The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 25, 1956, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    Four Formats Highlight
V
AAUW Entertains Seniors
Shown above are four mem
bers of the American Associa
tion of University Women and
two students of the University
who attended a reception at the
By JAV FARRELL
Social Editor
Four formals highlight this
week's social activities on campus.
There are four date dinners, two
house-parties, a faculty tea, a
pledge party, a barbecue, an ex-
change dinner, an hour dance and
two Founders' Day banquets.
There were announcements of
ix engagements and six pinnings
Janice Samuelson, Alpha Omi
eron Pi alum from Hastings, to
Pete Vinsant, Beta Theta Pi jun
ion in Business Administration from
Summerfield, Kan.
Marlene Hutchinson, Alpha Xi
Delia senior in home economics
from Lincoln, to Gene Robinson,
xarmnouse aium irom usnKOsn. T II
Marcia Reifschneider, Delta Del-1 1 O V7lVG Id I K
ta Delta junior in Engineering '
from -Omaha, to Jim Hofstetter, ! C v C A -v I
Delta Upsilon alum. TOr C-WeeK
Sally Oder, Gamma Phi -Beta
freshman in Arts and Sciences i
Irpm wichiu, Kan., to Dave Blev-1
ins from Wichita, Kan.
Pat O'Gradv. Towne Club senior
In Arte anrl firvec fr-rtm t irrri'!n
to Bob Meyer from Lincoln. An engineer at the Chrysler Cor-
Julia Bigelow, Nebraska Wes-! poration's proving ground in Mich
Jeyan junior from Rye, Colo., to ' igan, Steckling will speak on the
David Seveland, BrcVn Palace jun-! topic. "Industry and the Engi
ior in Business Administration ; neer."
from Gordon. j Steckling was graduated from
r lMlinffSr
Mary Lou Pittack, Kappa Alpha
1
AC9
Ag Seminar
Announced
On Economics
Professor W. W. Cochrane. P"
lessor ot agricultural economics at
the University of Minnesota,, will
speak at an ag ec seminar May
fi n4 'J am Art rfimr,te
. . .. . . , ' . .
the Nebraska Research Council.
-l t 1 ;.v
Liii ai ic w ilia ly vi iui iriic
Bureau of Agricultural Economics,
United States Department of Agri
culture. He has also been asso
ciated with the agricultural eco
nomics departments of the . Uni
versity of Minnesota and Penn
sylvania State College.
. Among the books he has written
are "Economics of American Agri
culture" and "Economics of Con
Information Available:
Foreign Summer Study
Designed For Course
Students interested in foreign j
r.uay tnis summer wm Tind mo
sirmmer school course listed in
' the pamphlet, "Summer Study
Abroad 1956."" Educational institu
tions in 22 countries nave listed
ourses.
The leaflet tells where to apply
nd "gives information on language
requirements, admissions proced
ures, credits, living arrangements
nd costs, transportation, passports
Cnd visas, and scholarships.
Copies of "Summer Study" may
be obtained free from the Infor
mation Division of the Institute of
International Education in New
York or from its regional offices
in Chicago, Denver, Houston. Los
Angeles, San Francisco and Wash
ington. The Institute has informa
tion oh other summer programs
nd offers general counseling serv
ices n study abroad.
The majority of courses offered
to summer visitor are designed
to give insight into the language,
history anc culture of the host
eountry. In addition to such "civil
ization" courses, instruction is of
tered in art. music, world affairs
and other subjects. There are
often special courses for teacher
of ioreign languages. Most courses
include excursion to nearby sites
f interest.
Of special interest to engineering
student will be the summer ex
change program. During the 1356
f-.-rr.7rer American industry will
accept foreign engineering stu
dents ior training and American
engineering students will work
abroad. Tins unique program pro
vides foreign .on-the-job training j
h Is i
i .. . - f I
Governor's Mansion for Univer
sity and Nebraska Wesley an
University senior women. In the
group above are, seated tfrom
left) Mrs. George Larson, Jolene
! Theta junior in Teachers from
Hawarden, la., to Bob Berghel, from Grand Island.
Delta Tau Delta senior in Business Kit witchers. from Sioux City, la.,
Administration from Omaha. ! t0 John Kahtez, Sigma Alpha Ep
Frannie Van Houten, sophomore silon junior in Business Adminis
in Teachers from Ohaha, to Don ! tration from Bloomfield.
j Beck, Alpha Gamma Rho junior
j in Agriculture from Fremont.
j Patricia Squire, Lincoln General
j School of Nursing freshman from
Elgin, to Floyd Urbach. Brown
Palace junior in Teachers from
Grand Island.
Marvel Lee Garrison, Loomis
Hall junior in Agriculture from
David City, to Bruce Maunder,
Auto Engineer
Arnold Steckling. a native of
Tji.irp nH m'ifi craHna: n( ihe'
University, will be the speaker at
Uhe Engineers Convocation at 11
a m FnHav in I l.ihrarv i
t-;, ..-. I
"RlruM-nfiold Wish c-KvO Ttr'0,R i
a bachelor s degree in mechanical
engineering fron the University j
'and a master's degree from the :
lazier insure
day program at the College of Engi- j PfOrirfllTl
neering and Architecture. Open!" yVllll JCI
house will be held from 2 p.m. i mm
to 10 p.m. Thursday. HOf I nUrSuOV
ZoUnSelOTS Needed
j For Boys' State
Any student wishing to be
i counselor for Boys' State, from
hjp TnW 1hm twimminI
J-J-
coach, can be reached at 107 in the
P. E. Building.
Lepley said former Boys'
Staters at Nebraska or in some
other state would be preferred.
Interested persons may also call
Mrs. Schofield at 3108 for an ap
pointment to be interviewed.
Bos' State is sponsored bv the
American Legion, and is attended I
by the top Junior boys in the state i
high schools. I
for advanced students of science
and technology.
The program, in which 21 coun
tries participate, is that of the In
ternational Association for the Ex
change of Students for Technical
Experience (lAESTEt. The Insti
tute of International Education,
New York City, at the request of
the American Society for Engi
ne e r i n g Education ( ASEE ), is
serving as the central coordinat
ing agency for U.S: participation
r
Kuklin Visits 'Time'
Arlen Kuklin "left) a univer
sity senior in B'-siness Admin
istration is shown visiting the of
fices of Time Magazine. Here,
Circulation Director Eernhard
Auer (far right) talks to Kuklin
Social Week
County Lincoln Journal
Munderl and Mary O'Reily, Uni
versity students, and Mrs. Dale
Foltz. Standing, from left, are
Mrs. E. James Brownson and
Virginia Wagner, a student.
, Farmhouse senior tn Agriculture
Barbara Peddicord, University
j 0f Omaha junior from Omaha, to
j Art Dewey. Sigma Alpha Eps'ilon
sophomore in Business Administra-
tion from Norfolk.
Friday:
1 Social Calendar:
Sigma Eta Chi Founders' Day
Banquet
Alpha Omicron Pi-Delta Sigma
j Phi Hour Dance
i Beta Theta Pi Spring Formal
j Saturday:
Theta Chi Founders Dav Ban
quet
Delta Upsilon "Hoods" House
i party"
i Beta Sigma Psi "Gates of Hades"
House-party
Alpha Gamma Rho Pink Rose
Formal
Acacia "Orchid Lei" Formal
Uella spring formal
Sunday;
I Sigma Nu Date Dinner
j Alpha Tau Omega Date Dinner
Alpha Gamma Sigma -Love Hall
i Exchange Dinner
Kappa Alpha Theta Faculty Tea
! Chi Omega-Delta Upsilon Pledge
jPart
A!l mfa Da,e Dinaer
Q ? J I CL...-
uriaai onower
I A program on bridal showers
i entitled "Spring Showers" -ill be
i held Thursday at 4 p.m. in the
I Union Faculty Lounge. Mrs. James
Critchfield, former bridal consult
ant at Miller and Paine, will be
the guest speaker.
The program will feature tips
on giving bridal , showers, includ
ing unusual ideas for menus, fa
vors, centerpieces, invitations, and i
shower games.
"Spring Showers" will be the
last program in the "Tips For The j
Contemporary Hostess" series,!
sponsored by the Union hospital
ity committee.
All women students are invited
to attend the program. Refresh
ments will be served.
Program
Variety
in the program this year.
Under the 1AESTE program stu
dents are sent abroad for on-the-job
training during their summer
vacation for a minimum period
of eight weeks. During the 1955
summer 5153 engineering students
from the 21 member countries
trained at 2500 industrial firms in
countries other than their own.
The United States received 39 stu
dents and 20 Americans took for
eign training assignments.
Oiekraakaa tbrtft.1
.(See story at right)
along with an unidentified visit
ing student. Kuklin was one of
57 advertising honor college stu
dents who visited the offices of
Time Magazine during the An
nual Inside Advertising Week,
THE NEBRASKAN
Professors
To Address
Association
Members of the Nebraska Mod
ern Language Association will meet
Saturday at the University.
Speaking at the morning session
will be University professors Dr.
Otto Hoiberg, coordinator of com
munity services; Jleino Virtanen,
associate professor of romance
languages and literature, and Dr.
Boyd Carter, chairman of the de
partment of romance languages
and literature.
Miss Marguerite Klinker of Lin
coln, former professor of piano
at the University, will discuss her
recent trip to Spain at the noon
luncheon at Parlor Z of the Union.
The afternoon session will be
devoted to a panel discussion of
"The Teaching of Foreign Cultures
in the Foreign Language . Class."
Participants will be Prof. Oscar
Budel, University of Omaha; Miss
Mary Joyce, Omaha Westside Com
munity School; Prof. Joseph Kup
cek, Creighton University, and
Miss Cathie Schemel, Duchesne j
School, Omaha. Miss Delizia Rin -
done of Omaha Technical High
School will be moderator.
Mix-Ups:
Syracuse Senate Defeats
Resolution On Liquor Use
By LUCIGRACE SWITZER
Copy Editor
A resolution suggesting the use
of alcoholic beverages at properly
chaperdned social functions was
defeated recently at the University
of Syracuse after considerable de-
; bate.
1 Reasons given at the student gov-
eminent meeting for the allowance
of alcoholic beverages on the cam
I pui included the fact that surround
) ing colleges permit their use and
that various Syracuse living centers
reportedly were engaging in the
practice at their social function
accordmg to the "Daily Orange." j
Name Game j
A Miami University coed with
a mixed-up name is Sidney Gene
Johns. In her lifetime, Sidney has
received a draft notice, been
bombarded with enlistment litera
ture urging her to "join up." and
when she Started college was as
signed to a mens' dorm.
According to the Miami "Hurri
cane", when she got her gender
straightened out with the school
Scholarship:
WAA Gives
Lee Award
To Edwards
Margie Edwards, a junior major
ing in Home Economics is this
years recipient of the Women's
Athletic Association's Mabel Lee
scholarship.
Anyone receiving this scholar-!
ship must be an active member of i
the Women's Athletic Association
on this campus and be a junior
or senior student. She shall have
proven ability to do satisfactory
college work and make sienificant
contributions to the Women's Ath- j
letic Association.
Miss Edward's activities include
vice-president of Women's Athlet
ic Association. Home Economics
Club council, vice president of Phi
Upsilon Omicron, secretary of Ag
Exec. Board, Farmer's Fair Board
and publicity chairman of VHEA.
Student
Attends
Confe
rence
A University student attended the
sixth annual Inside Advertising
Week of the Association of Adver
tising Men and Women April 1.
The student was Arlen Kuklin, sen- j
ior in business administration.
Kuklin was chosen by the head j
of the advertising department of
the University to attend the con
ference along with 50 outstanding
students from throughout the country-
The students spent the week at
tending Uectures, conferences,
lunches, dinners and taking tours.
Esso Standard Oil Company took
the students inside the advertising
workings of a major consumer and
industrial advertiser. The Com
posing Room. Inc. presented '"The
Printed Word" and Grey Advertis
ing Agency, Inc., gave an exposi
tion of the modern advertising ag
ency in action.
Look Magazine explained the inner-workings
of a giant consumer
magazine to the advertising- stu
dents. The National Broadcasting
Company also participated in the
program by discussing the place of
radio and television in the adver
tising world. .
At tbe -end of the conference,
an opportunity was given to the
studens to go back to the com
panies they visited for job inter
views. In June, one of the students who
attended the conference will be
designated by the AAM&W as the
''Outstanding Advertising Student
in America." The choice will be
made' on the basis of tbe student's
performance during the week, his
written report of the week and his
school standing.
Lysteria Organism Studied:
Animal Pathology Department
Conducts Research Program
By WILL SCHUTZ
Ag Editor
Bacteria aren't usually associat
ed with brains, but research work
ers in the Animal Pathology De-
partment of the Ag College have
discovered that this is sometimes
the case.
For the past seven years ex
periments have been carried on
with an elusive animal disease cal
led listeriosis. The symptoms ex
hibited by sheep, cattle, and goats
with listeriosis are in general
caused by lesions in the brain
stein. Just how the organism man
ages to gain entry to the brain
is one of the phases of the lab
study.
A unique characteristic of the
disease is the fact that the lyster
ia organism must occur in con
junction with a virus to produce
an infection. When the organism
alone was sprayed into the nose
! of a test animal nothing happened
I However, when a virus was added
to the test, lysteriosis occurred.
officials, she promptly received in
vitations to a fraternity smoker and
rush party. Finally, to top it all
off, her sorority pin arrived re
cently addressed to Mr. Sidney
Gene Johns.
Eager
At Wyoming University, a per
sistant musician has been arrest
ed for breaking into the Music
Building to practice his string
bass.
The man gained entrance by un
locking a window on Saturday mor
nings and then returning on Sun
day evenings for his practice ses-
sions according u, campus police
wh0 aPPhended him
Theta Xi's Schedule
Founders Day Fete
Theta Xi fraternity will cele
brate its 92nd annual founders day
Saturday. The celebration will be
sponsored by the Lincoln Alumni
Club and the Alpha Epsilon chapter
of the fraternity with contributions
by the Omaha Alumni Club.
The day will include a buffet
luncheon at the chapter house at
noon. Afterwards the alumni and
their wives will attend the Alumni-Varsity
football game. Saturday
evening the men will attend a ban
quet at the Lincoln Hotel, while
the wives will dine at the chapter
house.
if,
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fetetMfew ni..rr ii t I iiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiii'niiiinrinniwiini-Aac. .v;MMMtfMHai
Dick W ahh ( right ) disrutumf carrier equipment a will prntiide
many additional tong dUwn:e t:ifuili out of PhiJiidj'lphja.
"There's opportunity in a growing company"
A an Engineer in the Transmission
Section of Bell Telephone Company of
Penmylvaniju Richard M, Wal4i plans
for the future,
''Our group's responsibility.'" sa
Dk-L. "is to k I hat e have ufiicient
facilities to handle prenent and future
npeds. Tc)ejhone usage is growing eveiy
ear, and e keep up nith this grottii
Ly keeping alidad of it
"For instanoe, Jo mwt the increasing
demand for communkation circuits in
our area, we're adding 70,000 new chan
nel miles this year alone, at a cot of
$3,500,000. Lading new tafcie will give
us 40.000 of those channel miles, and
m eU get the other .'0.000 through use of
carrier equipment, which lets us wnd a
" 4 t 1 " --4 J
;
LAe v ,J4K-I I. N.l.l.. 1J
Research Conducted
This lab in the Animal Path
ology Department of the College
of Agriculture where lysteriosis
! A virus has already been isolated
that associates well with the or
ganism, but the search is contin
uing for other viruses that can
combine with lysteria to produce
the brain disease.
Lysteriosis is not limited to ani
mals alone, but can also occur in
man as well. It is usually en
countered as Listeria meningitis
in adults a disease that is
often fatal.
The first description of listeriosis
was reported in 1926 when the in
fection was observed in a stock
colony of rabbits and guinea pigs
at a laboratory in England. Since
that time, infections of man and
animals have been reported from
all over the world. This has led
to the conclusion that almost any
type of animal may be expected
to harbor the organism.
A peculiarity of the disease in
the ' United States, especially in
sheep, goats and cattle, is its ,
tendency to occur from December :
to June. One of the purposes of the 1
t lab experiment is to determine
j the significance of this peculiari
ty.
In the lab, sheep are being used j
as the chief test animals. The dis- j
ease organisms may be injected I
directly into the brain, into the !
artery leading to the brain, or i
sprayed into the nose.
"We feel that the experiment is
important because lysteriosis is .
CANOE TRIPS
Qi3tK-SuperiT witrimeM5. Canoe.
roTflpletp cmpin equlrmnt vA x-
lm food supplies otiIv J.YSrt jt
person pr ditv. rummsn lunn'Twm
rnm. Far colored boakMt ad map,
rii t:
Mil. MM, Mrr.. rVOB
ClU'NTBT (llTlltTHS
Bi Jit C. fctj. MiaatMrtm
A Campus-to-Career Case
Ill
- y "
I !
number of long dis1aior, al on each
pair of wires simultaneously.
"Tlius, though a cable might have only
3-00 pairs of wires, we can. w ith carrier,
make it carry over 3000 telephone calls
at one time. Using carrier equipment lo
get extra circuits out of cable which i
expensive to make and lay is an example
of how we engineer to give high-grade
serk at the lowest possible coL
"Before I graduated from college I had
interviews with twenty -eight companies.
Out of all these I chose the telephone
company because it had tbe roost to offer
in the way of interesting wrk, training
and opportunity. This certainly luroexi
out to be true. In a growing business
your opportunities grow, too."
I k Talnfe trdmd in 1913 fron tb I uiv-rtiiti of
Delaware wilk B.S. is Mechanical nc;inrcrinf . Tit-
are manf interevting career opportv b i lirt in olbrr Brll
Telepkone Companie. ani in Bel) Telephone Labora
tories, TTentern Elm-trie and Sasdia tierporatioau Vwr
tlaenent ofiicer an give yo9 more in form alios LwmiI
all Bell Sy4tem (mnpiniK.
Wednesday, April 25, 1956
tNtrsk PhtJ
research is being carried on Is
typical of lab setups found
throughout the University.
definitely a health hazared, and
because we know so little about
how or why it develops," Dr. Carl
Olson Jr. chairman of the animal
pathology, department said.
"It is serving as a model for
agents working together to product
an infection," he added.
The work is largely supported
by a $10.0(X) a year research
grant from the U.S Public Health
Service, and research will be con
tinued until some of the basic ans
wers are clear, Olson said.
This experiment is typical of
the many research studies that
are being carried on, not only in
the Ag College, but throughout
the University as well. The re
sults of these studies may well
be of immeasurable value to so-
cjety in the future,
MOTHER'S DAY
May l.V IS5
See our largo selection of card
GOLDENROD
21S North 14th Street
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