1 r V si e V. , '4 i a Ted Wright, NU architecture professor, assumes the . post of director designate of the newly formed Community Resources and Research Center. Get orates awarded to 24 cs The University of Nebraska Lincoln awarded 23 doctor of philosophy degrees and one doctor of education . degree at the end of the University's first summer session, Friday, July 12. The doctor of education degree was awarded to Alfred E. Smith, Omaha, who has been a teacher at South High School in Omaha since 1955. The new doctors of phi losophy, their current ad dresses, and their current or future positions are: Maximo W. Baradas, of the , Phillipines, horticulture and forestry; research associate in the Department of Horticulture and Forestry at NU. Steven J. Dellovich, Tulsa, Okla., geography; assistant professor of earth sciences at the University of Tulsa. Louis Carl Brandhorst, Mon mouth, Ore., associate pro fessor of geography at Mon mouth College of Education. William E. Brockmeier, Springfield, Mo., special educa tion; director of special services in Kearney Public Schools. Larry Leland Krlinger, Bart lesville, Okla., animal science; livestock specialist for the Kerr Foundation, I'oteau, Okla. Neal Owen Higgins, Com merce, Texas, economics; as sistant professor of economics ..: r; tv TTni..Aw Joan E. Innes, Omaha, mathematics; assistant pro fessor of mathematics at Creighton University. Alden It. Longwcll, Macomb, 111., geography; Western Illinois University. Sheila E, Megley, Western Springs, III., English; associate dean of the college and dean of students at Salve Regina College, Newport, B.I. Marilyn J, Mcrtens, Lincoln, political science; research ana lyst, NU Bureau of Business Research. Gary A. Moore, EimwooJ, economics; assistant professor of economics, State University College, Geneseo, N.Y, Larry A. Morrow, Lincoln, agronomy; research agronomist for the U.S. Department of tuoiday, juiy 16, 1974 ndidates Agriculture. Donald J. Nelson, Hastings, educational psychology; staff psychologist, for the - Hastings Educational Service Unit. Virgil K. Olson,' Pawnee City, chemistry;, post-doctoral work at Colorado State Uni versity, Fort Collins. Robert Louis Otteman, Lin coln, business administration; assistant professor, University of Nebraska at Omaha. Nelson Samuel, India, zoo logy; assistant professor B.U.O. College, Batata (Punjab), India. Hebn Winter Stauffer, Kear ney, English; associate pro fessor, Kearney State College. , Dwight V. Sukup, Syracuse, mathematics; assistant pro fessor of mathematics, Uni versity of South Dakota, Vermillion, S.D. Tomoaki Taira, Japan, gene tics; post -doctoral fellowship in Department of Plant Science of University of Manitoba, Canada. Robert Charles Townsend, Bensenville, 111., psychology; clinical psychologist at Malcom Crow Medical Center, Wash ington, DC James E. Vinatierl, Bartles ville, Okla., chemistry; re search scientist for the Phillips Petroleum Co. Wayne L. Wahlquist, Ogden, Utah, geography; associate prf;of nf irencrraohV at Weber State College, Ogden, Utah. Richard Charles Wildnian, York, sociology; assistant pro fessor of sociology at Bradley University, Peoria, 111. If you enjoy doing it.. .do it right on Interiors Diversified great rental furniture. A few items or an apartment full. Now moved to 1230 South Street, or Call: 1972 Kawasaki 7H Mi.it condition, 4,200 n.iics. 477-9311 3024 Orchard esource Center Form.' in Architecture CoMe By Rebecca Erite Improvement of Nebraska's environment is the sweeping long range goal of the UN-L College ot Achitectnrc's newly created Community Resource and Research Center (CRRC), according to W. Cecil Steward, Dean of the college. In an interview Tuesday, Steward end Ted Wright, acting director (designate) of the CRRC, outlined the compo sition and goals of the center, which was established officially at the Board of Regents' May meeting, Wright, former head of the NU Extension Division's Com munity Development Unit, said the Community Development Unit would be one of three components of the new center. Established in 1948 by the Extension Division, the unit aids in community organization, studies, planning and parks and recreation. The CRRC's second com ponent is the Omaha Com munity Design Center, created in the late '60s to enable lower income groups, through College of Architecture students, to receive help in community design projects. ' The third unit of the new center is what Wright called a research component, the func tion of which is to coordinate research efforts of the College of Architecture and to initiate community development re search. ' Funding for the center, in addition to state tax monies, will be provided by grants amounting to about $125,000 for the 1974-75 academic year. Environmental research study, is , funded through . the Department of .Health, Educa tion -and Welfare under - the Environmental Education Act; a National Endowment of the Arts grant provides for a Capitol Environs Study of the State Capitol Building; and a Community Services Grant under Title I, Higher Education Act of 1965, will facilitate development of new adminis trative structure, Steward said. In audition lu L!iea projects, specified by the grants, ongoing tasks of the CRRC include park and recreation consultation, administration of the Nebraska Community' Improvement Pro gram and public workshops in community planning, Wright said. Other objectives of the program include the mainten ance of a center of continuing education for community offi cials, the provision of design and planning services to persons and groups who otherwise would not have access to those services and the development of an information bank on community development. Steward said the long-range benefits of the center will be threefold, affecting the aca demic community in the College of Architecture, the profes- sional community of practicing architects and the general population of Nebraska. He said the students of the college will benefit from direct laboratory experience in plan ning and design through the CRRC and its research pro grams. Graduate students will serve as research assistants and other students will receive class assignments and design projects directly from the ed ge The benefit from the center to professional architects and the people of the state will be through new access to well erganized resources err envir onmental quality and com munity development in Neb raska, Steward said. "The net effect, we feei, will be improvement of the state's environment," he said. Both men emphasized that the CRRC is not designed to pose any threat to the practices of professional architects in Nebraska. "Our task is not to initiate action, but to assist the actions of community groups," Wright said. The center began operation July 1, Steward said, but relocation of the Community Development Unit from Neb raska Hall to the College of Architecture will not be com plete until September. All but two staff positions in the program have been filled, he said. In addition to Wright as Acting Director (the ap pointment awaits confirmation by the regents), staff members will include Kip Hulvershorn, formerly with the Extension Division, as coordinator of community relations programs, and David Allor of Syracuse (New York) University, who will coordinate the Omaha Community Design Center. CRRC; ;p.TO.'w--wijwi-'.i Mfriymtfm3rre9tB ' 3g , West Cornhusker Highway 1 .Mow Appearing. - II "OEDIPUS" J ft. Nickel tap beer and 2-fers tA. 1 I 6:30 - 8:30 Mon-Thurs. f 6:30 - 8:30 Mon-Thurs. A.. ..... JL... r m Starts Wednesday July 17 Clauclinc's got six kids, four rooms, and a welfare check Hie last thing she wanted to do was fall in love with the garbage man. J K- l HI till iiis , 7f- - r S T 1 n"v in x t h") Ss" I X - -A , - l 4 - f u 1 VL 1 V :'A J ii! tfi Cent jry-Fax ftesonts A M (0 WORLD CIMA PRODUCTOJ ftentd n assocon wih M SLSmiU (ft -"CLAuairjE" "AJI ( Ik th) lj LL UJfUi m,,p--U", GLADYS KfiCHT AND Tl IE PiPS v.,x.r7,atRri3 YnlLD summer nebraskan page 5