PAGE 6 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1969 "i t.'A ' ' it t I if - "if 'I Students select three for professor award Three University faculty members have been named finalists for the Outstanding Student Professorship Award. They are: Mrs. Dorcas Cavett, assistant professor of elementary education in Teachers College. Dr. Keith W. Pritchard, associate professor of history Go Red Big and philosophy of education in Teachers College. George E. Wolf, assistant "WW Dorcas Cavett professor of English in the College of Arts and Sciences. All University students will have an opportunity to vote for one of the finalists in an election to be held ih conjunc tion with the Homecoming Queen election Nov. 5. The re cipient of the Outstanding Stu dent Professorship Award and a $500 stipend will be named at the Honors Convo cation in April. Finalists for the award were selected from nomina tions by all campus living units, according to Sue Lut ton, chairman of the Student Professorship Committee for Builders. L Cl 'Blacks wanted t o be like whites' George Wolf Keith Prichard KOSMET KLUB Fall Show This Saturday 8 P.M. Pershing Tickets now on sale at the Union and at Pershing Auditorium $1.73 Plays wherever you play LEAR JET STEREO 3 TP P-550 only $69.95 No matter where you are on land, sea, or in the air you can throw a party for your ears with this Lear Jet Stereo 8 portable. Listen to true stereo music even while you're carrying it. Or when you're not moving from place to place, separate the second speaker for wide angle stereo. Automatic track changer and illuminated program indicators. Powered by flashlight batteries or reg ular household current. Tune in now at: cuu Municipal Airport Lincoln, Xtbraxka HOI) i:U-6tii7 Picture Ithe world through the eyes of Rat Sky. (DHL Q g UUIL Patrick Sky sings about the world he sees. And with a poet's touch, he writes his songs. They're here in Photographs, a sensi tive new album that sheds light on Now. You'll understand. jaisnv V . I W'' V.J, mwmsk ' b Mnfiirum i FTS-3079 1 FORECAST) jF VrForci Recorda Vf la a dlvl.ion ol Matro-Ooldwya-Mijer Ino. If you're tired of using two or more separate so lutions to take care of your contact lenses, we have the solution. It's Lensine the all-purpose lens solution for com plete contact lens care preparing, cleaning, and soaking. Just a drop or twoof Lensine before you insert your contacts coats and lubricates the lens surface making it smooth er and non-irritating. Cleaning your contacts with Lensine retards the buildup of foreign de posits on the lenses. Lensine is sterile, self sanitizing, and antisep tic making it ideal for storage of your lenses oetween wearing periods. And you get a removable storage case on the bot tom of every bottle, a Lensine exclusive for proper lens hygiene. It has been demonstrated Bacteria cannot grow in Lensine. Caring for con tact lenses can be as con venient as wearing them with Lensine, from th Murine Company, Inc. that improper storage between wearings may result in the growth of bacteria on the lenses. Thisisasurecauseofeye irritation and could seri ously endanger vision. mm Continued from page 5 hardships they had known would decrease," he said. "Blacks were accepting the notion that they were responsible for their own op pression," he continued. "That their problem was that they were black and that if they could change that or camouflage that, everything would be okay." He said black students in 1960 thought the solution was mass intermarriage. "They all forgot to talk about the basis of racial op pression which is society, period," he charges. "Suddenly they began to Commission coordinator Richard J. Raecke has been appointed by the Ne braska Educational Televi sion Commission to the newly-created post of network education coordinator. Raecke's principle assign ment will be "to serve as liason between the commis sion, the various instruction al program agencies and the State Department of Educa tion." He also will have ad ditional duties in the areas of scheduling, utilization and research. Raecke has been active in Nebraska education since receiving his Bachelor of Science degree in education from the University of Ne braska in 1954. say not only were blacks culturally negated, but that there was also a question of power," Turner said. "They saw that tne major problem in this country is not just in dividual discrimination, but it is systematic, institutional, economic exploitation and political manipulation." "Blacks wanted to be like whites," Turner said. "It used to be a great compli ment to a black man to say to him 'I don't even notice that you're colored when I'm talking to you.' Today the black man doesn't know if he wants to be invisible." Blacks are beginning to wonder if what whites have to offer them is work while according to Turner. Blacks are questioning just why white culture is supposedly the best. He compared the creativity of black jazzmen improvising constantly to white sym phonies endlessly repeating themselves, as an example of the new attitude towanl cultures. "In a highly utilitarian society like America, nothing ASUN interviews Interviews for ASUN staff positions will be held Thurs day, Nov. 6. Four or five students will be selected for secretarial duties while 35 to 40 will be selected to serve on the committee of their choice. Interested students should sign up in room 335 under the committee title they are interested in. remains unless it has some utility," Turner said. "The ghetto has historically been a base for cheap labor, soldiers and cannon fodder during war and a source of enter tainment for whites during peacetime." He added that "ghettos are not ghettos, they're reserved areas. They are not there as a factor of economic discrim ination but of economic de pendence." The most serious discrep ancy he said, was that though the Blacks are the oldest minority group of im migrants, they own the leas' land. Turner added, "Not only are we landless, but are 99rV an open market, 99 con sumers. We are completely economically dependant. "Black people are beginn ing to understand that in tegration is not liberation. Liberation means control, and speaks of power. "Blacks talk about the st ruggle for self-determination, which means independence. And independence for Black people me ans, fun damentally, control over areas in which they live." Meaning of campus unrest not realized Tidewater, Va. (CPS) Dr. Jerome ("Brud") Holland has resigned as president of Virginia's black Hampton Institute with an angry blast at student rebels. Accusing them of "demagogery and-or facist that "neither the public nor many of the public leaders are aware of the dangerous significance of the current campus unrest." Last April, over 1,000 students seized the Hampton administration building and closed down the school for four days. One of their demands was the ouster of Holland. The black school, where most noted alumnis is Booker T. Washington, has been headed by Holland for the past decade. Holland's resignation came as a complete surprise, even to his top administrators. It was announced not through the regular college channels, but through the local new media. The student newspa per accepted the announce ment with "no regret." The Hampton student government wired the trustees and demanded a voice in the selection of a new president. They also suggested that Holland's resignation be accepted im mediately, rather than "on or before June .30, 1970" as was intended by Holland. 1 ."f 4 hi v sJvufcis m(( v lr c The lampyridae beetle family. Delight of small boys. Biological light bulb. And prime source of raw material for another Du Pont innovation. Luciferase, an enzymatic protein with intriguing properties, obtain able only from fireflies. Luciferin, an organic molecule also found in fireflies, but synthesizable. Adeno sine triphosphate (ATP), a common energy-yielding substance found in all living cells. Those are the three main ingre dients in lampyridae's love light. And because ATP is common to all living cells, university researchers discovered they could produce an artificial glow by mixing luciferin and luciferase wherever life is present. Noting that phenomenon, Du Pont scientists and engineers went on to develop it into a practical ana lytical system. Correlating the in tensity of the artificial "glow" with the amount of ATP present in bacteria, they designed a means of measuring the reaction. The result is the luminescence biometer the first really basic im provement in bacteria-counting methods since the time of Louis Pasteur. Rather than waiting days for a culture to demonstrate growth density, a doctor or technician can now get a digital readout of bacteria concentration inamatterof minutes.' Other potentially lifesaving uses for the biometer are being sug gested every day such as diagnos ing metabolic rates, enzyme d9r ficiencies and nerve damage.- Innovation applying the known to discover the unknown, inventing new materials and putting them to work, using research and engineer-l ing to create the ideas and products of the future this Is the venture Du Pont people are engaged in. You can become one of them,, and advance professionally in your' chosen field. See your Du Pont' Recruiter. 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