1 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1969 'Soul music 9 is theme of jazz The growing Interest In black studies has brought about a change in the music depart ment at the University. "Insight Into American Jazz will give insight into the entire role of black people," said Ilobert Bcadcll, who will In struct Music 187, the History of a new Black-oriented course. "The history of Jazz is tiad up with the Black man," Beadell continued. "We'd like to cover jazz from its pre history, with emphasis on the black man's social and economic status, then take styles and key soloists and groups, and take It right up through rock music today." Beadell, whose background In jazz began when he played with some of the "Big Bands." most notably Ray Anthony's band in New York, believes the new course will be of real value for the younger student not acquainted with jazz. "It's, a new language language African In origin which grew when the blackj brought it to America," he said. Two of the major books used In the course will be Blue) People and Black Music, both by Leroi Jones, anationallv known black playwright, pot and social critic. His books, said Beadell, give an in-depth (EtatfteiiH Hams Offered GOOD CARS, IjOW PKlCli 5 Chvy, V4 automatic I J J 41 Ford Wagon i '41 Comet V- automatic t ri a Chaw II Convertible I W 3 Alpha Romeo "$ '43 Ford Wagon VI t TO 44 Pontlac Tempest Wagon I TO 44 Impala. SS. 327 I TO 65 MOB Roadster II.09S ai Oldi Star Fire $1,493 '66 Old! Otlta N l.45 ' Volkswagen bug $I.JvJ '61 Dodge, hardtop II. MS '4 LeMans, hardtop, air $2,TO Opan Eves & Weekends All Cart Inside 9TH STRKET AUTO SALES Ol-W) 420 No. tth 435-77U Repossessed 144 Bandmaster-fender am pullar and control ut, two 19; New- comb speakers. A bargain at $250. Nebraska Teachers Credit Union, 605 South 14th, Room 201 Phone 432-1051 '62 Austin Healy JOOO. Inspected, runs well, some Body damage. 15M 423-0417 alter ? p.m. I track. Mark VIII, RCA Stereo, two weens old. Retail I14.l for 173.00. A new 4-a track stereo player tor car, ijees retail value, for 170.00, call 4-6j alter t:00. Part time work for men 11:30 a.m. 100 p.m.. s p.m. l midnight can be eoiutted to schedule, call 432-iom. COMES THE REVOLUTION CU7379M BLUES IS BACK AND THE REVOLUTIONARY BLUES BAND IS LEADING THE WAY. ROCK-BLUEST SURE! DIG IT. GET IN STEP WITH THESE YOUNG SPIRITED ACTIVISTS. THE REVOLU TIONARY BLUES BAND NO GIMMICKS -JUST SOME OF THE BEST NEW SOUNDS AROUND TODAY. INCRCOIIlt NIW IXCITImlNT OH DKCA RCCOROt Hey Christian do jour tiling. BACK TO GOO TRACT TEAM H50 KalomnJO Avk, I t. Qrend Napkts, Mich. 4SSC4 Heln urae.ii the) Wa'e!. Send sample of cartoon woapol tracts that really turn on lre "No tterterauon." 'l:.i..A--:..r'M' r V view of music from the black's view. The course has also been allotted funds which will be used to bring a black visitor lecturer, David Baker, here March 19 and 20. Dr.Koefootf files for NU Regent Dr. Robert Koefoot, a Grand Island physician has filed for the District 6 position on the University of Nebraska Board of Regents. Dr. Koefoot has run unsuc cessfully for the regent position which is now held by Robert Raun of Minden. The District 6 post was created by the 1969 Legislature and the term Is for six years. Dr. Koefoot is a native of Broken Bow and graduated from the University of Nebras ka In 1954. After receiving his medical degree In 1947 he served in the Army. In 1954 he moved to Grand Island and is now serving his second term on the Grand Island Board of Education. "mLSi! lw".ro"t Epiphone electric guitar with case. Contact Tim pnonte '"' N""' New guitar for sale, call 475-1283. Record your favorite songs In stereo el one third o original price. Stereo cassettes cheap, 435-2512. Help Wanted Can you work part time four evenings weekly, do you have a car and need to earn over 1100 weekly? Leading local photography studio has this lob opportunity. Wanted: full-time desk clerk 3-11 p.m. J daytwtc. No experience necessary. Apply In person Clayton House Motel, 10th 0 SI. Waitresses wanted to work part or full time 11:00 a.m. to J X p.m. No ex perience necessary. Will train. Apply In person Clark Kotrons. Lincoln Uni versity Club, llth floor. Stuart Bldg., Uth 1 P St. Expert typist reasonable last, thesis, term papers. Pat Owen 423-2000. Personals Interested - forming Conservative A y n Rand discussionresearch group? Con tact SOI South II Apt. 301. Olrl to share apartment. Rent tree In ex change lor Dabv sitting. 10:30 pm-7:J0 amnlghtsw Co.. U, OnlveCty Roommate to share two-bed room hove. Near East campus. Phone 4t-3Mv. Alterations coat hems SI JO; cuffed pants si.w. (.an evenings 4H-44M. I'll bet you never thought It was poa- s'oie, a proven meinoa which makes taking tests easyl Send today: Belter Speech. Oept. 81, em N, Montlcello, Chicago, Illinois. 4062s. 3t A. OL WITH THE BAND PLAYING FRIDAY FROM 3:30 to 6:00 AT SORRY NO MINORS Ho iCnaf PRESENTS -JOHN WALKER GUITARIST SINGER PLAYING FROM 9:00-12:00 FRIDAY central course Baker is head of Jazz studies at the University of Indiana and is very active in the total area of Black Music. Key figures the three-hour course will concentrate on In clude Count Basle, Louis Armstrong, Bennie Goodman, Charlie Parker, and Miles Davis. Blood, Sweat and Tears and the Beatles will also be studied, Beadell added. A great deal of the course will be listening, said Beade'l. The class will be held In the choral rehearsal, so there will be room for large musical groups to perform for the class. Thursday, Nov. 20 Nebraska Union 9:30 a.m.-S p.m. YWCA Christmas Bazaar 12:30 p.m. University Food Service Luncheon Placement 1 p.m Young Democrats-Robert Kennedy Film 2 p.m. Beta Gamma Sigma 3 p.m. , Free University-Personal Development Lab 3:30 p.m. Hyde Park 4 p.m. Builders-Culture 4:30 p.m YWCA Cabinet YWCA Head Start 6 p.m. Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia AUF Exec. 6:30 p.m. AUF Board Theta Sigma Phi Christian Science Org. 7 p.m Siema Alpha Eta NU Accounting Assn. NU Chess Hub ASUN-Human Rights Dept. of Romance Language "Dr. Cvril Jones" Quiz Bowl Isolation 7:30 p.m. Math Counselors 8 p.m. NHRRF-Teen Age Project Bus. Ad. Advisory Board . , ifaJes Scheduled' The Reader's Theater will present an interpretative read ing of Chaucer's Canterbury Tales Thursday and Friday at 8:00 p.m. It will be held in Rm. 201 of the Temple Bldg. THE DAILY r gv f , . TV v. J v.- ' V A jl 1)) " -f "VV! . i New dimension added to psych study Psychology training, which considers both the Individual and his environment, characterizes the clinical psychology training program at the University of Nebraska. A new University Psychology Clinic, just completed this full, is a laboratory for students in the program, according to Dr. James K. Cole, program director. Consultation rooms in the clinic are equipped with closed circuit television cameras and recording ap paratus. Graduate students are thus allowed to record consultations on video tape and play them back for later analysis, Cole said. Use of the video tape equipment also facilitates classroom presentations. "This equipment adds a new dimension of visual variables to student research work," 51rr ICiutf PRESESTS THE SPINNING WHEEL PLAYING THUR., FRIDAY & SATURDAY FROM 9:00-12:00 HAVE A HAPPY TIME ON THE MINI-LINE , 1 1 1 1 ii tU 1) 1? Route detour during construction work on K and L streets UN M "" '" " t mi s 1 1 NEBRASKAN Nebreskan photo by Jim Dean Cole said. "The program emphasizes student work in research and professional projects under faculty supervision," he con tinued. "Parallel training in research and professional aspects of psychology are considered throughout the program." Cole said that for this reason, formal classes and seminars are secondary to practical work. The faculty has a ver cl s I ion wiih the students, he, added. . Each student in the program studies community clinical psychology, he continued. "This is psychology which focuses on the individual while also taking into account those forces of society which affect him. "The student must become an expert in understanding Departures Every 5 Minutes, Monday thru Friday 9AM -6PM FARE: 10t i I Ljf ,, 0 I L a. I m 1) 14 Tiemann calls for more by Carol Anderson Nebraskan Staff Writer Governor Norbert Tiemann said Tuesday night that ASUN should work with the governor in hammering out the University of Nebraska budget instead of going to the legislature after the budget has been drafted. "I am aware of the treat ment some of you received before the legislative com mittees and it was not good," Tiemann told a student au dience in the main lounge of Harper Hall. The fate of future library construction is in the hands of the State Supreme Court, the Governor continued, and added that the library budget contains four million dollars more than was originally pro posed. In answer to a question about his veto of a new home economics building, Tiemann said, "I realize the need, but there are priorities. The home ec people say their building has termites. They had termites when I went here, but the Beatrice State Home has pro blems too." If the Republican party re jects him in the primaries in his bid for a second term in the governor's mansion, Tiemann said, "I'll go back to the banking business and make a lot of money." Carpenter Asked if he thought Senator Terry Carpenter would run against him, the Governor replied, "No, he hasn't got the guts to run against anybody. Referring to the Scottsbluff senator as "that distinguished old gentleman from the far west" Tiemann said, "Terry human behavior and pro blems," he said. "He must learn how a person is affected by his environment and how he, in turn, affects the en vironment." He added that this differs from other forms of psychology training in that it does not concentrate on just the Individual or just his en vironment. Cole pointed out that while an individual lives in a society, he is affected by only a small part of it. The community clinical psychologist studies an aspects of his environment that directly affect him, Cole said. Research and clinical training parallel one another in the program, he continued. During the first year, the pro gram emphasizes a core pro gram in general psychology, research methodology and statistics. Beginning In the second HENRY'S THANKSGIVING COUPON FOR A G00O Sc COFFEE, TEA, OR COKE Henry's Place 1123 TV VOID AFTKR t l-27-i RANGER II Hen's the baby for family funl Up to 12 HP gives you all the power you need to keep tht family cheering. We've doubled tht fuel co- fiacity to keep you going onger without refueling. The Ranger II is easy to handle, too. Weighs only 286 lbs. Skims along on an endless 12" molded rubber track with sno-grip tread. 61. SPORTS! Siip!SiH JiUHTED teamwork says 'if I were governor I'd do exactly as Tiemann does' and that frightens me." Tiemann described his feud with the legislature as an attempt to shift power back to the executive which has been lost by what he called weak past administrations. "The executive branch must be able to say how money is to be spent or else we are all employees of the legislature, and there will be only two branches of govern ment," he said. Students questioned Tiemann on a spectrum of topics. On President N I x o n ' i November 3 speech: "You just can't walk out and abandon Southeast Asia to the com munists. I don't know any more than you know about it. I may be having a gut reaction to it. I don't know what the solution to the war is. It may be another Korea, but I'm convinced that the President is trying to end the war as quickly as he can and honorably." Although the war may have been a mistake four and one half years ago, "We just can't walk out," Tiemann em phasized, "now that the United States is there." Harper student assistant Bill Fink didn't buy this reasoning, but Tiemann insisted it was valid saying, "Do you want to arm-wrestle about it?" Later Fink said he still disagrees with the Governor, but feels "he's the best Governor we've had." Moratorium On the Moratorium: Tiemann criticized those who oppose the President for not offering any solutions. A stu dent disagreed saying that pulling out of Vietnam was a semester of the first year, the students are exposed to clinical work, Cole said. After this time individual responsibility for research and professional projects increases. During the student's third year, he takes an Internship in a psychology clinic away from the University, he con tinued. After the internship, the student returns to the University and works in devel oping his special interests. Research training takes place at the same time as professional training, Dr. Cole said. "In the first year students receive basic training in psychology research methods." "During the second year, the student begins a research pro gram with a faculty member and, by his fourth year he undertakes research oriented toward a dissertation," Cole said. Research and professional training are often parts of the same project, he added. The program also organizes a number of psychology workshops with internationally known psychologists as part of the program, Cole said. PRINT-STAT )l WALK. I Vt. sHONI 4-40rO MCTIOSTATIC COM3 TERM PAPfRS-THf SIS UW BRIEFS OPEN 9 4 DAILY VtNINOI ANO WICKIND Y POINTMtNT -..,4 ... FORESTER II fflove out with the power of the Forester II. Up to 28 HP and a 15'" wide track to take you and the gang over practically any terrain, You can have either sno-grip tread or steel cleats. Carry more than six gallons of fuel for long hours of roaring over the mountain. Standard equipment includes 40-wott Hi-lo sealed beam headlamp. 12 4olt starter optional. Division of AllieJ fettfottrsM PAGE. 1 solution. Tiemann answered, "I cant accept just walking out." On the Governor's visit two weeks ago to Omaha's Near North Side, scene of last sum mer's riots and burning: Tiemann said the bulk of urban problems are out of the governor's jurisdiction and up to the mayor and county com missioners. A black student questioned the Governor for specific results of his Omaha visit. Tiemann replied that the visit was only two weeks ago but that he was trying to en courage insurance coverage for the area and that proposals will be made. The student repeated the question and Tiemann answered that, "If we weren't there to listen, we wouldn't have taken abuse from the Black Panthers." He said the Panthers had angrily criticized him for calling out the Na tional Guard during last sum mer's trouble. "I did it to protect them from themselves," Tiemann asserted. Agnew On Vice President Splro Agnew: Tiemann said that he knows Agnew personally and likes him. "He's a sensible guy and has more courage than you can shake a stick at." The Governor credited the Vice President with getting the first open housing law passed in Maryland. A student commented, "I become concerned when the Vice President calls one of our basic rights that right to peacefully assemble, 'carnival in the streets'." "It wasn't a very con ciliatory statement, but he has the right of free speech too," Tiemann replied. That the vice-president takes the Viet nam protest seriously, the Governor said, is evidenced by so strong a statement. He added that sometimes it is necessary to polarize Issues in order to gain support. On the Governor's proposed new area airports that would handle turbo and jumbo jets: Tiemann denied that new airports would hurt existing airports because the amount of business would increase, he said. Nebraska growth "In five years Nebraska will be not only the' geographic center of the country but the population center too. People are moving this way and we must get ready for them." On the objectiveoess of the reporting In the Dally Nebraskan: Tiemann said he receives the student newspaper at his office and thinks it is fairly accurate, especially the editorial calling for his re election. But he said some slanting of the news is natural. Tiemann added that he liked Agnew 's speech In Des Moines last week lambasting the broadcast media for unfair criticism of President Nixon. "But he (Agnew) didn't offer any solutions," the Governor said. On coed visitation at the University: Tiemunn admitted that he wasn't up on the sub ject but suit! the Regents get the basis of their authority by being elected by the taxpayers who pay two-thirds of the cost of University education. ,,rv v J EXPLORER II This is the way to go! Twenty-eight romping horses pow ering a full 20" wide track. Choice of sno-grip tread or steel cleats. Big fuel capacity for long treks. Big storage space and big comfort. Carry all tht gear you need for a full day of fun on snow cov ered peaks. You're boss with tht Homelite Explorer II. .'1' v. '1 . ii ' : t ISIS Na. tb 44-1331