H B Foodstand pays off. . .University 4-H members reap benefits. Uni 4-H Club offers challenge The University 4-11 Club is downright different from the local 4-11 clubs many rural Nebraskans are familiar with, its members say. The club offers "new and challenging activities" for college students according to Glenn Krohn, assistant state 4-H leader. For instance, he said, the club earned $5,000 at a State Fair foodstand, some of which will help 4-H'ers travel and learn in foreign countries. Some of it will go to help several UNL students get through school. The rest of the $2,300 in profits from the stand will go to the Uni 4-H Club's local programs. Yoga group presents instructor Dadajii Dadajii, an instructor and initiator in the Ananda Marga Yoga Society, will be in Lincoln Saturday and Sunday, to give private instruction in meditation. Initiations will be held Saturday and Sunday at the Society's Lincoln headquarters, 1319 S. 11th St. Yoga, according to its practitioners, is a true science of the body and mind, and while the physical system of exercises is a part of the yogic science, it plays only a secondary role. The emphasis in this science is first on the development of the mind and hrain, and secondly, once the mind becomes sharp and healthy, on the body, which must keep pace with the progress of the mind. In other words, mind rules the body and not body the mind. The first step in yoga is to focus the outgoing tendencies of the mind on a suitable point and idea, under the direction of the yoga teacher. As no two persons have the same mental and physical personality, the method of each person's meditation is also different. A person becomes a yoga initiate w h e n he starts practicing his method of SCHLITZ y Krohn said a big part of the club's purpose lies in promoting it's ;citizenship program, an inter-city 4-H program designed to help local clubs. Last year 125 Uni 4-H'ers helped 3 0 0 'y o u n g e r club-members in 50 clubs to "learn by doing, and make the best better," Krohn said. Until last spring Uni 4-H was the only college-level club in the state. But the UNL club initiated a program of expansion and now has two sister clubs. One is at Platte Junior College, and one is at Kearney State. In April the first Interstate, concentrating the mind. By regular practice of half an hour in the morning and evening the yogi attempts to achieve complete harmony between mental, physical and metaphysical forces surrounding him. The Ananda Marga (Path of Bliss) Yoga Society was founded in 1954 by Shrii Shrii Ananda murtijii, known to his followers as Babajii. Ananda Marga has provided social service on a massive scale. In India, 700 primary schools, a university, adolescents' and convelescents' homes, tribal welfare units, and an international relief team for victims of natural disasters have been established by Ananda Marga workers. The groundwork is also being laid for similar projects in the United Stales. The Ananda Marga Universal Relief Team (AMURT) is being formed in the U.S. to aid all victims of natural calamities. A Pakistan Relief Drive has just been completed by workers in Lincoln. The Ananda Marga Yoga Society in Lincoln is holding a Live University class Sept. 22 at United Ministries in IIiuIkm Fd uca I ion. 333 N. I4lh. Lectures will be given the following two nights at the I incoln lieadipiai lers. Eyobody maEcee IVlalt Liquor , like Schlitz. l!obcdy ! Cg I vert- Bey e r Dist. Co. 800 S Street Lincoln, Nebraska Intercollegiate 4-H Club conference was held, sponsored by Uni 4-11. Fighty delegates from eight states attended to discuss program ideas. Uni 4-H also sponsors the Outreachers, a folk singing group that gives a student the opportunity "to express his ideas, hopes, and fears in song," Krohn said. The group "went out reaching" at about 20 conventions, award banquets and business meetings last year, he added. Uni 4-H meets the second Tuesday of every month. Dues are S2 per semester. it Lincoln Annv & Corner 11th & N cavy Coats T v if1 1 4 You can use our Layawayat no service charge Architecture offers Mexico, Yucatan trip The UNL Department of Architecture is offering a course studying the architecture of Mexico and Yucatan over the Christmas break. Prof. G. I. Anderson said the course is open to the first 30 students to sign up. Students need not be architecture majors. The course, styled as a field trip, will leave Lincoln December 27 and return January 17 from stops in Mexico City, Taxco, Cuvernavaca, Cordoba, Veracrus, Yucatan and environs. A meeting and brief slide show for interested students will be held Thursday at 8 p.m. !n the Nebraska Union small The Nebraska Union Art Lending Library will be open today from 2:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Nebraska Union conference rooms. Students may check out one piece of art work with their I.D. card. The art must be returned at the end of the semester. Amy Chung will speak at the Biochemistry Seminar at 4 p.m. today on "Vitamin D-Active Form and Mode of Action" in the Fast Campus Biochemistry Auditorium. The National Student's Speech and Hearing Assoc. is sponsoring a Book Fair at Temple Building until 5 p.m. today. Dr. Bernard Landis, professor of Speech Pathology at California State at Long Beach, will be speaking Thursday Sept. 23 at 7:45 on "Childhood Voice Disorders" in Rm. 210. iVeslmi Store v? J :.Viv 3 1 xvfJ- f IMS." ' auditorium. The department hopes the total cost of the course will be under $500. Students will examine colonial architecture, pre-Columbian architecture (Aztec, Toltec, Olmec, Mayan etc.) and contemporary architecture at each stop. The students' first working day in the course will be in Mexico City. In the morning the class will visit places of archaeolgical interest and art museums by cab and subway. In the afternoon students will visit the Museum of Anthropology, a modern residential area built on a vast lava field, and University City with its student body of 140,000. The Lincoln Draft Information Service has resumed its office and telephone service in the choir loft at U.H.M.E. 333 N. 14th, 475-5438. Hours are 3:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays. HOLD THIS UPTD AMiWoRU llfiQOl C1A3 dATl4AW ASTROLITE S:J V.E2 VS3 75I THE RING FOR TODAY'S GIRL She's vounq, she's ith it and she wants the finest. That's why Keepsake is the rin.: tor her . . . A penect diameve perma nently registered. There Is no finer diamond rim:. Keepsake EGISTERED C : A M C N 1 AUFMANS trurst. fir. .sSk. 1 1 SChuTz tlam&M 1 1 (5 V'. I ' K . A' i: If CV.:' WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1971 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 3 3 . ,