo to the light and humorous. 10:00 MEN AND IDEAS (Repeat) THURSDAY, JULY M 12:00 SING HI-SUVG LO Mrs. Kennett tells "The Storv of Salt," from Its mining to its use. (N.E.T ) IMS THE FRIENDLY GIANT 11:30 ONCE UPON A JAPANESE TIME Mikami tells the tale of the Japaaesa lord who travels incog nito among his people to know their true feelings. (N.E.T.) 1:M WHAT'S NEW 1:3 THE GLORY TRAIL 1:00 INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE 3:00 MANAGERS IN ACTION (Re peat) 3:30 AARON COPLAND: MUSIC IN THE 20's 4:00 THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BROTHER BUZZ 4:30 ONCE UPON A JAPANESE TIME (Repeat) 3 (si SING HI-SING LO S:15 THE FRIENDLY GIANT 8:30 THE BIG PICTURE :00 WHAT'S IN A WORD (Repeat) t:30 WRArS NEW Vtlier Valle. a U-year-old Swed ish boy, dreama of adventure in the South Seas a dream about to come true. (N.E.T.) 7:00 SCIENCE REPORTER Host John Fitch visit. U.S. Army Laboratories at Natick, Maaa. to ' find out bow researchers are coping with the problem of pro- I viding food for U.S. space trav elers. (NET.) 7:30 THE STRUGGLE FOR PEACE I Leading participants in govern- ! meaiiai aeiioeratwRa at the time of the Berlin crisis in lil and the Cuban missile crisis discuss in depth the techniques of man aging a world cruris. no NEBRASKA FARM AND RANCH I 30 CONV ERSATIONS WITH ERIC HOFFER H o f f e r, philoaopher and long shoreman, discusses his views of the political and economic life of America. (N ET.) 00 CHILDREN GROWING Dr. Piers discusses the -arioya roles fathers play during the stages of a chikj'a development, and the importance of fa therm. (N.E.T.) 1:30 THE CREATIVE PERSON Cameras visit classes being taught by 7fc-year -old Nad Is Bou langer. noted ceadvetor and teacher of composition. The pro gram features interviews with two of her former pupils, con temporary American composers "Ty 432-1465 2140 No. 13th St JIMMY BROWN ONE OF THE GREATEST HAYEKS IM THE HISTORY OF FOOTBALL tS OFF AND RUNNING AS CM OF NOW SHOWING nOaaan AtMTHHYilUI fa-elR tk ma urn urn mm mum mm 'ux'cmrttzmi KiWCOlOt TODAY AT Ml :, araj, f m '"Uls . H Virgil Thomson and Aaron Cop land. (N.E.T.) 10:00 THE FRENCH CHEF (Repeat) 10:90 INTERNATIONAL MAGA ZINE (Repeat) FRIDAY, JULY 71 11:00 NEBRASKA FARM AND RANCH 11:30 JAPANESE BRUSH PAINTING Mikami teaches the art of draw ing a human figure using the Japanese equivalent of a "baby sitter." 1 :00 WHAT'S NEW 1:30 BRITISH CALENDAR 1:45 SOCIAL SECURITY IN ACTION 1:00 CONVERSATIONS WITH ERIC HOFFER (Repeat) 1:30 MENUHTN TEACHES (Repeat) 3:00 INVITATION TO ART Dr. O'Doherty explains how the art of Edvard Munch reflects both the early tragedy of his life and later, his more optimis tic outlook. (N.E.T.) 3:30 DR. POSIN-S GIANTS (Repeat) 4:00 DISCOVERY Viewers see some of the com mon sedimentary rocks: lime stone, sandstone, shale and con glomerate. (N.E.T.) 4:30 JAPANESE BRUSH PAINTING (Repeat) 1:00 SING HI-SING LO Mrs. Kennett tells the life of . the trapper one of the most ex citing figures in our history. (N.E.T.) 3:15 THE FRIENDLY GIANT 5:30 THE STRUGGLE FOR PEACE (Repeat) :M MANAGERS IN ACTION (Re peat) . :30 WHAT'S NEW Some of today's topics are: "The Birth of the Camera," "How Movies Began," and "Stop Mo tion Photography." (N.E.T.) 7:00 FOLK GUITAR 7:30 UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA NEWS 1:00 INVITATION TO ART Dr. Brian ODoherty interviews the controversial modern arti-t, Leonard Baskin, who is noted for his dogmatic approach to art and philosophy. (N.E.T.) 1:30 LOTTE L E H M A N N MASTER CLASS Mme. Lehmann Instructs some of her gifted atudenta in the singing of four German lieder (songs) by Schubert, Schumann, Brahms and Wolf. (NET.) 1:00 WARSAW PHILHARMONIC Witold Rowicki conducts the War saw Philharmonic in perform ances of Dmitri Shostakovich's Symphony No. S, Op. 47, and Stanislaw MoniusrWs Polka form "The Stone Guest" (N.E.T.) 10:00 N.E.T. PLAYHOUSE The American Conservatory Theatre Company presents a re peat performance of John Wheat croft'a award-winning "modem folklore tale," "Ofoeti," the sto ry of a boy's search for a troll, and his indecision between a make-believe world and real ity. (N.E.T.) SUNDAY. JULY 3:00 INVITATION TO ART (Repeat) 1:30 LOTTE LEHMANN MASTER CLASS (Repeat) 4:00 WARSAW PHILHARMONIC (Re peat) i:00 N.E.T. PLAYHOUSE (Repeat) 6 30 THE BOOKSHELF (Repeat) 7:M AARON COPLAND: MUSIC LN THE TWENTIES RECORD SALE Continues This Week UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE n Nebraska Union SAVE 2 lower level $3 FIRST LINCOLN f'ftfTTV P$ - '111 I ; h Li aaaa gum r'- ' MOWN INTEINATIONU ROUSE 2ND E HIT Copland concludes this series with a program on the so-called "ultra modernists" of the 1920's: Henry Cowell, Edgar Varese, and Leo Orenstein. 7-.10 CONVERSATIONS WITH ERIC HOFFER (Repeat) I 00 SUNDAY SHOWCASE Noted stage and screen actor. Rip Torn, hosts this program as the Theatre of the Living Arts repertory company presents scenes from two plays: William Saro van's "The-Time of Your Lile," and Rochelle Owens "Beclch." (ETS) 1:15 BRITISH CALENDAR 1:30 MENUHIN TEACHES Maestro Mennhin conducts a mas ter class on the Beethoven Vio lin Concerto with two advanced violin students. 10:00 CHILDREN GROWING (Repeat) 10:30 FOLK GUITAR 11:00 THE CREATIVE PERSON (Re peat! MONDAY, JULY 14 11:00 SING HI-SING LO Mrs. Kennett tells us about the mountains, tundras and cities of Alaska. (N.E.T.) 11:15 THE FRIENDLY GIANT 11:30 JAPANESE BRUSH PAINTING Mikami uses Vosemite National Park as his subject, for drawing landscapes, in this last program of the series. (N.E.T.) 1:00 WHAT'S NEW 1:30 THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BROTHER BUZZ Today's story tells about "Banna Bovs' Center," a place for ne glected boys of all races and creeds. (El Si 1:00 N.E.T. PLAYHOUSE (Repeat) 3:30 INVITATION. TO ART (Repeat) 4:00 DLSCOVERY Out of a terrarlum unfolds the story of "The Green Giants" of a past are of plaM life. (N.E T.i 4:30 JAPANESE BRUSH PAINTINO Repeat 3:00 SING HI-SING LO 5:15 THE FRIENDLY GIANT S:30 THE WONDERFUL WORLD OF BROTHER BUZZ Today's program shows how dogs and other nets are shipped plana and steamship. (ETS) (:00 THE FACE OF SWEDEN Todav's program, a aurvey of Sweden's legal system, openes with a dramatization of a Juvenile court case. (N.E.T.) C:30 WHAT'S NEW This is the first of a three-part story about Miguel Chavez, a 12-year-old boy in New Mexico, who is Impatient to become a man. (N.E.T.) 7:00 FROM THE SHELDON GAL LERY Gallery director Norman Geske es corts viewers on a tour of the gallery's permanent painting col ic -lion. 7:30 MEN AND IDEAS Distinguished author William Owens discusses folk or regional writing with hostess Beulah Hodge. :00 BACKYARD FARMER 9:00 N E T. JOURNAL Thailand" is a documentary look at U.S. involvement ia that country; "Unknown War" ia a report on the war waged by Burmese tribesmen against neigh boring Chinese Communists. SElLrJGQZ.'ii7 i iff asiaaaEO co i it a mil m v wua WaeaafaS pmaiiaiiiuiiii)iuijaMjiiaie DRIVE-IN THEATRE SHOWING MAKTYtlNDtt '-o nw miLAor-