Monday, September 19, 1C23 jc j University of Nebraska-Lincoln Vol. 83 No. 15 Wf r ' I 'V i i o o n I o Hie world was chocked weeks ego when a South Korean airplane was ahot down over Soviet territory, and 2C3 paceer.gcrs were killed. - 7hi!2' meat people overcame the shock and began to speculate about the causes end consequences-, severe thousand friends sad relatives cf the victims grieved. To them, it was, more than sn international polities! event; it was, and is, a personal tragedy. Okon Hwan, a UNL student, is one of the grzevcrs. Her former piano te acher died on Korean Air Lines Flight 007, she said. ', .. .. , - The hte Jur.g Ju Oh, professor of piano pedagogy at Korea University, wa3 cn.her way to Seoul Sept. 1, after having completed a trip to the United States., She had traveled to this country to help her son move to an Ivy League university, Hwan said. Hwan learned cf her friend and teacher's death a few days after the incident, when her mother phoned her from South Korea, she said. . Hwan said she was very upset to hear the news, because she considered her relationship with Oh very special '.- ,:. '-...,:v "She taught me to play the piano correctly. . .' Because of this, I was able to get into Seoul National , University, the beet music college in Korea," she said, j Kvan, 23, said she owes her current position as a first-year graduate student at UNL's School of Music, in large part, to Oh. "She was a great instructor very famous to musicians throughout my country " Hwan said. Hwan said she had known Oh for about five years, and had studied with her for one year. In that time, Oh and Hwan's mother had become close friends, Hwan said. Hwan also knew Oh's two children. Hwan saw Oh for the last time in Seoul at her piano teacher's home. x "I went to her home to thank her for all that she had done for me. It was she who wrote my recom mendation to thi3 university ," she said. Her memory of Oh, whom she believes to have been in her early 50s, is of "a really nice, warm and moreover, a very beautiful woman." Hwan, a musieology major, said she doesnt know much about politics. She said she does not believe it is her place to discuss the Soviet Union's actions and their implications. "I really don't want to think about that," she said. She did say, however, that she believes Korea . should take harsher measures against the U.S.S.R. to make up for the suffering of so many people. Hwan said she wa3 sad because she knows nothing can ever make up for the death of Jung Ju Oh. "I think she was the perfect woman. Her death is a great loss to my country and to myself," she said. i ! r i f J n j I ! , - ) - A IV" :..z:z;r::.t:t&& by Hebtrt LIcDcnsU if" All Kt fm mst T-ffS..- f -w'n'fl - 4 w A he-M uAW Vi im3 ifeMj bv.sA.J IbmlU -4& -4 CW ..-- fc. Mg Ssts.oit. Seat ' feet ' : 2 Jin Hz2zi"ZZ2a '. ' . ."I juet take chances on cm," she : . . . .' ;" .... '. said. 1 ... .-: - . - A sunr.y f:-"J dry frectr d a crc;vd . Greg. Edwards, a UNL junior :f 5,215 peer!? Fni::y aTterneen as t ra::enr.g in en;:neerir r rid he cn- per.cd its f; 'l heree racing eeaeen. '. - "Ycu sit the: ? rr.dtrytof .:re cat n tl.2 1 0 rrc:.", a cr : : n r " f ' ' - . ' -h a Llr.ecln rc:idrr.t, r " . ; v e g : : t. : the niera to g:t cut . , ,, . . : t ,i(W.r. y iiv-UfVi " 1' ''I f" - 1 t L' "" r I x" f f y----r"? c.;,H-y,taf.. aaldnt cl::y her- .. -tint , I know 'en, and r:; -:! ; I l - -.y cha said. ' Workshop presents re&eaMon, "A In recent years public and private institutions have placed great emphasis on making buildings more accessible to people with disabilities. Most physical fitness and recreation programs, however, have not yet been modified to include those people. To help integrate disabled indivi duals into recreation programs, the League of Human Dignity and the Lincoln YWCA have developed a workshop to aid various health-care if tv a IS ! vf eskting programs to.meet the needs of the disabled. The culmination- cf a year's work and research, the first workshop was presented Thursday and Friday at Southeast Community College. ix teen professionals attended the workshop which included a series of lectures, discssssier.s and . practical exercises. the league, said the project begin because of complaints voiced by "disabled persons in the community who found it difficult to gain 1 u2iMittxiC6 tO lt zz2 midl rs and. scat letters to vrri'js dbrllcd p:e.'.2 to dcterrains the types cf C t!:e prr ;:r3 cv:;!. to the 1 r' - r - f , , P- " w - - 4- 1 - si V Cs.- 3 C3T v Cjf Cs-.d Z"C3 ' Host said the league found, the r.rjarity cf diritled feep'.s rcepended that th:y 7cr! J pre.'er to participate Li fregrans v.lih L:th r.c.i-c:.::M:d r-. I Inch cf the t.!.:c"r.::3n ct the :p centers J c,i t!;e impcrtrr.ce cf attitudes when vcr!;ing .-;ith -s, m to- t- tie- j- VcIj cither ra-'.ethar:;-.::. -tien t' "t i.e c.r4 c5 r " : - 2 c t, cr - c. .. : rf.h" Nancy Erickson, project coordi nator for the league, explained the use and misuse cf words and how they a!Tect the attitudes of the disabled. She said words like cripple, victim, af flicted, suffers from, and vegetable should never be used. "A lot of disabled persons' problems have to do with our attitudes toward each other," she said. - , - Erickson and McXeeman made their comments during a panel discussion Thursday dealing with disability information and accessibility and transportation problems. After the panel discussion, the group divided into sections to practice disability simulation. Each person either was blindfolded, had cotton stuffed in his ears, or was confined to a wheelchair.-'. - - After being assigned a disability, the groups wandered the halls cf the college and tried to perform certain social functions, such as going to the bathroom, getting a drink cf wat er and asiang a stranger tor r.c'p. (Tr 4-8 "3 'JSflis ssfk 7 f -j Nations! and int:rnct;,-r:al news ma its debut in thj Daily is tha 4th cf Juhy, t!;,n c;zr;tiy , should bo Chr; I";? 10 f Jo. 1-rankeJ i.'rara:" ; im proved I':: record to 3-0 Cittrrdr as it rc"cd cv : r th : :.:r.r. : :z2 Go-' phers, C-t-10 r';2C i IJ C,! I J Ulllvl I .. . ) liolll. 4 . J C , , . i - ! .................... V - J i - ......( I .1 J -S I .-mm :