The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, August 13, 1974, Page page 2, Image 2

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Tuesday, Aug. 13
Nebraska Repertory Theatre,
"School for Wives", 8:00 p.m.;
Howell Theater.
Wednesday, Aug. 14
Deadline for filing theses,
dissertations and final report
for degrees 2nd session;
Summer Film Safari, "Films for
Fun," 12:00-1:30 p.m., student
union. Nebraska Repertory
Theatre, "Mary Sunshine,"
8:00 p.m., Howell Theater. '
CLIFF'S LOUNGE
DOWNTOWN'S MOST
POPULAR ,
RENDEZVOUS
Lunches 11:30-2:30
Entertainment Nightly
1204 OSt.
BACKSTAGE LTD.
has the biggest selection of
Nature Shoes in Lincoln!
Rover
by encode
' 3 different brands-both men and womens'
1 ,
4 different colors-12 styles to choose from
THE MOST COKFORTAStC
shoe youW evBR owm BACK 2H
STOP m AMS TBY A STAGED ,
.. PAIR TODAV ! LmVQl '
jr J I jj J l If
1 WORTH .. HHY jfjr
Jfji Worth $1 .00 onGiMrt Sl aiAKSTfc TOZA
Not honors for tikoUt orn ...JIllJM!
! What do you
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' . '.
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......... -,rrcMtrrV
7
Thursday, Aug. 15
Nebraska Repertory Theatre,
"Birthday Party," 8:00 p.m.,
Howell Theater.
. ' Friday, Aug. 16 . '
Final examinations and end of
2nd session. Sheldon Film
Theater, "Last Tango in Paris",
7:00 & 9:00 p.m., Sheldon Art
Gallery. Nebraska Repertory
theatre, "Mary Sunshine",'
8:00 p.m., Howell Theater.
Saturday, Aug. 17
Sheldon Film Theater, "Last
Tango in Paris", 7:00 & 9:00
p.m., Sheldon Art Gallery.
Nebraska Repertory Theatre,
"School for Wives", 8:00 p.m.,
Howell Theater. .
Monday, Aug. 19
Nebraska Repertory Theatre,
"School for Wives", 8:00 p.m.,
Howell Theater.
&t mar w
Mother Nature
gave you
a ring finger for?
C JL
Serving Lincoln tinct 1 905
REGISTERED JEWELERS AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
Gatev,"sy
Mon. Wed Th, Fri 10-9 .
Tuc. Sat. 10-5:30
Students
TtrltB
To most folks these days,
"roughing it" means a weekend
in the Winnebago camper with
no flush toilet.
But to almost 40 students
who went through workshops
in The Plains Pioneer Experi
ence this summer, roughing it
meant the real thing.
For five days at the beginning
of each five-week summer
session in 1973 and 74, about 20
students have cooked, slept,
worked and playedin and
around a complex of log cabins
on the grounds of the Stuhr
Museum of the Prairie. Pioneer
at Grand Island, Nebr.
The class, which is to be
nominated for the 1974 National
Association of Summer Sessions
Award for Innovative and
Creative Summer Sessions
Offerings, was created by
tJN-L Centennial Fellow Roger
'Welsch.
In an interview last week,
Welsch said the purpose of the
course, which gives six hours of
credit in English or Elementary
Education, is to jut folklore
and literature into the per
spective of the 19th century
pioneer experience.
"How can you really study
Mari Sandoz Old Jules or
Cather's O Pioneers! in an air
conditioned classroom, meeting
twice a week?" Welsch asked.
"We're not trying to duplicate
pioneer life (at the workshops),
but we do try to get into the
environment of regional liter
ature, singing the songs the
pioneers sang, eating the food
they ate and doing the work
they did."
The work part of the course,
in addition to the five day living
situation, includes writing a
substantial paper on some
aspect of folklore or regional
literature, Welsch added.
Recounting some of the
experiences students had at the
workshop this summer, Welsch
remembered one night when
"we were driven out of the
fields by a thunderstorm," and
one afternoon's half-mile walk
from the cabins to Stuhr's
railroad village in 107 degree
weather.
think
Downtown
iton.-Sat. 10-5:30
Thuw. 10-9:00
rough it in
High temperatures this
summer createu vera prc!5
lems for the students, not the
least of which was the closing of
the Hall County campgrounds
because of fire hazardsthe
workshops had been using the
camp's bathrooms.
"We had to wade the Wood
River and use the woods on the
otherside," Welsch recalled.
Cooking on an old iron stove
in a closed cabin was "a g eat
learning experience," according
to Gina Newbold, a senior in
Editor Lucy Lien
Business Manager Jodi KoPf
Published each Tuesday
Office: 112 Avery Lab.
Phone:472-2557
The 1 974 edition of the
Summer Nebraskan
ends
with this issue
High school cagers'
battle to be aired
For the fifth time on
statewide television, Neb
raskans will be able to see the
top 24 high school basketball
, players in the state compete in
the Sixth Annual Nebraska
State High School All-Star
Basketball Game. The Neb
raska ETV Network will broad
cast complete game coverage,
Saturday, August 17, at 7:30
p.m.
Sponsored by the Nebraska
Coaches Association, the game
takes place Friday, August 16"
at Pershing Auditorium in
Lincoln. Ken Johnson, NETN
PRODUCER, Doug Brooker,
NETN director, and a Univer
Dobson scholarship
awarded
The Arthur A. Dobson
Memorial Scholarship for $300
has been awarded to a civil
engineering student In the
College of Engineering and
TWhnoioey at the University of
Scholarship
awarded
An electrical engineering
student from Grand Island has
been awarded the Holling
Memorial Scholarship for $175.
Michael John Steckmyer, 20,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John R.
Steckmyer (1609 NW Front
St.), has received the award.
We've moved!
If yea're moving or plan to
when JM-hool starts, be sure
to ec Interiors Diversified.
Our rental furniture will
make your fcppartmcnt or
house feel like home and
look great.
DIVERSIFIED
Now at 1230 South Street
432-8851
workmop
Rncrliah and CSVChologV.
"We had to keep the doors
shut even on the hottest days
so the wind wouldn't cool the
stovetop," she said.
But, Welsch said, "the food
was great."
"Real pioneer fare beans
and sowbelly and sonuvabitch
stew. What? Oh, that's all the
leftovers cooked up in one big
pet."
A Winnebago would have
been a luxury.
sity of Nebraska mobile tele
vision crew will videotape the
game for the delayed Saturday
broadcast.
The North team will be
coached by Al Bahe, Fremont
High coach, assisted by Jay
Muma of Schuyler. The South
team is coached by Wally
McNaught, Lincoln Southeast,
and the assistant coach is Jim
Martin, Omaha Central.
The annual event drew over
5,300 basketball fans last year.
A record 6,000 seats are
available this year, according to
Rick Alloway, of the coaches
association information staff.
Nebraska.
Robert M. Sacco, 20, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sacco of
DeSoto, Texas (128 Valley
Glen), is the recipient.
Classical prize
bestowed
Two students at the Uni
versity of Nebraska- Lincoln
have been selected to receive
the Barber Classical Prize, an
award established about GO
years ago by the late Professor
Grove E. Barber of the
Department of Classics.
Winners of the prize, Joni
Kerr of Lincoln and Warren
Woerth of Scribner, will share
$100 cash.
They were selected on the
bhhi of scoring highest in
special written examinations
given student) in Latin and
Greek.
Mha Kerr, daughter cf Mr.
and Mrs. John R, Kerr of
HastirjgK, j.bmi h!g!iiSt In the
Latin competition. Woerth, the
son of Mrs, Darlene Woerth,
, wait tops in Greek.
tuetdtoy, august 1 3, 1 874
pas 2
summer nebraskan