monday, dcccmbcr 6, 1973 ddly ncbrEsksn i i f i i i ?1 ' j C. m- ".. - j ,m0m m m.tmm."' j HACELAHD CHOiSlT.IAS IQUARTEKS GIFT Wheel Lcsks tsri.-:3l!3 . Techcsnstsrs I Timing Lights if I Hi I ' DOWWHILIi VSK!:;1: CUNIC TONIGHT 70 end 9:30 1235 Q Gunny's Q7- f J Mow, when your psrty for a crest pizza cr Italian food ... just ctt Vsi't. Our vsnwni deliver your onir FHEE if it consists of 13 cr . more larjs pizza or a tsts! of CSO. OPEN DAILY FfM2rU, FBi.t!i 12:C3, SATAII 1Af,l W4b W I li 35th ft Mofgt "Tf 1 7Cth & Vn D&m n i 27m li Mhv 2 tOp7diiri 0r i . l?tf toottiot W M II AM tor A-, ftw' i ' miff- o 1 7 "i & A Mueller Planetarium's new hardware opens another world of visual trips By Greg Tally Tumbling asteriods, gas clouds and lunar landscapes are effects made possible by new equipment in UNL's Mueller Planetarium. Those new moving images should make planetarium programs more interesting to audiences, coordinator Jack Dunn said, because today's audiences are becoming more visually oriented. , "Audiences are becoming watchers more than listeners,' Dunn said, and seeing moving images will be more visually stimulating than just listening to lectures about planets and constellations." The new equipment was purchased and constructed during the past few weeks. The Horizon Panorama System, costing between $600 and S700, Dunn said, will show such things as lunar and planetary landscapes. The rotating and moving images shown on the plane tarium dome are projected through new slides treated with a polarized substance, Dunn explained. The slides are used with eight new projectors. He said four more projectors will be bought later. Another addition to the planetarium will be a land scape panorama, replacing th? Lincoln skyline that has been the dome's horizon for many years. - A UFO program in January and a show in April based on astrological references in the works of Shakespeare are programs scheduled to use the new effects, Dunn said. The younger audiences are interested in visual effects, so the new programs should be particularly appealing to them, Dunn said. 01der audiences go for the more traditional type cf program where you point out planets, stars and so on," Dunn said. "A good planetarium program will be a combination of both interests." . Mueller Planetarium was built with funds from UNL alumnus Ralph Mueller. It opened in 1953. Although the planetarium is financed by UNL,' it "makes enough money to pay for its own existence, Dunn said. Expensive special projects, like the 1970 purchase of ' the Spitz A4-RPY star projector, are sometimes financed by the Mueller fund, he said. pledges, Union 343. 6 pjn. Towne Club, Union Harvest Room B-C. 630 pjn. Kappa Alpha Psi Kittens, Union 232. - 630 pjn. Tau Kappa, Epsilon, Union 222. 7 pjn. Table Tennis Club, Union Conference Rooms. 7 pjn. Cahal Associa tion, Union 337. 730 pjn. College Career Christian Fellowship, Union 202. 730 pjn. Math Coun selors, Union 225 B-C. 9 pjn. Kappa Alpha Psi, Union 232. calendar 10 ajn.-6 pjn. Univer sity Health Services, flu clinic, Nebraska Union. Noon Security Mutual Life, luncheon, Union 203. 3:30 pjn. Panhell enic, Union 232. 4 pjn. . International Education Services, Flights & Study Tours orientation, Union 222. 5:30 pjn. Towne Club i ft" i ? - : I Hi' . I I' V. J ' 7 V. I. 1 1 1 ff W - it W h..itt . 4 W 4X3 Stiffs 4f1r-r 0 j 3 Kim!!! C3X CifiC9 ml Li iij ItAfA.. .fP. Th;s corset on JSftis!?y crpsrtrf ty f-'om tictr&zla Arta CcuncU end tt fertsl Eniysnt for t? Ana. 3 ccc-i:n-:r3 try t.3 ;fri:3 -tj AJInca.