The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 16, 1985, Page Page 6, Image 6

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    Page 6
The Nebraskan
Tuesday, July 16, 1985
BRASS RAIL
SPECIALS
WED 8-closo
THURS 8-10
"Best Prices
Downtown"
1436 "0" ST.
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MARY BEECHAM
OWNER
483-8253
42nd 0 St
tintillating
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Oh, the
things we
create with
Redken
haircolor.
What
excitement,
what
drama.
Anew
experience
altogether
because
it's
actually
good for
your hair.
Extraor
dinary
results
brought to
you in
living
color.
By Redken.
Space shuttle Columbia
visits Offut Air Base
Military officials said an estimated
40,000 people visited Offut Air Force
Base Sunday to see a Boeing 747 carry
ing the space shuttle Columbia.
The shuttle-laden 747 arrived from
Edwards Air Force Base in California
and stopped to refuel at Offut before
"It was a routine flight," said AJ.
Roy commander of the jumbo jet.
The 747 and its piggyback cargo
approached the Nebraska base from
the southeast at 11:38 a.m. After mak
ing a pass by the base, the blane
circled the Omaha area before touch-
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flying to the Kennedy Space Center in ing down at 12:02 p.m.. Offut tower
Florida. officials said.
Columbia is one of Four U.S. space The 747 reached speeds of 200 mph
shuttles, along with Challenger, Dis- during the flight, he said. Carrying the
covery and Atlantis. shuttle reduces the plane's speed but
In April 1981, Columbia made the causes no other problems, he said,
first reusable space craft to make a The plane that visited Offut is the
successful space flight. Its seventh - only jet capable of carrying the shuttle,
mission is scheduled for December. Roy said. If the iet ever had a serious
AJ. Roy, commander of the 747, said problem, 'We (in the shuttle program)
the flight from California was smooth.
Other members of the 747 crew were
pilot Ace Beall and crew members Skip
Guidry and Dan Hill.
would be down a while." he said.
Roy said that during the approxi
mately 3 hour and 40 minute flight, the
jet burned 140,000 pounds of fuel. The
Andrea HoyThe Nebraskan
The space shuttle Columbia,
aboard a Boeing 747, travels
down the runway at
Omaha's Offutt Air Force
Base on Sunday. The shuttle
was on its way to Kennedy
Space Center in Florida.
fuel was replaced at Offut.
Both touchdown and takeoff appeared
smooth. Takeoff time was 2:34 p.m.,
officials said.
After sitting for 214 hours on an inact
ive runway, the 747 taxied down the run
way and took off into the wind. The jet
used "most of the runway" during the
takeoff, an official said.
TA71
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News
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The American physical Therapy Asso- mitment to involvement in the field of
ciation (APTA) has named Nu senior physical therapy. The specific criteria
physical therapy student as Ronnie for choosing this year's recipients in-
Hald one of 10 recipients of the 1985 eluded: 1) superior scholastic perfor-
Mary McMillan Scholarships. A $500 mance; 2) evidence of potential contri-
award has been granted to each student, bution to physical therapy, and, 3) past
t UG an u uo nuc given Ulia CUHIJJCU- yiUUUtWVHy.
tive basis, from out of 35 eligible nomi
nees considered, to those candidates
who fulfilled to the most outstanding
level, a combination of demonstrated
abilities, leadership traits, and com-
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Wrrco Hour 10:00 Rm -
Lunch 11:00 fim
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8:30 fim-2:00' pm
To'ro hero to I;:!? tnc!:o psr rjn:n:cr a Illlb c:;:;d
Vinh Ba Dun Ha, a 1984 Master of
Architecture graduate ofUNL, has been
awarded third prize in the 72nd Paris
Prize in Architecture competition.
As third prize winner, Vinh, a native
of Vietnam, will receive a $4,000 Lloyd
Warren Fellowship for four months of
architectural studies in Europe. Ha is
now an architectural designer in the
architectural offices of John Schofield
Savage and Scott Findley of Omaha.
The Paris Prize Competition is held
annually by ihe National Institute for
Architectural Education and is open to
architects who have received a profes
sional degree in architecture in the
United States between June, 1982, and
December, 1985.
Participants in the competition,
which drew 35 entries representing 18
schools of architecture, were required
to submit a design proposal for 2 mil
lion square feet of mixed-use develop
ment on an historical site in Richmond,
Va.
Three UNL students will receive
scholarships awarded by the Nebraska
Recreation and Parks Association for
the 1985-86 academic year.
Paul E. Absalon, a junior from
Crawford, and Bruce F. Ladiaan, a
senior from Lincoln will receive $500
Ruth B. McClintock Scholarships.
Absalon is majoring in recreation and
park management.
Randall E. Butt of Lincoln (5600
Wilshire Blvd.) will receive the $400
Joseph Churchich Memorial Scholar
ship. Butt, a senior, is majoring in natu
ral resourceswildlife biology. -
Fourteen UNL agriculture students are
participating this summer in a "nanas
on" Livestock Industry Experience Pro
gram sponsored by the UNL animal
science department.
The program is designed to help
students apply classroom principles to
industry situations, said John Ward,
project coordinator and UNL animal
science professor. Industry areas in
clude beef cow-calf management, feed
lot, swine, dairy, sheep and horse pro
ducton, meats, feed processing and
agricultural financing.
It provides working experience for
students not from a farm-ranch back
ground and valuable industry informa
tion to those with some experience,
Ward said.
Students participating in the pro
gram are: Barry Anderson, Aurora,
UNL Mead Swine Unit; Juan Carulla,
Bogota, Colombia, poultry at Graff, Bea
trice; Diane Lapp, Lincoln, cow-calf
at Dalbey-Halleck, UNL beef research
farm, Virginia; Cory Leaver, Valley,
cow-calf at Roger Lee, Lakeside; Mark
Lorenz, Rockville, cow-calf at Floyd
Bryant, Brownlee; Mike Madden,
Aurora, poultry at the Hill Hatchery,
Lincoln; and Larry Miller, North
Bend, feed industry at Upjohn Company.
Also participating are Kurt
Ohnoutka, Valparaiso, marketing at
Omaha Stockyards; Banky Palmer,
Gambia, West Africa, poultry at Hill
Hatchery, Lincoln; Jennifer Robin
son, Bellevue, cow-calf at the UNL
Mead Cow-calf unit; Michele San
dusky, Seward, swine at Sell Swine
Farm, Seward; Karen Schneider,
Cody, cow-calf at Leonard Adams, Ashby;
Susan Schroeder, Seward, cow-calf
at Steve Kreitman unit, Bassett; Jay
Woherton, Lincoln, cow-calf at Ervin
Maahs, Lincoln.
Two students are participating in a
new Range Internship Program in co
operation with the Nebraska Stock
growers Association. They are: Bryan
EechteL Pretty Prairie, Kan., at the
Hamilton Ranch at Thed&rd, and Lee
Aim Ziaamenaan, Hastings, at the
Adams Ranch at Ashby.
The Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Sand Scholar
ship valued at $503 has been awarded
to UNL agriculture student Denise
Barnes, 21-year-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Barnes of Louisville.