The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 26, 1985, Page Page 8, Image 8

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    Friday, April 26, 1935
Page 8
Daily Nebraskan
Now Is Ths
Time To Learn
To Fly
JOHN RADKE
OUR CPC PILOT
OF THE WEEK
PUT YOURSELF
IN THE PICTURE...
YOU CAN DO
IT. TOO!
We are pleased to announce
that our Pilot of the Week has
completed all requirements of
our Cessna Pilot Center Private
Pilot's Course and has been
awarded a Private Pilot's
License by the United States
Government. You, too, can gain
the prestige and greater freedom
afforded by pilot training at less
time and expense than you
probably think. Come in and
let's talk about it.
LINCOLN AVIATION INSTITUTE
LINCOLN MUNICIPAL AIRPORT
475-7602
WE WILL MAKE
YOU A PILOT
FOR $2,990.
GUARANTEED.
'Subject to limitations outlined
in Flight Plan Agreement
"A
Cessna
yfr)rsages & Body Flowers to
If complement your Spring f I Vk. n
j. Formats. Each corsage & ft l
I boutonniere custom ' jj v ' ,
I M-?J,5i'1 H v Visa. Master Charge I
1 474-3792 1 Diners-Carte Blanche I
flj " American Express B
iR. A. OE-3UCEC KOSS
FRIDAY,
9:00 AM Introduction. Native American Ceremonies compared with Jungian Psychology and Para
psychology 10:15 AM Origins ol the Red Man. Migrawns horn the east, linguistics, Archeology. Anthropology,
and Para psychology
11:30 AM Origins and Destiny ol the Red Man. Migrations from the west.
1:30 PM Original Teachings ol the tied Man. Religious ceremonies examined using Psychology.
Metaphysics. Quantum Physics. Physical Science, and Para-psychology
2:30 PM A Red Road tor Educational Synergy. Traditional thought compared with current
psychological studies
3:30 PM Tafcu Wakan Skan Skan (sumolhmg Holy moving) Comparison ot star lore with current
investigation ol the cosmos
SATURDAY, APRIL 27
10:00 AM The Flowering Tree. Examination ol spiritual healing techniques.
11:15 AM The Center Moved. Examination ol Hopi, Dakota, and Genesis creation stories.
1:30 PM Telekinesis by Native American Holy Men. Psychological and Para-psychological
techniques used.
2:45 PM Exoteric Astro Counseling. A workshop exploring the origin o( psychological thought
patterns.
ALL LECTURES IN COMMONPLACE
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
14th & R STREETS
UNIVERSITY CF KEEFiASXA-UNCCLN
I l f A Nitrvt MacrMcnH
ws
I STUQCMI OUNUMUa
Shorts
Groundwater protection strategies
and groundwater and public health will
be discussed today at a UNL workshop.
R. Rajagopal of the University of Iowa
will report on his project, "Ground
water Quality Assessment for Public
Policy in Iowa." The report will be of
interest to surrounding states because
most of its findings are universal,
Rajagopal said.
The workshop, co-sponsored by the
UNL Water Resources Center, the Ne
braska Department of Environmental
Control and the University of Iowa, will
be from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the East
Union.
The annual Vreeland Awards cerem
ony, honoring outstanding, student
creative accomplishments in art, Eng
lish and music will be today at 3:30
p.m. in the Sheldon Memorial Art
Gallery. Vice Chancellor for Academic
Affairs Robert Furgason will be the,
guest speaker.
The Behlen Observatory will be open
to the public tonight from 7:30 to 1 1 for
free.
If weather permits, visitors will be
able to see celestial objects through
the 30-inch telescope. There also will
be a lecture about comets, their possi
ble impact on life on earth and what to
expect when Halley's comet becomes
visible at the end of the year. The lec
ture will be repeated every 30 minutes.
The observatory is at the NU Field
Laboratory near Mead on Avenue C
between Third and Fourth streets. It
can be reached from Lincoln by way of
Highways 77 and 63.
For more information, call the UNL
APRIL 26
sroMowe ar Kf 4ea irwuuum
MATIVf MCMCM SMCUl tVMTt
!
department of physics and astronomy
at 472-2770.
The Cornhusker Division of the March
of Dimes will present its annual Walk
America Saturday at 8 a.m. at Lincoln
High School, 22nd and J streets.
The course is 30 kilometers long,
and participants can walk all or part of
the route. Prizes will be awarded in the
youth and adult categories to people
who collect the most pledges to help
support the March of Dimes' efforts in
fighting birth defects.
For sponsor sheets or more informa
tion, call the March of Dimes Walk
America at 476-0118.
The "Worth Another Look Star
Home Sunday," a tour for homebuyers
of Lincoln's older neighborhoods, will
be Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m.
The Star Homes will be offered for
free touring to show how older homes
can be restored and decorated. Repre
sentatives from each neighborhood will
answer questions and tell about the
area's assets.
The tour is sponsored by the city of
Lincoln and is the culmination of
Neighborhood Week. For more informa
tion, call Barbara Hager at 471-7391.
"Onward Entrepreneurs," a three
day conference on Women Business
Ownership, will be Sunday through
Tuesday in North Platte and Omaha.
The conference is sponsored by Gov.
Bob Kerrey, the Small Business Admin
istration, the Nebraska Business De
velopment Center, Mid-Plains Com
munity College, the Nebraska Department
of Economic Development and the
Nebraska Commission on the Status of
Women.
Women who are interested in start
ing their own businesses or expanding
their current businesses are urged to
attend the conference. It will be at the
North Platte's Holiday Inn and Oma
ha's Red Lion Inn.,
Registration will begin at, 5 p.m.
Sunday. The conference will formally
convene at 9 a.m. Monday and at 7:30
a.m. Tuesday.
Union Board
By Lisa Nutting
Staff Reporter
The Nebraska Union Board voted
this week to keep all but one of the
1985-86 proposed space allocations for
both Nebraska unions.
The UNL Wildlife Club submitted an
application for union space allocation
two weeks late. The board declined to
give space to the group since it had not
sent any representatives at the meet
ing to justify the late application.
Board member Frank Kuhn mo
!iuo ro mbuoss
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I rv
The Daily Nebraskan is accepting
applications for the following fall positions:
Photographers Artists
News Reporters Copy Editors
Sports Reporters Depth Reporters
" Entertainment Reporters
Editorial Columnists
The Daily Nebraskan editors and reporters
have gone on to jobs at the Miami Herald, News
week magazine, the Orlando Business Journal,
the Dallas Times-Herald, the Raleigh News and
Observer and the Omaha World-Herald. Novelist
Willa Cather also worked at the DN.
Applications are available at the Daily Nebras
kan, Nebraska Union Room 34. Application dead
line is Friday, April 26 at 4:30 p.m. All applicants
must be UNL students.
a Daily
Mi Nat
UNL does not discriminate in the academic
admissions or employment programs and
abides by all federal regulations pertaining to
pi.
V
For more information, call Jean
O'Hara, executive director of the
Commission on the Status of Women, at
471-2039.
UNL's department of textiles, clo
thing and design will be the host of
"Festival '85," an open house featuring
original student fashions, designs and
fiber arts Sunday.
The festival will begin at 2 p.m. at
the College of Home Economics with a
fashion show and will last until 4 p.m.
The public is invited to attend for free.
UNL's College of Dentistry at 40lh
and Holdrege streets will sponsor a free
parent-child health education program
Monday at 3:30 p.m.
All parents interested in the session
should call 472 1305 to pre-register.
The program will include informa
tion on the new personal identification
program for children, dental sealants
and dental nutrition.
State Sens. Chris Beutler, Bill Harris,
Dave Landis, Shirley Marsh, Jerome
Warner and Don Wesely will be the
hosts of a breakfast Monday featuring
Helen Boosalis, former Lincoln mayor
and current director of the Department
on Aging at 7 a.m. in the Nebraska
Room of the Nebraska Center for Con
tinuing Education, 33rd and Holdrege
streets.
The breakfasts are modeled after the
Nebraska Breakfasts in Washington By
the Nebraska Congressional Delega
tion. The Lincoln breakfasts provide an
informal opportunity for Lancaster
County citizens to discuss issues with
their state senators. The cost is $2.
The Nebraska Native American Stu
dents Congress meets every Monday
night at the Culture Center, 1012 N.
1 6th St., from 5 to 7 p.m. New members
are welcome. For more information,
call 472-1480.
A search is on for a new America's
Miss Charm. More than $100,000 in
scholarships, prizes and awards will be
presented at the national finals, July 30
approves space requests
tioned that if the wildlife club could find
another group that would be willing to
share its space in the Nebraska East
Union, the club should then be allowed
the space. The board approved the
motion.
The Nebraska State Student Associ
ation also filed a late space allocation
application, which the board approved.
NSSA requested space in its current
room, with the Government Liaison
Committee in Nebraska Union 116.
The board's proposed allocations
reserved a combined space for GLC and
IF""" a m a
umioiit yoq!
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m
to Aug. 3, In Washington, D.C.
The woman chosen as the 1985
America's Miss Charm will receive a
$4,000 scholarship, luxury cruise trip
to the Bahamas, a Norwegian blue fox
jacket, diamond jewelry, a personal
appearance contract and more prizes
and gifts.
Search directors want a woman to
represent UNL and Nebraska at the
nationals. The contest is open to all
women who are between 17 to 25 and
single. At the national finals, women
will be judged on their talent, poise
and appearance, scholastic honors and
community service. Any fraternity; sor
ority or group may nominate a woman
to represent it. Or, interested women
may write directly for more information.
Please send a long, stamped, self
addressed envelope to: America's Miss
Charm Search, P.O. Box 72 16, Jackson
ville, N.C. 28540 or call 919-455-9G43
The American Red Cross still needs
four instructors for its summer swim
program. One is needed for the Ballard
Pool, one for the University Place Pool
and two for Belmont Pool. Applicants
must have a current Red Cross Water
Safety Instructor certificate. Classes
will be from 9 a.m. to noon on June 10
through July 19. Instructors receive a
starting salary of $4 an hour.
The Red Cross also needs about 100
aides. These aides need to be at least
12 years old and good swimmers. Aides
are needed for all nine Lincoln City
pools. Aides receive a free swim pass
for their assistance.
For further information contact the
Lancaster County Red Cross Safety
Services Department at 1701 E St. or
call 475-5581.
"The Day of the Traitors," a film
about the betrayal of Czechoslovakia
by its French ally and Great Britain in
World War II will be shown in Georgian
Suite A of the Nebraska Union Tuesday
at 7 p.m. The film, sponsored by the
Czech Language Club and the Czech
program of the modern languages
department at UNL, is free and open to
the public. Refreshments will be served.
the Nebraska Student Foundation.
Heidi Burklund, campus coordinator
for NSSA, spoke in an open forum and
explained that NSSA failed to reapply
because the group didn't know about
the deadline.
Burklund requested NSSA be allowed
to share a room with GLC because the
two groups have "a good working re
lationship." Board member Julie Gathman mo
tioned that the back room of Nebraska
Union 334, which is now a study hall, be
opened for group space. The board
approved the motion, and allocated the
space for the Nebraska Student
Foundation.
But because the renovation of the
University Bookstore has reduced study
space, the Nebraska Student Founda
tion won't be allowed to move into the
room until fall, when the bookstore is
complete.
Communication. . .
Continued from Page 1
Keating questioned the commission's
jurisdiction, saying it might overlap
with the vice chancellor for Student
Affairs' round table. But Weems said
the commission would deal specifically
with residence hall and Greek student
issues, whereas the round table involves
a much wider range of student groups
and doesn't restrict the group to officers.
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and Fri.
starting
(j June 11th.
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