1 ' PAGE 4 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1969 . 5 'J 1 AS r ' If f 'if 8 . 3 ,5 ft : Coeds sing, dance and Charing House involves continued from page 3 , Meade began colege intending to enter social work, but now he believes he can be of more service to society as a teacher. "What knowledge I have gained through my University studies isn't any more important than what I have learned working with these kids," ac , cording to Mike Milot, a junior. Milot is chairman of the Navajo Home- committee, which works with children at the Mesa Vista Sanitorium In Boulder. The children in the senitorium are recovering from tuberculosis, the result of a life of poverty and neglect. MILOT and two other students became involved with an entire family of Navajo children. They saw the con ditions under which the children lived on the reservation, and they knew of the children's background. Their experiences led one of the CU students to seek and get legal custody of the four children. "It takes a lot of work," said Milot. He added, "When you take these kids from inside to the sanitorium and get them outside and play with them and take them on hikes, it makes you a god in their eyes." The CU junior romps on the sanitorium grounds with the kids to day, and the love between them is evident. But Milot said it wasn't always like this. MILOT RECALLED, "I have gotten angry and wanted to hit them. But Outstanding, coed interviews on Thursday ideal Nebraska Coed and Outstanding Collegiate Man interviews will be held Thursday night in the Nebraska Union. Room , numbers will be posted. Finalists for Ideal Coed and interview times are: Diane Theisen, 7:30; Jane ;; Sitorius, -7:40; Christie Schwartzkopf, 7:50; Barb Ramsey, 8:00; Jan McGill, 8:10; Mary Lund, 8:20; u Susan Deitemeyer, 8:30; Cricket Black, 8:40. ' Outstanding Collegiate Man finalists and interview times are: Joe Voboril, 7:30; Randy Reeves, 7:40; Bill '. Mobley, 7:50; Dave Landis, 8:00; John Heil, 3:10; Terry : Grasmick, 8:20; Dan Goodenberger, 8:30; Dave w Buntain, 8:40. The Ideal Coed and 1 Outstanding Collegiate Man will be announced at Coed v, Follies, Feb. 28 at Pershing Auditorium. 14 T H AMU Paxton Quigley is i prisoner of love... and completely s exhausted' JC'' Mr. Mis Mr. ( j A t v V.!-ifT! v..; jf It v mime in preparation for Coed Follies February 28. then I stopped and thought, 'Is this the right thing to do?' The Indian culture is very passive and very pa tient, and it takes a lot of patience to work with them. "They can say things that really hurt you, and you say to yourself, 'I'm a failure.' But they really love you." Milot said he had been working with Exchange dinners begin Mon. in dorms Students in dormitories will be able to eat meals in halls other than their own beginning Monday, according to Theresa Sledge, chairman of the IDA social exchange subcommittee. The new program will allow up to 30 people to eat lunch and dinner Monday through Friday and Sunday noon as a guests in another dormitory, she said. DURING INTERNATIONAL Week, Feb. 28-Mar. 4, the cafeterias will be serving the foods of a foreign country one day of the week. By participating in this exchange program, students can sample the foods from several countries, Miss Sledge said. This pro gram will also enable students to hold organization meetings during meal times. The dinner exchange and recently initiated continental breakfast are part of a plan by the IDA subcom mittee to make meals more enjoyable for students in the dormitories. World Campus Afloat, is a college that does more than broaden horizons. It sails to them and beyond. Once again, beginning in October of 1969, the World Campus Afloat program of Chapman College and Associated Colleges and Universities will take qualified students, faculty and staff into the world laboratory. In-port programs relevant to fully-accredited coursework taught aboard ship add the dimension of personal experience to formal learning. Classes are held six days a week at sea aboard the s.s. Ryndam which has been equipped with classrooms, laboratories, library, student union, dining room and dormitories. Chapman College now Is accepting applica tions for the Fall and Spring semesters of the 1969-70 academic year. Fall semesters depart New York for ports in Western Europe and the Mediterranean, Africa and South America, ending in lLos Angeles. Spring semesters circle the world from Los Angeles through the Orient, India and South Africa to New York. For a catalog and other information, complete and mail the coupon below. SAFETY INFORMATION: The s.s. Ryndam, registered in The Netherlands, meets International Safety Standards for new ships developed in 1948 and meets 1966 fire safety requirements. WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT Director of Admissions Chapman College, Orange, Calif. 92663 Please send your catalog and any SCHOOL INFORMATION Last Nam First Initial Nam of School Campua Addr Strt - "City ' Stat Zip . Campua Prion ( ) - ' Aia Cod . . Year in School Approx. GPA on 4.0 Seal l. ..a... ....... ... .......i Growth resource (I.P.) The nation will have to utilize fully all its available educa tional resources to take care of the growing number of yoimg people who want to attend college. This was the warning recently of Dr. William H. McLean, secretary of the Sevens Institute of Technology in Castle Point, N.J. Dr. McLean predict ed that 41 per cent of the college-age population in New Jersey will be at . tending full time college in 1980. This compares with 30 per cent who attend in 1968. The college-age population of the nation is expected to increase by one third between 1968 and 1980 from 12.9 million to 17.1 million and in New Jersey by 38 per cent from 402,000 to 556,000. To meet the nation's higher educa tional needs, said Dr. McLean, "we shall have to utilize fully all our avail able resources, both public and pri vate." DR McLEAN said he was particular ly concerned with a "basic, funda mental question, the very survival of independent higher education. The problem," he said, "lies in the area of cost. Construction costs for new buildings have risen to new levels. "Operating expenses have increased as more students have come on to the campus and for longer periods of time. With the tremendous growth in new knowledge, books have be students in social work one Indian boy on a soap box derby car for a long time, showing him how to save money and conserve materials in an attempt to get him interested in school. Milot thought he was not getting through to him; then, one night as Milot was leaving the sanitorium, the youngster called out, "Hey, Mike. You know, you are my best friend." Miss Arndt said, "Success (in Clearing House) is measured by the amount of knowledge the volunteers have gained, as well as the amount they have taught." THE CU organizatiin is operated solely by students, through an ex ecutive board of the committee chairmen, Meade and associate director Gwen Davis. , Meade said the most effective pro grams are the Navajo Home, the Juvenile Court Tutoring program, and SHOWER PROBLEMS? The Unusual Gift Will Cost You Less NOW HALF-PRICE CLEARANCE SALE AT INTERIORS DIVERSIFIED 1230 South St. 432-8852 Art student Leant Leach ot Long Beach sketches ruins ot once-burled city during World Campus Afloat visit to Istanbul. other facts I need to know. NOME INFORMATION Horn Addroaa SU..I Citr Horn Pnon ( Tfal "Zip" L Arc Cod Until Info should b nt to campua horn O approx. data lamlntmstd1nOF'l Sprlnstl 1 I would Ilk to talk to a mpicwntatlv of WORLD CAMPUS AFLOAT WCA-22 forces full utilization come obsolete much faster and li brary size has grown enormously. "Laboratory equipment has to be more sophisticated to deal with ad vanced technologies. And faculty sal aries, which account for half or more of a typical college budget, have had to be raised to attract and keep good professors, and to permit them to meet the rising cost of living." Coed grad student receives scholarship to study transplants Donna Siekmsr-a, a University graduate student, has received a two hundred dollar scholarship from AWS for further study of medical trans plants at the National Institute of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. Miss Siekmann will return later to the University to experiment. She hopes to perform graft operations on mice in such a way that their bodies will not reject the new organ. Up to now, new organs have been rejected because the body recognizes them as foreign. Cortisone and other drugs have been used to supress im munization. It was discovered that animals died of infection, not the transplant, because they had no im munity. Miss Siekman hopes to rem edy this. She leaves in early April for Maryland. the DeMarc Home for Girls, part of the Evergreen Girls Ranch. The DeMarc Home includes many girls who have had social adjustment prob lems. Meade said the Navajo Home is popular with CU volunteers because of the contact with another culture. The other programs, Meade said, at tract student attention because of the challenges they present. The" Clearing House programs in clude Mental Health, Follow Through, the Navajo Home, Boulder Welfare, Adult Education, Physical Educaton for the Retarded, Juvenile Court Turoing, the North Broadway Center in Boulder, secondary school tutoring, Lads Without Dads, elementary school tutoring, Head Start, and the Title I program for children with academic and emotional problems. n n y mtm tmm mliur warn mWm tu'itf tsm mm B> li$tt liW'iMl f? -n n n no i 11 ft i. jmmmFm TWA tation w Mirers It'll give you It's TWA's 5050 Club Card. And if you're skiing, fly swimming, fly home, fly anywhera U... 4.1 ' f J f 5. av! a . mTIt a between the ages of 1 2 and 2 1 , it entitles you to fly TWA anywhere in the United States at half -fare (and it's good for discounts on most other airlines too). Now's the time to get one, so you can take off on your spring vacation. Fly M Nn hi THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20 events in the Nebraska Union unless otherwise indicated.) (All 12:00 p.m. Natural Gas Pipeline Co. of America Tri University Project Wesley Foundation Emeriti Association 12:30 p.m. Placement Lunpheon College of Engineering & Architecture Luncheon 2:00 p.m. Economics & Management Industrial Revolution-Prof. Dept.. R. M. Hartwell 2:30 p.m. Builders-Calendar & Directory 3:00 p.m. Union Contemporary Arts Committee People to People 3:30 p.m. American Marketing Club YWCA-Juvenile Court Student Publications Board Union Talks & Topics-George Plimpton, speaker 4:00 p.m. Nebraska Union-Special Events 4:30 p.m. SDS YWCA-Tutorial Committee 5:30 p.m. Graduate Counseling Fraternity 6:00 p.m. Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia AWS-Outstanding Collegiate Man in terviews AWS-Ideal Neb. Coed interviews AUF-Executive Committee 8:30 p.m. Wesley Foundation 7:00 p.m. AUF Board Baptist Student Union Pi Lambda Theta Quiz Bowl Quiz Bowl-Isolation YWCA-Cultural Crafts 7:30 p.m. University Dames Young Democrats Free University Sigma Alpha Eta Math Counselors 8:00 p.m. Greek Week Committee LTD RHRd HI HB YOUTHFARt CARD ' rCf AC 5 12 7m 35 !.Hiif iJbl tOJiflivSJ ICC T&ii Identification card entitles member to purchase transpor self only, subject to conditions on reverse sfae. tf i y tV?- i f nil, . - :T ' State ZtpCodt :4jemaeC HairColorQ Eye Color J&fL a great trip on your spring vocation TWA flies just about everywhere. See vour travel agent, TWA Campus Representative or stop by the local TWA office. Forget about classwork and fly TWA somewhere at half fare. Even if your parents approve. 871 th things we'll do to moke you ftappjt Government, reform program topics A centennial program and panel discussion will be presented by Pi Sigma Alpha on Feb. 27 at 7:30 p.m. In the Nebraska Union, according to participant Tom Briggs. A panel consisting of Briggs, Wayne Hanway and Laurie Gerdis will pre sent papers written by students last semester on student government and university reform. The program will be coordinatel with the centennial as discussion will center on plans for the next 100 years, rather than past accomplish ments. Ideas arising from the discussion will be offered for the ASUN consti tutional convention. Topics will include: the University as a producer of marketable goods for government and industry; prob lems of participatory democracy; ad ministrative limitations on decision making by university students and the value of confrontation politics. Enrollment count shows increases A preliminary report on the enroll ment for second semester shows that 28,118 students are enrolled on all campuses of the University. This compares with the total of 25,884 a year ago, according to University spokesmen. Lincoln campus enrollment is 17.- 416; Omaha campus is 10,010 and the Medical Center at Omaha is 692. TEACHERS COLLEGE leads Lin coin campus enrollment with 3,912 students followed by arts and sciences with 3,817 students. Law School leads the professional category with 267 of the 743 enrolled Graduate Students total 2,489. Continuing Studies program leads enrollment on the Omaha campus with 2,432 students enrolled. Offult AFB personnel account for 390 of the Omaha tally. The Omaha break down between fulltime and part-time students is 5,194 to 4,816 respectively. 1 q no urn ns0Pm irDETDTD oo CO- oo . IF JUU