The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 27, 1971, Page PAGE 3, Image 3

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    Indian Culture
Week continues
Indian Culture Week
continues Tuesday with two
speakers in the Nebraska
Union.
Keith Jewitt, a South
Dakota Sioux Indian now
director of the Indian studies
program at Midland College in
Fremont, will speak at 10:30
a.m. on the retardation of
Indian education in Nebraska.
At 1:30 p.m. Robert
Burnett, a Washington lobbyist
also from South Dakota, will
speak on Indian civil rights and
treaty rights.
Cavett to feature
author Neihardt
The Dick Cavett Show will
feature John' G. Neihardt,
author o" "Black Elk Speaks"
and five other books published
by the University of Nebraska
Press, at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Because of widespread
interest in the Neihardt
interview, KETV (Channel 7,
Omaha) is scheduling this
special program at 10:30 p.m.
rather than the customary
midnight hour.
The ABC network program
is devoted in part to a
discussion of the Plains Indians
based on "Black Elk Speaks."
Used nationwide in high school
and college courses, the book is
among the Press's best sellers
with sales averaging 20,000 a
year and 90,000 copies now in
print, according to Bruce
Nicoll, director. Other
Neihardt works published by
the Press are "A Cycle of the
West", "Lyric and Dramatic
Poems", "The River and I",
"The Splendid Wayfaring", and
"When The Tree Flowered".
Impioaa Credos Wtwla Davatiral
Itm tarn Amount Of Tim To Study
USE STUDY SOUNDS
Iwciaoaa Tour Concentration And Improvo
Vour Comprohonuon. Study At A FoMor Roto.
ELECntOMtCAUV PRODUCED SOUNDS
CAUSE THIS TO HAPPEN
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lawn a Concoot. Inc. Boi 3oS2
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Cornhusker
interviews
Copy editor, art director
and business manager.
Tuesday, April 27
4:00 pm
Sign up for interviews in
the Cornhusker office.
CnT
UK 1 MrUH
UarA TTP
ynlvoV
LINCOLN'S
FAVORITE!'!
DISCOUNT STORE
a) Moat CemoNM fhomtn m
of Antlouo ottMil
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International
A luncheon meeting will be
held Friday, at 11:30 a.m. at
Selleck Quadrangle for people
interested in joining a founding
committee for a University
International House.
International Student
Services is planning to initiate a
program for next fall whereby
all people interested in cultural
exchange will he able to fill part
of a dormitory, according to
Ivan Alphouse, foreign student
adviser. The International
House will provide a
community in which students
from other countries and
Peace coalition
meets Wednesday
A new student group at NU,
the Coalition for Peace and
Justice, will hold a meeting
Wednesday for all
students interested in
organizing for May 5 anti-war
protests in Lincoln.
The gathering wDl be at
3:45p.m. in the Nebraska Union
ballroom, according to Fritz
Edelstein, one of the new
group's organizers.
!
i 'ki at InJ d inl fy" Hi, J 1-AV -i nr tVifcjft--
-,Jn cP n?:.ed,tor: 472 "88. news: 2S89, advertising:
2 590. Second class postage rates paid at Lincoln, Nebr
d r."uSCI,pA,onJra,es are $S PCT mester or $8.50 per year.
Published Monday through Kriday during the school year
except during vacation and exam periods. Member of the
Intercollegiate Press, National Educational Avertising Service
College Press Service.
Address: The Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union,
University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68S08.
DATE: April 27,28, 29
pia Nebraska
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T. J. Enterprises
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house organizes
American students can share
cultural differences.
The f o unding com mitt ee
must locate a place for the
International House, identify
those students who will live
there, and determine housing
policies, staffing and potential
University funding. In addition
the committee must plan
educational and cultural
programs for the House.
The committee plans to
meet every Friday until the
proposal is ready to be
presented to the Board of
Regents.
Organization
meeting for
Young Demos
The newly-organized NU
Young Democrats will hold an
organization meeting at 7 p.m.
Tuesday in the Nebraska
Union.
Junior Bob Yaffe has been
elected president of the group.
Jo Schroeder is vice president,
Linda Banks is secretary and
Jennie Ziebarth is treasurer.
New members are welcome
at the Tuesday meeting.
SAVE
$450
time - 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Book Store
SPECIAl '2.C0 BIS5SZZT
at. Va W ..
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tuiiimmini ini.nmiii.i.nnii linn iiiimi i , ml, n , ,i.nii.iWinnnMi.i,i-i.t.Mliii.il -r n in nuiinmi nun, J
Rebirth of Albert's Mind.
and Vic Smith as the Narrator in Song For Albert.
'Albert' opens at Union
Song For Albert, an experiment in Theatre of Cruelty using
rc;k music in several forms, will be presented Tuesday, April
27, and Wednesday, April 28, at 8 p.m. in the Centennial
Room of the Nebraska Union.
Written and directed by NU student Paul Baker, Song for
Albert is about the formation, devastation and rebirth of a
man's mind, the entire play taking place inside that mind.
According to Baker, it is a spiderweb of colors and people,
sound and memory, a mixture of kindness and crueltv.
The music in the play was composed by another NU
student, Tom Bredenberg, and features the Red, White and
Blues Band.
Admission is absolutely free.
nooooooooooooooooooooooooo
TUESDAY NIGHT
FIRST DRINK
HALF PRICE
Girls Only :
ROYAL GROV
5 LIVE MUSIC g
for
ASUN Committee Chairmanships
ax Tuesday, April 27
... Student Services and
Economic Development
--- Legal Rights
Free University
Legislative Liaison
--- Education
Human Rights
If you are interested in being one of
these chairmen sign up for interviews in
the ASUN office, Union 334, starting
Tnocrlow Anril 5"7 1Q71
m t Mwuo y i rii ii aw,
. .Gary Boham as Albert
SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCf
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inn
lavi.
0000
TUESDAY, APRIL 27, 1971
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
PAGE 3