The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 18, 1968, Page PAGE 3, Image 3

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    The Daily Nebraskan
PA
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1968
Fund drive ends
AUF aids Cancer Society
Thursday, Nov. 21, is the
last day of the All University
Fund (AUF) Drive for
students, according to Linda
Jeffrey, vice president in
charge of solicitations.
All the money collected
from students must be turned
into the committees by Thu
rsday, she said.
Part of the money that is
collected will go to the
American Cancer Society,
i ACS), as one of the five
charities selected by the
students to receive money
irom AUF.
THE OTHER charities io
receive money from AUF are
he Multiple Sclerosis Society,
United Service Organization
iU.S.O.), Keep Biafra Alive
and the Heart Association.
The American Cancer
Society is the only national
agency fighting cancer
through research, education
md service to the cancer pa
tient, according to the
Society's literature.
Because of the Society-sup
r.orted research, physicians
today can cure one half of all
cancer natients if their
cancers are diagnosed and
properly treated in time.
Doctors say that the most
deadly form of cancer is
leukemia; but with research,
150 children with acute
."iliiMitlllUIHIIIIIinilllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIU:
iMATCHl
BOX
ENGAGEMENTS
Diane Woodhull, Alpha Phi
senior in Teachers College
from Omaha, to Jack Todd,
senior in journalism from
Seottsbluff.
Virginia Ann Richmond,
senior in food technology
;i-om Chimacum, Washington,
hi Jack Arthur Gilmore, NU
electrical engineering
graduate from Omaha.
Dottie Hoe:el, Burr Hall,
sophomore in home
economics education from
Creston. to Ken Halvorsen,
; inior in agricultural educa
tion from Syracuse.
Janet Moran, Chi Omega
iuniorin dental hygiene from
.Lincoln, to Captain William
Laeder. 1968 NU College of
Dentistry graduate from
Omaha.
Christine Messinger, Smith
Hall junior in med tech from
ricCook. to Richard
1 oshbaugh, Triangle senior in
economics from McCook.
Joan McCullough, C h i
Omega senior in journalism
:rom Brady, to Dan Looker,
.Seta Theta Pi senior in
English from Lincoln.
Lynne Gorackc, Gamma
I'tii Beta sophomore in music
'mm Omaha, to Rod Johnsen,
'hi Gamma Delta senior in
'.. jsines from Omaha.
PINMNGS
Catherine Yearley,
iphomore in pre-nursing
. om Lincoln, to Steve Lucas,
.ilpha Gamma Rho senior in
i eachers College.
3ig Eight
Summary
Bl Eight standings
W L pts O. Pis.
.nsaa SI Hi 122
sonrl SI 1W SO
lhom 4 1 15 1S
.hR VSKA JIM 90
' 'ordo J 4 157 168
' lahoma State II 101 14
n. Stat IS 103 1
. HI Stale 1 110 222
Results Rtaurday
" "SHP.ASKA 22 Colorado
' Ishoma 28 Missouri 14
! as 38 Kansas State 29
I ishoma Suit 26 Iowa Suit 17
Game Next Saturday
BRASKA at Oklahoma
nsaa at Missouri
lahoma State at Kancaa tmm
I' mm
ustwm
KELP WANTED
C'lllege men. Parttime opnini. Call
today. 4 ( p.m. only! 432-8414.
3 -ammatlcal enrrectlnnal worker -ad
tvpit wanted. Christian preferred. For:
Mr Turtas. X1M "C" Street. 432-2207.
U p Wanted: Advertising Major Need
oineone to help compose mail-order
catalogues. Ix rim pie Hne drawings,
paste-ups. etc. Can work at roar ev.-a
envenie-re. Good starting salary.
Write C Man, P.O. Baa 1505 Lincoln.
Nebr. 88501.
e man. Part time opening. Call
'.'Jday. 44 pm. (iDJyl 432-8414.
10ST:
B''M spiral MM book containing philoso
pfay 10 aotes. Pleas call Gary, f77-7d.
l"'w textbook and whit spiral Bote book.
Eaflisa 181 British and America -i
Poetry. Hewsrd. Uav mess with
Rag eftlc. 472-2SM.
For Sole
1 "5 Chevrolet lineal, fuper Sport.
Yellow hardtop. Power stearin, B2J
automatic. 33,003 miles. One Aner.
Immaculate condition. SIJJ5.00. Eve
nings, 43V724S
Miscellaneous:
ErERA Jo.n ( Student Vet-
e ;mfc o fi-twa"f.i. N'-xl me-iiiiK No-
vntH-r .,(!, !t: nr. at American
I inn. Km "o".
Thursday
leukemia have survived five
years or longer.
TODAY, one in three
cancer patients is cured and
there are more than one
million Americans alive as
testimony to the fact that
cancer can be fought suc
cessfully. Great strides have been
made in treating cancer
through surgery, radiation
and chemotherapy. Surgery
can provide a permanent cure
if the cancer is removed
before it has a chance to
spread.
Chemotherapy, the treat
ment of cancer by drugs,
hormones, and chemicals is
used to diminish the size of
tumors that have spread
throughout the body. Direct x
rays to tumors also help con
trol the cancer.
ACS WORKS to educate the
public to the necessity of
treatment at the earliest in
dication of cancerous growth.
While cancer is fatal if un
treated or treated too late,
early cancer is among the
most curable " of . the major
causes of death.
The Society urges the public
'Teachers had dignity, watched
their personal conduct in the '20V
Continued from page 1
"Teachers have a light load
today, so that they may have
time to do research and
write," Patterson said. "The
amount of stuff turned out by
professors today is enormous,
but a good deal of it does not
amount to very much."
Too often faculty members
are promoted not on their
ability to teach but on how
much they publish, he said.
"MANY 'TEACHERS
publish a lot of books, receive
promotions, publicity and pay
increases but are rotten
Punts,
by Mark Gordon
Sports Editor
' It's a good thing the football
team's future doesn't depend
on this column's predictions,
since five out of nine games
this season have been missed.
But Saturday's game which
saw. Nebraska rise from the
nadir of last week's 12-0 loss to
lowly Kansas State to defeat
explosive Colorado 22-6 com
pletely amazed me.
HOW CAN a squad lose
decisively to an undermanned
Wildcat team and then re
bound with probably its finest
effort all year to clobber a
team led by the Big Eight's
best quarterback Bobby
Anderson?
Nebraska coach Bob
Devaney's seventh team now
stands 6-3 with a crack at last
year's Big Eight champion
Oklahoma Sooners Saturday
at Owen Field.
The Husker running and
passing game clicked Satur
day with 275 yards which is
quite an advancement from
last week's 146 yard offensive
production. But the key to the
victory was punting and punt
returning. Punter Joe
Armstrong and returner Guy
TUESDAY. NOV.
V A fry
'tt mk0M.j--rjtJf f J 11 I T 1 ,,i
PENNSYLVANIANS
IN CONCERT
rSAVtTIK ftCET BETTER SEATSlIvOfD LINES
IT.. at: a ' ' .J. l .... 1 U V...l, .. I,
uar nun in i viucu iwiiu iui juui mcvn w niuiiey uratr.
Prices:
U. C-I1W 42.S8
is my cbi k 3 nwin.-y ordrr i
( no. of fteatt i at $
for
Name-
City-
Please tnelo e a narrpei r'.' unYrnwrf fnrehnr for prompt tenter.
if. o. lo.x as li. ."Coi..., ivF.niiASivA r.- ii
Purchai Ticket. ' t . um B.i C lice, o-en Pa 'r 11 'TIL , Mil'tr &
C:w;.t-wn G. war. Imaseii Heat Divltion Recor Uudi Ouritti Stprs
to visit a doctor once a year.
Unfortunately, beginning
cancer produces no symptoms
obvious to the average in
dividual, and usually must be
diagnosed by a physician.
When a person goes to a
physician for a checkup, his
responsibility ends and the
doctor's begins. That is why
the Society undertakes a
comprehensive professional
education program to make
every doctor's office a cancer
detection center.
The society works with
medical associations to pro
vide films, exhibits,
brochures and booklets on
new methods for the treat
ment of cancer.
TO HELP cancer patients
and their families, ACS pro
vides counseling, loans, trans
portation and housekeeping
services. Service activities
are directed toward the eas
ing of mental and physical
suffering of the individual
patient.
Of the 100 forms of cancer,
six account for 60 per cent of
all cases. Cancer is a group of
diseases in which uncontroll
ed and disordered growth of
teachers," he said.
Patterson emphasized that
some research is necessary.
Some faculty members,
particularly on the Ag Cam
pus, do a grand job in
research, he said, but not
every teacher should feel
burdened to do so.
"Two of the best teachers I
have ever known were well
liked and respected but
because they published very
little, they were never pro
moted," he said.
PATTERSON FEELS that
the teaching profession had
returns key NU win
giMiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiimiHiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
I Re Marks I
Ingles showed Nebraska it is
possible to both kick and
catch.
ARMSTRONG, who kicked
two years ago for the Huskers
and should have been used
last year and this year as a
punter, booted seven times
for a 44-yard average while
Ingles provided Nebraska's
victory spark with a 62-yard
touchdown punt return. The
speedy Omaha W e s t s i d e
graduate returned five for a
total of 123 yards.
Neither team passed well.
The usually potent Colorado
hit on only 10-33 attempts but
credit a charging defense led
by ends Mike Wynn and
Sherwin Jarmon with most of
the underthrown or
overthrown tosses.
The NU defense looked
tremendous, but we question
if it can continue this
performance against Steve
26-8:00 P.M.
with the
3
Zm ChW
Pai e
Heuri.
abnormal cells, if unchecked,
will cause death. Cancer cells
grow in a disordered way and
produce useless tissue that
deprives normal cells of
nourishment. The cells grow
into surrounding tissue or are
carried to other parts of the
body by lymph and blood
vessels.
In spite of the advances, no
cure has been found for
cancer. An alteration in the
process of cell growth is
believed to be responsible for
the development of the
disease. When cancer cells
destroy a vital organ, they
cause death.
MANY PHYSICIANS and
scientists are convinced that
tobacco smoke contains
substances that cause lung
cancer. The American Cancer
Society's study of thousands
of people showed that lung
cancer rates increased
directly with the number of
cigarettes smoked.
Cancer strikes one in four
people. About thirty million
Wing Americans are now
marked for death by cancer
unless research finds new
means of preventing or curing
the disease.
more dignity in the 1920's
than now. Teachers watched
their personal conduct more
closely then there were
some things that were just not
done.
"I remember one faculty
member," Patterson said.
"Several students asked him
in for a beer, and he w a s
suspended for the year for the
infraction."
The teachers then were
more devoted, he said.
Salaries were poor so if a
man was teaching, it was
because he loved the pro
fession. Owens and company next
Saturday at Norman.
IF NEBRASKA'S offense
decides to rebound after an
anemic showing most of the
year and the defense can
bottle up OU quarterback Bob
Warmack and Eddie Hinton,
NU can better last year's 6-4
slate, which was Devaney's
worst season in Lincoln.
We're glad we missed on
our Colorado prediction. Let's
hope Nebraska can prove us
f
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. IKf)r ' etaapis
i- Sen - hve t wrlr
V - tso, .Xiug on.
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9 : j
SOMEWHERE SOMEONE IS WAITING TO
HEAR FROM YOU. WOULDN'T IT BE
QUICKER, EASIER, MORE ENJOYABLE JUST
TO PICK UP THE TELEPHONE AND DIAL
HOME DIRECT? (THRIFTY, TOOAT LOW
STATION RATES!)
The Lincoln Telephone and Telegraph Company
Campus
Calendar
NEBRASKA UNION
MONDAY, NOV. 18
12 Noon
College of Engineering and
Architecture Protege Pro
gram Luncheon
Chancellor's Luncheon
12:30 p.m.
Placement Luncheon
Ed Psych 162 Section 9
3:30 p.m.
Union Trips and Tours Com
mittee
4:30 p.m.
Tassels
AWS Sorority Court
6:30 p.m.
YWCA Advisory Board Din
ner
7 p.m.
UNICORNS
7:30 p.m.
Mathematics Counselors
8 p.m.
Students for Peace and Free
dom 9 p.m.
Afro-American Collegiate So
ciety EAST UNION
4 p.m.
Contemporary Arts Commit
tee NEBRASKA UNION
TUESDAY, NOV. 19
4 p.m.
Special Events Committee
4:30 p.m.
Builders Trs.
5 p.m.
Union Program Council
(Exec.)
7 p.m.
Union Program Council
(Board)
8 p.m.
Ag Econ Club
wrong for the sixth time at
Owen Field where Devaney
has never won.
INTRAMURAL NOTES
If University Intramural
Director Joel Meier thinks he
has crowded conditions at
NU, listen to the University of
Illinois student paper report
on Illinois' intramural situa
tion. Last year 219 football-
teams will jump to 270 squads
while 1967's 167 basketball
teams will increase to 258
contingents.
NEBRASKA students
purchasing a $5.25 All-Sports
Ticket at the Coliseum Ticket
Office can use the ticket to
watch the NU varsity-
freshmen basketball match at
7:35 p.m. Friday in the Col
iseum. "
S-i .. . ji
r' frees. 4 j
cle now, "
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Winning over McCook
Frosh finish second
perfect grid season
Nebraska's freshman foot
ball team completed its se
cond consecutive undefeated
season with a 43-6 trouncing
of McCook Junior College at
McCook Friday night as
Coach Cletus Fischer heaped
praise on his yearlings.
"After beating McCook so
handily when they were
ranked" (The Indians were
19th among the nation's small
college teams), he said, "we
knew we had a better team
than we had thought before."
FISCHER ADDED that the
squad, unlike the past three
victories, had to surge from a
6-0 deficit to a 35-6 halftime
lead as the team won its tenth
straight game since a 13-12
loss to Missouri in 1966.
He said this year's squad
threw the ball more which
enabled it to roll up 154 points
for a 38.5 game average while
an improved defense limited
foes to only 34 points or 8.2
points per match. Fischer
noted that graduate assistants
Barry Aivaic: who worked
with the defensive linebackers
and Marv Mueller, who aided
the defensive backs, were key
factors in the stingy defense.
Although Fischer could not
mention specific players who
might move into 1969 varsity
positions he said possibly
more players than ever from
Bowling results
Results from last week's
Nebraska Union student and
faculty bowling leagues:
Students (high games)
Bob Fillaus 233; Dick Rima
232; Mike Schroeder 222; Bob
Coble 210; Harry Grebe 210;
Bob Leavitt 203; Joe Baker
201; John Behrens 201; Dick
Schuessler 200. High series
Bob Fillaus 593; John Behr
ens 568; Steve Nye 566; Harry
Grebe 554.
Faculty (high games)
Steve Sandelin 214; Chuck
Koopman 201 and Milan Frey
193. High series Steve San
delin 393; Richard Grace 368
and Milan Frey 365.
Jf V laftiriTriilff
SOUTH ATLANTIC BLUES
scon rACAN
SOUTH ATLANTIC BLUES
Atct SO 33 267
- -
fcEASURSEOF-
tlfesaay
P.F.SLOAK
MEASURE OF PLEASURE
Atct SO 33 2S8
rry ra y
3 SsslfVaa w-
rI 1 i L
'irf:i
STEVE MARCUS
COUNT'S ROCK BAND
V.(Ui20Q9
Atlantic
a freshmen team could ad
vance in the NU system.
"THERE SEEMED to bo
more leaders in this group
than what we have had for a
long time," the coach said.
"We had some fine young
men who worked real hard in
practice."
Besides starting
quarterback Van Brownson,
who established several in
dividual records, two other
quarterbacks aided the profi-
Husker
Summary
Nebraska 12 S 7 022
Colorado 0 0 6 0 6
Nebraska, Orriima 8 run. Kick failed.
Nebraska, lnlei 62 punt return. Pass
failed.
Nebraska, KG Rogers 46.
Nebi-H.Hka, Ordtina 1 run Roger kick.
Colorado, Engel 3 run. Run failed
Statlsllm Neb. Celo.
Kirst downs , 17 18
Total yarduu 575 2:19
Rushing yardage 228 172
Passing yardag 47 67
Return yardage 146 42
Passes 6-12 10-33
Intercepted by 1 1
Punts 7-44 4-41
Fumbles Inst 2 1
Yards penalized 40 14
in uric
11BD"
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1 1
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MR. BOIANGI.ES
Atct SO 33 259
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cient offense which net
numerous team peaks. Jerry
Tagge and Harold Osberg will
join varsity quarterbacks this
spring for a crack at next
fall's starting berth, Fischer
said.
"But after spring ball, some
decisions will have to be
made," he added. "The
players and coaches will have
to make up their minds which
positions they can play best."
He said some of the
quarterbacks may be
withheld from competition for
a year or others could be
switched to other positions to
alleviate the abundance of
quarterbacks.
McCook game summary :
Nehraska Frosh
MrOmk
McCook, Mel Tarpley,
u 21 s
-
24 ran. Run
tanea.
Nebraska, Dave Mason. II pass front
Van Brownson. Kick failed.
Nebraska, Jim Branch. 46 fnmbks re
covery Phil Harvey kick
Nebraska, Jeff Hughes, 1 ran. Jeff
Kinney run.
Nebraska. Kinney 4 run. Harvey kick,
Nebraska. Brownson, 2 run. Harvey
kick.
Nebraska, Nate McKinney, pass from
Tagge. Ron Hinckey pass from Osberg
FROSH season summary:
Nebraska 40, Missouri 21
Nebraska 42, Iowa State 7
Nebraska 29, Kansas Stat t
Nebraska 43, McCook JC 6
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N.Y. 10023
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