The Daily Nebraskan Friday, December 8, 1967 World Governor Norbert T. Tie raann told a Legislative Council study committee Wednesday, that a constitu tional revision convention is "desperately needed" in Nebraska. He said such a conven tion is "the only reasonable way" the state government al charter can be truly modernized. Last minute opposition by the Nebraska Farm Bureau Federation defeated the Tie-mann-supported bill (Lb 2) on final reading. Atty. Gen. Clarence A. H. Meyer told the committee that substantial public support is needed for suc cess of the measure. Meyer along with Secre tary of State Frank Marsh oppose the governor's sug gestion to discuss a "short" ballot at the proposed con vention. Tiemann said he was only emphasizing the "short" ballot as a discussion topic. He said he did not want to be recorded as advocating the ballot LINCOLN JOURNAL An encounter with a UFO was reported Sunday by Herbert Shirmer, Ashland policeofficer. Shirmer described the ob ject as f o o t b a 1 1 shaped, about 20 feet long, and 14 15 feet high, with a catwalk like ring and a series of red blinking lights around the center. Shirmer discovered the object south of Ashland near the junction of Hwys. 6-63 about 2:30 a.m. He returned to the police station about one mile away at 3:00 a.m. Shirmer cannot account for the half hour loss in time. The only evidence found near the site was a bit of molten metal. Two more reports of UFO sitings were made south of Lincoln in the vicinity of Denton, Tuesday between Hand 11:30 p.m. An unidentified woman caller reported seeing an object with two blinding lights, flying at tree level while returning to Lincoln. The second report came from four persons at Cristo Key home for boys in Roca. LINCOLN JOURNAL A second phase in the Cy prus crisis is expected by United Notions officials. The first phase, the Turkish-Greek showdown intend ed to bring about withdraw al of outside troops from the island, is now proceed ing. But these officials be lieve the Turkish Govern ment will not be satisfied to end its push for a basic so lution of the Cyprus feud with only a withdrawal of Greek and Turkish forces, and a strengthening of UN units. They believe Ankara in tends to reopen the internal Cypriot question of constitu tional guarantees for t h e Turkish Cypriot minority on the island. They think at would be logical for Turkey to do so once the Greek Army is withdrawn. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR "Washington is busy with rumors, speculation, analy ses and partial facts as to why McNamara will move, at sometime in the future (as yet unspecified), to the World Bsr. There are so sources of reliable informa tion. Only President John son knows the entire story and he has not disclosed much. Generally, those close to the President claim John son did not force McNa mara to leave, and those close to the Kennedy fam ily have hinted that McNa mara was deliberately cropped by the President. Jane; Bestow, ttf the New York Times, has given per liaps the most plausible ex plamation of the event leading up to McNamara 's transfer: Washington hat long known that McNamara X .7 ' Reports wanted out but would not leave until his job and na tional interests were in good shape. There seems little doubt McNamara knew of a pro posed transfer to the World Bank earlier this year. The question being raised now is if McNamara knew in ad vance of the actual nomina tion submitted to the World Bank by President Johnson on November 16. Kennedy implications are that the Secretary of Defense did not know. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR The second human heart transplant in the world took place Wednesday Dec. 6 at the Malmonides Hos pital in Brooklyn. Dr. Adrian Kantrowitz, heart surgeon at the hospi tal, replaced a 2 -week-old baby boy's defective heart with one from a two-day-old Philadelphia child that had just died because of gross deformities at birth. The replacement heart failed to save the child, who died 3 hours later. Other attempted heart transplants have been successful though. In 1964, . Dr. Kantrowitz successfully preformed a heart transplant on a pup py, However, the first trans fer on the human heart in history occured recently in South Africa, at Cape Town. The failing heart of a 55-year-old Louis Wahkansky was replaced with the heart of a 25-year-old woman. Washkansky is currently in excellent condition. LINCOLN STAR President de Gaulle's re newed appeal for an inde pendent province of Quebec proved "intolerable" to Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson. Pearson was applauded by the House of Commons when he announced the fu ture of the Canadian con federation would be decid ed in Canada by Canadians. Another press conference remark by President de Gaulle, that Israel had started the June war in the Middle East, prompted the Israeli Government to ex press its "deep regret" and label de Gaulle's statement as "an historic falsification and severe insult to the Jewish people and Israel." CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR Agronomy Awards Go To NU Club The University of Ne braska Agronomy Club re ceived top honors at the American Society of Agron omy (ASA) convention in Washington, DC, this week. William J. Amen, a senior in Plant Pathology from Lincoln, was elected na tional president of the Stu dent Activity Section of ASA. Amen was responsible for preparing t h e Nebraska Agronomy Club's entry into national competition with 50 other clubs. For this first place national award the Nebraska Agronomy Club wiU receive $200 and a trophy. Membership, attendance at meetings, programs and money-m a k i n g activities were the basis for judging Another member of the Nebraska Agronomy Club, Chuck Jttricek, won the Na tional ASA speech contest Amen won me same con- r mswm MSSiMv ' -. r : V f Kit I S ::t, --'- :.'ri " W' ' 'V W .-,... . .. ::'-'.::..'?'?'. -is ;'vv '' ;-T ' ". '.' ' v" ,:' ; : 1 i y r v km. .....i...... nun -II ... .i..... -to - - - Phol By Dm Lately RON HULL, assistant director of KUON, spent 11 months in Vietnam advising their Educational Television Network. Education First Effort Of Vietnam Broadcasts Hull: VSIA Programming Attempt To Reach Out To The Population By CHRISTIE SWARTZKOPF Junior Staff Writer The only answer to the situation in Viet Nam is ed ucation, according to R o n Hull, assistant director of KUON-TV, who spent 11 months last year in V i e t Nam as advisor in TV pro gramming and production to the South Vietnamese government's TV proiect. His position with the USIA K United States Infor mation Agencv) was a part of the first effort in TV broadcasting in the country. The project's primary pur pose, be said, is to reach out to the people with edu cation. ""We first had to decide what areas would do the most good on TV for the people," he said. Hull and his staff of 27 Vietnamese worked with four main agencies of government the Ministries of Educa tion, Psychological Warfare, Agriculture and Health, in teaching the people about themselves and their coun try. The broadcasts were done in the Vietnamese lan guage from two cities, Sai gon and Can Tbo, the larg est city in the eMkong Del ta. Before the installation of the broadcast tower in Sai gon, programs were broad cast from a video tape in an airplane which flew over Saigon continuously f or s i x hours. Saigon had over 5000 pub lic TV sets located in parks, m vacant lots and by busy streets. "I never saw lets than 125 people at a set,'" Hull remarked. In addition to these two r AMBULANCE SERVICE 24-HOURS 1 IMZ-VYI strictly Vietnamese p r o grams, the American grams, the American broadcasts to its troops up country shared time with the Vietnamese. Hull pointed out the long history of domination by foreign governments Chinese, French and Japanese that the people of Southeast Asia have been subjected to. "One of the big problems of the foreign government that was in power was that they couldn't communicate with the people," Hull said. Domination by a foreign government has come to mean exploitation of t b e i r Vietnamese breadbasket and "many of the Vietnam ese people feel the Ameri cans have come to do just the same thing," be pointed out OWN FATE When asked about the war effort Hull said, "The educated people want to de termine their own fate they don't want Commu nism. They are thankful for American help. ""The problem does not lie in the cities where the people pay taxes and tup port the war effort, but in the surrounding fields where the people feel the Americans have come t take over their country." He continued, saying that most of the people m the countryside fearfully take oo stand, supporting the VC when the VC are in their village and the Americans in the Americans' presence. In reference to American military action in Viet Nam, Hull said. "I wish we weren't as aggressive as we are" VDLl KIT OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE TRAINED ATTENDANTS ON DUTY 12 Blocks From Any Place On Campus 315 South 11th Street i ii He advocates protecting the cities in a holding ac tion and diverting the rest of the money the U n i t e d States is spending on mili tary operations for health and education in the cities of South Viet Nam. Hull made one qualifica tion, however, for the de escalation policy he advo cates. He said that the United States' military ef fort should stop the troops coming down from the North. "We can't just pull out," be said in reference to total de-escalation. "Every ally we have in Asia would bate us if we did." D03HNATION The United States' fail ure to follow through would be a green light to aggres sor nations seeking to domi nate in Southeast Asia, Hull said. He further pointed out that the only thing standing between the people and domination by a foreign power in other Southeast Asian nations of Thailand, Tiawan and the Philippines is American ail Do you find Unci Archibald impossible to Christmas shop for? Not at Interiors Diversified! We suggest: irwi iMMtnu tuiWf mr capper cifareftt feu or JMfrtu aiuzlt. Open 104 .MoiL-frL INTERIORS DIVERSIFIED 1230 Swft $L juuyy Y" AMBULANCE COMPANY Ford Cuts Funds National Merit Phases Out Four Year Scholarships EVANSTON, ILL. T h e Naitonal Merit Scholarship Corporation (NT JSC) will phase out its four-year na tional scholarships next year, and will replace them with a less costly program of one-year, $1,000 awards. The change is a result of a cut-back in the amount of funds granted to the cor poration by the Ford Foun dation, according to Harold Harding, NMSC's director of information. Ford has supplied funds for all the national awards in the past The industrial, or spon 1 sored scholarships, w not be affected by the pending change, Harding said. The sponsored awards comprise the bulk of the fi nancial assistance given out by the corporation t here were about 1800 sponsored awards made last year, and only 600 national awards but the national scholar ships have always been re garded as the more pres tigious of the two kinds of awards. According to Harding, the corporation plans to award about 400 national scholar ships next year, and none the year after. It will phase in the one-year awards dur ing the same period. CONSTANT LEVEL The NMSC official said the total amount of financial aid given out by the cor poration over the next two years would remain at about the level of last year's aid, which be estimated at $7.3 million. Sponsored awards will makeup a larg er percentage of the total, however. Harding predicted that 2,000 sponsored awards would be given this year, and about 24200 next year. Since 1956, when the cor poration was founded, sev eral hundred high school students have been chosen from among the National Merit finalists each year to receive the national awards last year there were 11 000 finalists K Every state was given a quota of na tional awards, with the win ners from each -state being selected by a national board, composed mainly of college admissions officers. The awards were given for a four-year period and ranged in amount from $100 to $1,500 per year. Accord ing to Harding, the national board selected recipients more on the basis of factors like their high school per formances and extra-curricular activities than their sccres on the NMSC's quali fying test. The test Hard ing said, has served mainly to decide who the finalists will be. Opea 104 Sri. PfeOM 432451 jsj Li The sponsored awards, most of them given by cor porations or private donors, usually establish one or more criteria for the selec tion of recipients. Harding explained that "commonly, the criterion is that the re cipient be the son or daugh ter of an employee of t h e sponsor. There are others, however some of the spon sors want recipients who are .going to a particular school, or come from a par Behleii Lah To Add New Accelerators Two new atomic accel erators are being added to the Behlen Laboratories on the campus to aid students in the study of and ex perimentation with atomic collisions, according to Prof. M. Eugene Rudd, di rector of the installation program. The accelerators were purchased with an equip ment grant from the Na tional Science Foundation at a cost of $65,000, Rudd said. He added that the foundation win also help fi nance experimentation with a separate research grant Foot-Nihbler Stalks Yale Library Coeds NEW HAVEN, CONN. (CPS) A phantom foot nibbler is at large in the stacks of the library at Yale University. He has attacked at least four women three graduate students and one professor's wife during the last four weeks. According to descriptions given by one of the nibbled girls and the campus police, the assailant crawls up on all fours and attempts to kiss or bite the feet of the girls studying in the stacks. In at least one incident, a girl's shoe fell off. and the attacker began biting her toes. The attacks have taken place during the af ternoon and evening w the second, fifth, sixth and seventh floor stacks of the library. One graduate student who was attacked over two weeks ago said she heard footsteps but ignored them, and then was aware of a person standing above her A $325 8 $625 ticular state, or even a par ticular county." Like the national awards, the sponsored awards are based on need and cover four years of college educa tion. The new program giving $1,000 awards for one year will go into effect this year, according to Harding. He said that about 500 of the one-year grants will be made to seniors graduating this spring, and about 1,000 of them the following year. to be made later. The accelerators will be used for atomic and not nuclear physics experimen tation, Rudd said. He ex plained that the accelera tors will produce a beam of high-speed ions that will bombard the atomic shells of atoms, but the new equipment will not generate enough speed to force the beams through the shells to the nucleus of an atom. Rudd said the accelera tors will be used specifical ly in studying ionization (the induced loss of atomic par ticles! and excitation (a re action giving off light). for a long time. "All of a sudden I felt somebody kissing my feet," she said. "Here was this guy on his hands and knees kissing me. I screamed but everybody ignored me." The attacker, who had ap parently crawled into her study booth from the side, fled, when she began screaming. The girt, a Vassar grad uate, said, "I've had some strange passes made at me, but never anything like this." A week later the same girl came back from mak ing a phone call to find water ail over her books and notes. Security Director John Powell said campus police are looking for "a white male, six feet tall, slender. 100-170 pounds, with dark blond hair and a fair com plexion." Powell believes the attacker is "probably aa emotionally disturbed per son." 8. C-1223 D J375 F $250 0 manny im"0"STBIT WnBI MWtUXi AMUKSM tmm MUTT 65 Mo. 27th $t 1 u