The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 19, 1968, Page Page 3, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Thursday, September 19, 1968
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 3
Love's great if you get it
Novel set-up uses one control
by Connie Winkler
Junior Staff Writer
Everything is still in the
library, don't worry. It has
just been rearranged to make
things easier for the student.
During the summer, Love
Memorial Library was rear
ranged to provide "better and
quicker service, saving time
and frustration, for the stu
dent," said Eugene M .
Johnson, associate director of
libraries for public service.
"All the same materials are
available, but they have been
regrouped," continued
Johnson.
THE SYSTEM with
Humanities, Social Science,
and Science reading rooms
has been abandoned. There is
now a general reference room
and a current periodicals
room. Other books are in
continuous display under two
classification systems.
The reading rooms system
served well when the
enrollment was smaller,
because each librarian and
each staff member was sub-ject-oriented.
As the enroll
ment, staff, and number of
books increased, service
deteriorated.
t,(i , i s w. , , J
"This new system allows us
to concentrate the library
staff at one point," said
Johnson. Students can get
help at the loan desk and the
information desk near the
card catalog.
There were three rooms
with reference materials
There is now one central
reference room in the north
room on second floor, Johnson
said.
Current periodicals were in
the reading rooms according
to subject, he added. Now the
2,500 periodicals most fre
quently used by the
undergraduates have been
brought together in the cur
rent periodicals room on third
floor.
THE COLLEGE Library,
consisting of books selected
primarily for their
undergraduate interest, is
filed in two sequences.
If the book was acquired
after 1964, it is classified ac
cording to the Library of
Congress system. This se
quence is shelved in the north
room on the third floor and
continues in the east room on
the second floor.
Books acquired prior to 1964
are classified in the Dewey
Decimal system. They are
shelved in the east rooms on
second and first floors.
;
m.mm
aW-!).. . , . . ViwmhhJ
Here's how it stacks up.
Student involvement IDA goal
Cast members, from left, Dennis Calandra, Don
Sobolik and Jean Calandra are in preparation
for Howell Memorial Theatre's first production
"The Homecoming".
Forum schedule released . . .
Churches to sponsor
morality discussions
The first in a series of
forums on moral issues
ranging from homosexuality
to ecumenism begins Thurs
day night at 7:30 at the
Newman Center.
The series, which will run
on consecutive Thursday
niehts through Nov. 14, is
sponsored by Newman and
the Wesley Foundation.
THE PROUKAM on
homosexuality includes a CBS
documentary "The
Homosexuals" and a group
Crompton professor of
English, James Cole, assis
tant professor of psychology,
and Jack O'Shea from the
Lincoln Catholic Social
Service Bureau.
Other programs, their dates
and locations are:
The God-Problem, Sept. 26,
Newman. Film: "The Theater
and God." Duane Hutchinson,
Wesley Foundation and Fr.
Raymond Hain, Newman
director.
War and Conscience, Oct.
3, Newman. Film: "Trial by
Fire."
The Playboy Philosophy,
Oct. 10, Wesley. Film:
"Harvey Cox: The Playboy
and the Christian." Dr. Harry
Cannon, director of the
University counseling service
and Chris Cox, a Lincoln
psychiatric social worker.
Race Relations, Oct. 24,
Wesley. Film: "No Man is
an Island." Lucy Nevels
Jerome Drakeford, and Harry
Peterson of the Lincoln
Human Rights Commission.
"Student Involvement" will
characterize the programs of
this year s Inter-Dormitory
Association, according to IDA
president Bruce Bailey.
"Rather than working on a
project of setting up better
and bigger social functions,
there will be more of a pro
gram to try to finally involve
the students," he continued.
For the residence hall
system to be effective, it must
meet all of the student's
needs, Bailey pointed out.
Particularly, it must give the
individual student a n at
mosphere for intellectual
growth.
"THERE IS going to have
to be some kind of intellectual
experience for them to have
so they will want to come
back. This will be what we
are calling ' P r o j e c t
Awareness," Bailey said.
This project will involve
creating interest in areas
varying from cultural events
to community service pro
jects. In other matters, IDA is
sponsoring a leadership con
ference for dormitory officers
on October 5. This will be
an opportunity for the officers
to meet and discuss mutual
problems as well as hear the
advice of professional ad
ministrators. THE CONFERENCE will
be followed in the evening by
an all-University "Computer
Dance," according to Bailey.
During its meeting o f
September 16, IDA establish
ed the new office of public
relations chairman and ap-
PARTYLAND
789-2764
Help Wanted
Female nude model. Dave or evenlnga.
Contact Art Dept. Office Room SW
Wood! Art Bid, or call 472-iMl.
Local Company need two college mea
to work pan-time. 4M-4414.
Need Roommate. Good etudy hablta, Uke
dating. Share $3040 rent. Phone
43M371.
PARTTTME
BUSBOYb
We have pirttlme work 11 AM, -3 P.M.
dally in our tearoom for buaboya. Em
ployee dleoount on etore purchaeea,
Apply 7th floor 10-11 A.M.. 4-6 P.M.
daily and 74 P.M. Thuriday.
For Sole
Dupilcator-FluM Praceae 434-3003 after 1:00.
1865 Corvette Convertible KM2S lully
quipped $2300 423-40M.
For Bale Camera! with loom lena. Call
Chuck Kutunan. SUamar Circle.
Lincoln, Nebraska ism.
'to Mustang, tm hardtop. Excellent oon
diUon. 4M4U1I.
SHAKEY'S PIZZA PARLOR
& Ye Public House
VARIETIES OF PIZZA MADE WITH
FLAVORFUL CHEESES IN 750 OVENS
NOW OPEN!
-Ar ADULT DINING AREA...
with live banjo & piano
SEPARATE TEENAGE ROOMS
FINEST BEVERAGES...
domestic and imported
For Pick Up Orders Call...
434-8328
Or Come In and Join the Fun
360 No. 48th St.
By Harold Pinter
A Fascinating and Bizarre COMEDY
You Can See it in. the Howell Theatre in October
BUT THERE IS MORE
Ticket Office
University Theatre
12th I "R" Sts.
Lincoln, "ebrcuka
Comic Qpare
THE ROYAL ClT GF THE SEN
Everything
YOU CAN SEE ALL OF THEM WITH A
STUDENT SEASON TICKET $7.75
(It'i chaster that way)
Telephone
472-2S72
472-2873
pointed Roxy Gee to fill the
post. '
I3TM ANO'P"
The Return
of the
Happy Ending
r
2
4
1 X
'"-"--" -
Doris Day
Brian Keith
"With Six You
Get Eggroll"
Color by Deluxe. Filmed in Panaviaion.
THURSDAY, SEPT. 19
(All activities in the
Nebraska Union, unless other
wise indicated.)
MORTAR BOARD - 7 a.m.
INTERVARSITY CHRIS
TIAN FELLOWSHIP -
a.m.
BAPTIST ST UDENT
UNION - 8 a.m.
GEOLOGY DEPT. 12:43
p.m.
POUND HALL - Building
Tour 1:30 p.m.
ASUN Human Relations
Committee 3:30 p.m.
PANHELLENIC -3:30
p.m.
HYDE PARK -3:30 p.m.
PEOPLE TO PEOPLE -Publicity
3:30 p.m.
STUDENT AFFAIRS
COMMITTEE - 3:30 p.m.
AWS Court of Appeals
4:30 p.m.
YMCA CABINET MEET
ING 4:30p.m.
UNION TALKS AND
TOPICS 4:30 p.m.
SUMBOULIAN -5:30 p.m.
PHI MU ALPHA SINFONIA
6 p.m.
AUF 6:30 p.m.
UNION SPECIAL EVENTS
6:30 p.m.
BOWLING ORGANIZA
TIONAL MEETING 7 p.m.
3 DAY RYDERS -Rehersal
7 p.m.
NU RIFLE CLUB - 7:30
p.m.
Sheldon Gallery to show
series of award films
Not content to be merely
an exhibition hall, Sheldon
Art Gallery will again this
year sponsor a cultural pro
gram of films.
THE FILMS will be shown
in two series, a Wednesday
night group of international
films alternating dates with
the Nebraska Union Film
Society and a Sunday after
noon program of British
comedies.
The first three international
films are comedies directed
by Ingmar Bergman. Two
French classics, Rene
Clement's "Forbidden
Games" and Jean Cocteau's
"Beauty and the Beast" will
also be presented.
Italy will be represented by
Ermanno Olmis' "The
Fiance." "The Flute and the
Arrow," directed by Arne
Susksdorf, is a documentary.
New film trends are em
bodied in an English film,
"The Caretaker," and a
Czech movie, "Sweet Light in
a Dark Room."
"Nobody Waved Goodbye"
has won recognition from the
Canadian film industry.
The cinema survey will be
completed with three films
directed by Americans.
They are John Huston's "To
Beat the Devil," Alfred
Hitchcock's "The Laxly
Vanishes," and H a r 6Td
Lloyd's "The Freshman."
1
t m
You give a Swinging World
of fun when you give a Yamaha
Campus 60 for graduation.
It's the gift that keeps on going. ..to col
lege, to work, everywhere! Big bike styling.
Center tank, telescopic front forks, sporty
upswept pipe, oil injection. Plenty of pep...
50-55 mph.Low insurance rates and nearly
200 miles per gallon make it economical to
own and operate. A Campus 60 is ideal for
the new college student since many col-
leges do not allow freshmen to have cars
on campus. A low down payment will put
your graduate on a Yamaha, the top-selling
2-stroke sportcycle in the U.S.
Discover the
s5 qm of YA MAHA
MCffttW
less than
60c a day
including insurance
Behlen Motor Sports
1145 N. 48th
v v. y
V
-
Mfjue your living quarters
more livable vifb
stereo components.
Your room is your home. Your residence for four
years. Add the beauty of sight and sound to your
home with component stereo. Electronics Unlimited
can furnish you with a complete system. Or buy part
of it, and add on later. Select from such names as:
University Sound, Marantz, Harmon-Kardon, and
Craig. Electronics Unlimited sells the sound of qual
ity. Stop, look and listen to component stereo. Then
live it up.
nwi-Tir-m- af-nrr eaimiml-ai ' I rf
414 So. !.ih
432-3930
"Quality Sound Equipment
Backed By Sound Semes"
1
1