The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 24, 1973, Page page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    yMmtm!mmmmmH0rmpr uanm. i in iiiMiiiMtnMIS--''i?;y
. , -"V - " ' ,. ...-. r .
Trr , y I,,, I t T 1 " ( ' I - t(
' .cP -, , , i, T . jt0ar " ..1 Va
UNL Flying Club member Chip Treen
Flying gets club off ground
' Nancy Stohs
University Flying Club members have one
ing in common: the wild blue yonder.
For $50 lifetime membership fee, you can
n the Flying Club, rent a shiny, single-engine
per Cherokee 140-B and fly to any part of the
Id blue yonder, even to the Orange Bowl in
lami.
If you don't have a pilot's license now, you
can taKe flight instruction through the Lincoln
Aviation Institute where the club keeps its five
planes.
The nonprofit club is open to all current and
former UNL students and faculty interested in
flying.
Besides students and faculty, its 80 active
members, include former war pilots, high
school aerospace teachers and flight tower
controllers, and a woman who entered the
Powder Puff Derby last spring in Arizona.
The Flying Club owns five four-seat, single
engine planes, two for flight instruction only
and three which it rents to members at discount
rates of $15 to $22 an hour.
Memlxjrs usually meet monthly and host
speakers on aviation topics, such as
crosscountry navigation, skydiving, or flying
gliders.
Former Flying Club president Fa? I R.mn,
associate director of tho UNL " i l I aii al
Extension Service, said they ai " hyifu to
reorganize a strictly student fly my club to
replace Red Barons, which fol-kci !.vo oars
ago.
If it were recognized by the Uoiv.M ..ity, it
could participate in competitive events, Raun
said.
UFC currently has a few activities, such as
"Wings for Children." One morning each year
members give underprivileged children free
rides around Lincoln.
Last spring it sponsored a "fiy in" ;l Grand
Island for all state flying clubs to exchange
notes and discuss problems.
The club was organized about ?? y r, a'o
following the Korean War, Raun i,..a:
Since then there has been only one m ijor
accident. About five years ago a newly licensed
pilot crashed into the Grand Ca-i.i-i r1, - ( ,-Kj
weather.
He said the Flying Club has an excellent
record because of the Federal Aviation Assoc.
regulations members must follow.
Anyone who wants to join can call the
Lincoln Aviation Institute, 475-760? or Flying
Club president Dean Van Zandt.
Social workers earn
Centennial credit
An experimental program offering community social
workers on-the-job college credit through the Centennial
Education Program has 16 persons enrolled this fall, according
to Gene Harding, senior fellow at Centennial.
Ten people are from the Lincoln Action Program and six
are from a community health center in Macy, Neb.
The program, taught by Centennial fellows, is aimed at
employes who lack formal training, want to know more about
their social area or want credit toward a college degree.
Centennial professors meet with the adult workers weekly
and suggest readings that will help them in their work. They
also will conduct three weekend seminars during the semester.
Although everyone's goals are different, Harding said, he
hopes the seminars will bring out some common needs.
Garnet Larson, retired professor of social work, is project
consultant.
The idea grew out of a Centennial project last year
patterned after NOVA. Harding was Lincoln campus director
in NOVA's first year.
The NOVA program provided a year's college credit to
students who are full-time workers in poverty agencies or
neighborhoods across the state.
It was discontinued last fall because of lack of funds.
In Centennial's version last year, about 50 students worked
10 to 15 hours a week as nonprofessional aides in several
Lincoln agencies and institutions, working with the poor, the
mentally retarded or disturbed, the elderly and the delinquent.
Twice each week, the students participated in discussion
group seminars at Centennial.
Once a week, Harding met with the students individually to
review their daily journals, talk about problems and direct the
student toward supplemental study materials.
Participants in the adult program receive six credit hours
applicable toward graduation requirements in several colleges.
Films focus on
gay community
Two films concerning social problems facing America's gay
community, The Invisible Minority and Some of Your Best
Friends, will Ixj shown this week at UNL.
The films will Ixj shown at 3:30 p.m. Monday at Burnett
320 and 1 1 :30 a.m. Friday at Burnett 207.
The films provide background on the Gay Liberation
Movement aru.) deal with 'medical and religious attitudes, police
practices, family and peer realtions and employment problems
of gay teachers.
GAY ACTION
-. RAP LINE
f
Thousands of Topics
$2.75 per page
Send for your up-to-date, 160-page,
mail order catalog. Enclose $1.00
to cover postage (delivery time is
1 to 2 days).
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE, INC.
11941 WILSHIPE BLVD., SUITE 2
LOS ANGEL ES, CALIF. 90025
(213)477 8474 or 477-5493
Our research material is sold for
research assistance only.
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE UNIV
OOK
Vz Price
KB
O
o
s
HI
O
XI
XI .
(St
CO
o
o
CSI
o
XJ
o
o
HI
O
XI
The University Bookstore is nutting a select group of text books,
trade liurdbaeks, novels, elassirs and aerlaeks on sale lor V2 price.
TO
03
O
o
is
LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!
FamuuH US Wiimen Ski Team Lhet
During thr ruin inn (iff emn
Ihr US Wfimm' Alpinf Kki Tim
memtwrn " n the "Ski Trnrn" dit
to Iom A) pouncta in two werki
Thnt'f right 20 pound in U dnyi'
The bam of the diet i rhemiral food
action and wna deviaed by a famoua
Colorado phyaman e pen ally for the
US Ski Team Normal energy la
maintained (very important!) while
reducing Vou keep "full" no
atarvation berauae the diet ta de
aigned that way' Il'a a diet that ii
eaay to follow whether you work,
travel or atay at home
Thia m. honeatly, a fnntaatically
aurcrMful die! If it weren't, the It S
Women'a Ski Team wouldn't be per
mitted to ue it! (tight? So, give
ynuraelf the aame break the U S Ski
Team geta loae weight the anentific,
proven way Kven if you've tned all
the other dieta, you owe it to your-
aelf to try the IIH Women'a Ski
Team Ihet That la. if you really do
want to loae 2(1 pounda in two week
Order Uiday Tear thia out aa a
reminder
Send only V (XI (12 25 lor Ruih
Serviicl i.ishisOK to ( oasta!
I'roduiiv I' O 4Vt2. Sanla Harbara.
( mIiI VI KM Don't order unlcs you
tuprct to bec 20 pounds in two werki'
Mrcausc that's v.h,ii ihr Ski learn
r lift wii; do1
There are books on cral'ls. w iiicmnkinj:, photography and film,
sports, religion, natural foods, ecology, poetry, civil rights, travel, S
sewing, rooking, stamp collecting, women, quotations, education,
ra and many more. There are TAKOT Cards and Bibles included 3
C5 ui
in the sale, also. Over 1.000 titles. 3
o
o
IS)
O
XI
ts
CO
O
O
O
03
o
o
iSI
i
O
XI
XI
is
CO
o
New titles will be added to the sale regularly
so keep checking for new titles.
Sale runs September 25 thru October 9
f$5fy bookstoiTi
LOWER LEVEL NEBRASKA UNION
Mastercharge - Banltamericard accepted
XI
tst
CO
o
o
sq
o
z
XI
(Si
UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE 1 3
daily ncbr.i'jk an fiy? b
rnondjy, t.'ptumbor 24, 1973
i