The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 01, 1968, Page Page 5, Image 5

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    1
Wednesday, May I, 1968
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 5
Group
for enlisting student suonort
The second Peace Corps re
cruiting team this semester
is trying a different approach
to lure University students to
the volunteer service organ!
lation during their week-long
stay on campus.
"This won't be as high
keyed as the last time," said
Jim McKinley, one of the two
peace Corps recruiters here
until Friday.
He added that this visit,
which will be the group's fin
al recruiting stop this spring
Deiore returning to the home
office in San Francisco, would
give students a second chance
Newly elected officers of
the Epsilon Chapter of the
National Honorary and Pro
fessional Military Fraternity
of Phalanx are Wayne Hake
commander; Steven Bartos
lieutenant commander; Dale
Berndt, adjutant; Douglas
Blum, finance officer and H,
John Kuhl Jr., public infor
mation officer.
& it
Miss Toni Nowak, Alpha Xi
Delta junior in Business in
, the Teachers College was pre
sented as the 1968 Rose
Queen at the annual Rose
Formal of Delta Sigma Pi on
April 29. Her first attendant
was Connie Clifton, Pi Beta
Phi.
ine otner finalists were
Kathy Dosek, Kappa Alpha
tneta; Jane Bauer, Alpha
Omicron Pi; and Barbara
Doerr, Chi Omega.
it it it
The new officers of Sigma
Chi are Scott Behnken, presi
dent; John Russel, vice pres'
ident; Bart Green, pledge
( trainer; Jim Wagner, assis
! tant pledge trainer and treas-
urer; John Drbal, secretary;
: Glen Forney, scholarship
, cnairman; bteve Yungblut,
rush chairman; Steve Reed,
: social chairman; John Thorn'
as, historian; and Roger
creed, chapter editor.
it it it
The new members of Gam-
' ma Gamma, the honorary for
senior women who have giv
en outstanding service to the
Greek system, are Carta
Cronkite, Karen Jones, Les
lie Broutman, Carol Strand,
Sandra McGuire, Jan Binger,
Diane McDonald, Cindy
Pauley, Jane Ross, Carol
Graham, Ann Boyles, Ruth
Hagedorn, Linda Salisbury
and Trudy Lieberman.
it it it
The Panhellenic grade
awards for second semester
of last year and first semes
ter of this year were 1st, Chi
Omega; 2nd, Kappa Alpha
Theta and Alphi Phi; and
3rd, Gamma Phi Beta. The
Panhellenic Philanthro
pic Award went to Madeline
Girard of Kappa Delta.
it it it
The following members of
the sophomore class who
were Kosmet Klub workers in
the 1967-68 term have been
selected into the membership
of Kosmet Klub.
Those iniated on April 28
were David H. Bingham, A.
Kent Boyer, Ronald A. Chris
tensen, R. Houston Doan,
Kenneth W. Ferrarini, Den
nis P. GoescheL James B.
Gunlicks. David H. Jones,
Robert D. Kinsey Jr., Chris
topher E. Kohout, John N.
Layson, John S. McCollister,
Patrick L. McNair, Lynn H.
Plambeck and Walter D.
Wood.
it it it
The new officers of Pi Kap
pa Alpha are James Powell,
president; Thomas Watson,
vice president; Keith Land
wher, treasurer; Max Maust,
recording secretary; Jay
Brzezinski, alumni secretary;
John Hendry, pledge trainer;
Roger Russell, resident coun
selor; Bill Dowd, house man
ager; and Jon E. Ulbright,
graduate adviser.
it &
Stephen Grenier of
Schramm Hall won the Uni
versity ring given by the Uni
versity Bookstore.
Read
Nebraskan
Want Ads
Peace Corps returns
tries different
to obtain information about
the federally-backed group.
A Nebraska Union booth
distributing pamphlets, appli
cation blanks and general in
formation will be available to
University students this week,
and the team has asso estab
lished an office in room 135A
Nebraska Union, he said.
Trip termed 'excellent'
Terming the February trip
by Peace Corps representa
tives "excellent," he said 51
University students comple
ted application blanks "when
the campus was blanketed by
us."
"When we were here be
fore, we spoke all over, in
Zoologist
Nicaraguan biology,
by Janet Maxwell
Junior Starr Writer
Dr. Thomas B. Thorson. a
zoology professor with a nose
for discovery, explores bio
logical features of sharks in
habiting the .waters of Nica
ragua. Sponsored by grants of the
Office of Naval Research and
National Heart Institute,
Thorson has been researching
in Lake Nicaragua and the
San Juan River which leads
to the Carribean Sea for the
past eight summers.
Seeking to understand the
features of body fluids which
change as the bull sharks
move from sea to fresh wa
ter, Thorson and his eight
member team employ a
shark tagging system.
Fishermen catch sharks
According to the professor,
the team depends almost en
tirely on native fishermen
for catching sharks which the
scientists later tag.
After tagging sharks at the
mouth of the river, the Thor
son team is able to observe
how and at what time the
Departments uncommitted
on 'take-home1 programs
The summer take-home
reading courses' future is un
certain, according to Profes'
sor Robert L. Hough, Assist
ant Dean of the College of
Arts and Sciences.
Everything is still uncer
tain, with no committment
from any of the departments
yet, Hough, who taught the
take-home class last year,
said. He added that the dead
line for offering courses
through the extension divi
sion has already passed, al
though it could be extended.
Last summer, English 229,
basically a reading course,
was offered to students on
a pass-fail basis. Participants
were given one lecture before
leaving for vacation, another
inthefalL
The 38 students were test
f
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES
IN
FOREIGN ASSISTANCE
A limited umber f specialiieo etftiont rt available in Vietnam
with the Agency for InternatitNol Development, U4. Department
f State!
ASSISTANT AREA DEVELOPMENT OFFICERS
Attiit Vietnamese provincial official! la chrl operations ana1 help
coordinate and tapport wide range of A.I.D. activities, e.g.,
strengthening local government, bodgot, "self-help" development
for local schools, health clinks, agricultural development and
wells. Bachelor's or Master's degree, preferably in public ad
ministration, political ocionce, economics of developing nations,
Far last stodies, or related fields. Recent experience, preferably
overseas, la leadership position in commanity development and
management, disaster relief or broad local government admin
istration which demonstrated aptitvde for the previously de
scribed duties. Equivalent experience may bo substituted for some
academic requirements.
Salary: SM00 $11,000 per year, pint 15 hardship bonus and
famished quarters.
REFUGEE RELIEF OFFICERS
Advise (or partkipato with) Vietnamese and B.S. Sovernment
officials an planning for or operation of refugee relief programs.
Activities incladet initial roceptioa and registration emergency
medical attention; temporary shelter; fvrnishlng of subsistence
commodities; organization of work prelects and self-help pro
grams resettlement, tecmlra epproprlato overseas experience
mrhrh an assistance or voluntary erganlratlon or rotated stateside
experience which demonstrates aatiteae for the provieasly do
scribed duties. College degree with major la u Soefti Science
desirable.
Salary! $MC0-$T2,O0O per year, plus 2S hardship bonus and
tarnished quarters.
Apollewitt tor Men poeitlm mutt be U.S. citizens ler at least t years,
in excellent physical cenemoa, wtlllna te serve a minimum of 11 memos
eferaae wMfteut iemilMo, one oe eMe to teem e Ssrehm kmemee.
Time hiterettee may matt opoelntmefn Or eaillne the University at
Neeraett Placement Ofnc. Teieanene M) en-teio. The U.O. aecrutt
ment Teem will kc to Lincoln ee May I one 1. Wes.
A.I.D. is on leva! Oaeerhmlty Bnwleyor
classes, sororities, fraterni
ties; we really got around a
lot," he added, "This visit will
be lower-keyed."
He said a 30-minute motion
picture entitled "Our Man in
Borneo," describing Peace
Corps activity in Malaysia
will be shown at 3:30 p.m.
Wednesday in room 332
Union.
Urging all students desiring
to participate in the group's
summer program to apply
this week, he explained that
the Peace Corps Placement
Test will be given Thursday
and Friday.
Test given
The 30-minute language ap-
Thorson explores
sharks proceed up the river,
Rewards are given to those
natives who catch the tagged
sharks and report the infor
mation to Thorson, the zoolo
gy professor explained. Ac
cording to Thorson, 100 of
1000 sharks tagged were re
turned, some being reported
two thirds way up the river.
Sharks protected
To protect those sharks
which are captured when
young, the team has erected
two portable swimming pools
with thatched huts- Blood
samples for research can be
taken from these specimens,
Thorson explained.
Last summer the team was
able to trace the movements
of sharks which carried elec
tronic tags by means of a
portable hydrophone in t h e
boat. By picking up the elec
tronic waves, the boatman
could follow the shark for
several hours.
Similarly, next summer
they will use seven shore
monitors which will record
on tape the time and direc
tion of movement of the
ed in the fall and passed the
class.
"I think the course was
very successful," Hough com
mented.
There seems to be conxid
erable demand for similar
courses this summer, accord
ing to Hough. He has re
ceived a number of telephone
calls asking if such classes
will again be offered.
Hough envisions course of
fering in not only English
but in classics and history
as well. Credit and cost
would be the same as if the
course was taken at the regu
lar summer session.
"We don't know enough
about these take-home cours
es yet," Hough said. "I
would like to see them car
ried on as an experiment"
method
JL X
titude examination will be
given Thursday at 12:30 p.m.,
2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. and
at 10:30 a.m. Friday in room
332 Union.
Working as a Peace Corps
liason to enable clubs or pro
fessors to have a recruiter
speak is Robert L. Scott, co
ordinator of student affairs.
McKinley, who spent last
week at Long Beach State
College in California, worked
two years in Northern Borneo
in the Peace Corps serving as
a high school history instruc
tor. His companion on the re
cruiting tour, Bob Casey,
worked with small industry
and co-operatives for two
years in Northern India.
sharks
! sharks. According to Thor
son, the transmitter will have
a range of about one half
mile in the Nicaraguan wa
ters. Natives host team
Spending the ten-week ex
cursion in a Costa Rican
village of 300 people. Barra
del Colorado, the Thorson
team lived in thatched roof
houses and ate in the homes
of natives.
The natives, which Thor
son described as having some
schooling, welcome the sum
mer researchers. Thorson at
tributed this to the fact that
the pay the fishermen re
ceive for catching sharks is
a boost to their income.
Thorson, who has done
some research in Florida on
strictly the marine phase of
the shark, has also done work
concerning body fluids on
stnngrays in the Amazon
River.
Always anxious to continue
research in the primitive vil
lage, Thorson said research
would be underway by m id
June this summer.
The University must
see
just how valuable the cours
es are and on what basis the
courses should be based on,
he countinued. "We must see
if they are educationally ap
propriate," he emphasized.
Hough reported that a de
cision must oe reacnea on
the take-home courses within
the next efw days. "We have
to order text books and have
everyone register very short'
ly if courses are going to be
offered, he concluded.
. OBJECT
MATRIMONY
Jewdorith fine ejec
tion, of diHTOonu la
vishes to meet young
inclined. Finest refer
ences from Anvir.
maker of diamond rings
since 1850. Have excel
lent selection of snapes.
settings. Can offer
Jnanent Value guaran
tee. Serious prospects
deriied, wishful think
era 'welcome.
4'
HlNOT, from f 160. te $1400.
HHtehlnt circlet $23.
Open Monday and Thursday
evening! 'til 9
Pbonoi 4321111
yillllllllllllllllllllNlinilinillllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIillllllMlllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIilllllllllljli
' Niiin(iitiiinm-Eaafc- 1 v
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ifk'v? vNfw. Z tiJ'
I I " J K v : v in in i i.'Z'f L i
';.'
mi. ii -i i in - M ii rrwiminn n m r mi tt
I Dr.
Thomas Thorson,
research by tagging sharks in Nicaragua.
WtllllllllNIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllllllllttilllltillflltlllllllltlilllllllliailllllllliliillllllllllllillitlltllllllllllfiiillll
Book explains U.S.
Wavering foreign confi
dence in the United States and
how American propagandists
deal with it is the subject of
former Nebraskan Thomas
C. Sorensen's new book, "The
World War: The Story of
American Propaganda."
Deputy Director of the
United States Information
Agency from 1961-65, Soren
sen received his B.A. from the
University of Nebraska and
is now Vice-President of the
University of California.
"There has been confusion
about the role of truth in a
government information pro
gram," says Sorensen." We
emphasize those aspects of
American life and policy
which are of greatest signifi
cance in furthering our fore
ign policy objectives. We re
port events in context. But
we do not lie, we do not cheat,
we do not suppress."
In tracing the development
of American propaganda,
Sorensen discusses incidents
from the Bay of Pigs, to
the 1963 "March on Washing
ton," to the 1956 Hungarian
revolt, to the Cuban Missile
Crisis.
Sorensen comes from one
otf America's prominent pub
He took that first step and ht took the
step first, when he went alone into New
Hampshira.
But ha was not entirely alona. Threa
thousand student volunteers, an actor
and a poet were with him.
Together they went Into the countryside
to talk to the people. The students
talked; the people listened. And then
in New- England they cast the votes
that were heard around the world.
As students ws made It happen. We al
J L v it
tr , 4 I
T
zoology professor, did
lic-service families. His broth
er Theodore was President
John Kennedy's Special Coun
sel and biographer. His broth
er Phil is former Lieutenant
Governor of Nebraska.
'Means? mm&tems&itmmzflg$
ritw Sera
joev m mWaBiaatfimasnnsiMsast.
journey of a
begins with a
f (i if Kjtx T2th
&-Jft, CN
tmmmmmmmmmmmmmmieammimmmmmmmt-ar-itiv nr iii ruiMii u iiw n ST .. i ..imtf,mm
tered America's course. In Wisconsin,
ten thousand of us came to work. A new
politics of participation was born. An
unchangeable mind was changed.
But our task Is Incomplete, our Journey
unfinished. Thousands of volunteers are
needed during the coming weeks to do
tha telephoning and canvassing, talk
ing and walking, that must be done to
win again in Indiana on May 7, and In
Nebraska, Oregon and California after
that
Quiz Bowl playoffs':
scheduled tonight ...
Finals for the Quiz Bowl
will be held Wednesday eve
ning at 7 p.m. in the Union.
In the freshmen third and
fourth place playoffs, the Fiji
Frosh will meet the Beta Sig
ma Psi Arthur. In the upper
class third and fourth place
playoffs, the Flower Children
versus Alpha Gamma Rho.
Chi Phi B will versus Ca
ther Freshmen in the fresh
men finals.
The upperclass finals will
pit Beta Theta Pi against Les
Fleurs du Mai.
Health conference
slated for May 3-4
Physical fitness enthusiasts,
ski buffs, medical and edu
cational students need not be
alarmed if they think they
missed the Health and Fit
ness Conference Friday and
Saturday it is scheduled for
May 3-4.
It had been announced last
Friday that the conference
was being held then, but Bob
Richards, Dr. Martin E. Hen-
dryson and other health and
physical fitness speakers will
not appear until the coming
weekend.
Richards, a former Olym
pic gold medal winner will
relate the successes attained
through his program for
physical health.
Friday night's dinner ad
dress will be presented by
Maj. Kenneth H. Cooper who
will discuss the possibility of
thousand miles
single step.
It is hard work. Sometimes It Is tedious
and exhausting. But it is the work that
must be done to Insure our future and
that of America. .
If your help, your commitment; -was im
portant before, it Is vital now.
We have promises to keep, and miles to
go before we sleep.
Students for L'clM?
Cleypovl Hotel, Indianapolis, Indiana
Call your local group cow.
In the semi-finals held last '
week, it was Les Fleurs du
Mai, 400 - Captain Billy's
Quizbang, 65. Alpha Gamma
Rho, 130 Unteachables, 115v
Beta Theta Pi A, 95 - Theta V." '
Xi. 85. Flower Children, 170-'
GDI, 160. Chi Phi B, 215-Dis-ney
House Freshmen, 145. Cai"
ther Freshmen, 190 Beta Sig- J-.
ma Psi Arthur, 95. Fiji Frosh
won, Cather Freshmen for- -feited.
Les Fleurs du Mai. 230""'-"
Alpha Gamma Rho. 126."-"-Beta
Theta Pi A, 195 Flower""" "
Children, 80. .
replacing isometric exercises "
with what he calls aerobics,.
He claims to have docu- :
mented proof that aerobic ex-
ercise, aimed at getting the -'
body to use as much oxygen "
as possible, will build and
condition the body to do pro
longed work without fatigue.
Aerobic programs have al
ready been adopted in the
University athletic depart
ment The keynote address will
be delivered by Hendryson
at the Nebraska Center for
Continuing Education on East
Campus at 2:30 p.m. Friday.
At
your
newsstand
NOW
PLUS
"FREEDOM: WHO NEEDS IT?"
by Richard Rovere
SOREL'S UNFAMILIAR
QUOTATIONS
A new feature combining
slightly distorted
quotations with
irreverent drawings
4-"-- -
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