Page 4 The Daiiy Nebraskan Monday, March 21, 1960 CAMPUS For the Week of March 21-27 MONDAY: CITY YWCA, cabinet meeting, 4 p.m.,' 232 Union. MU EPSILON NXJ, luncheon meeting, 12 noon, 415 Ad ministration. LAW , ENFORCEMENT SEMINAR, registration, 8:45 a.m.; meetings, 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., Little Audi torium, Union. - - PLANT SEMINAR, Dr. H. A. Borthwick, 4 p.m., 217 , Bessey. TUESDAY: RELIGION STUDY GROUP, communism, 4 p.m., 232 Burnett. LAW ENFORCEMENT SEMINAR, meetings, 8:45 a.m., 7 p.m.. Little Auditorium, Union. PLANT SEMINAR, Dr. Borthwick, 4 p.m., auditorium, Biochemistry Bldg. ART .GALLERIES TOUR, Tom Schmitt, director, 8 p.m., second floor, Morrill Hall. AG YMCA-YWCA, cabinet meeting, 6:30 p.m.. Food and Nutrition Bldg. AG YMCA-YWCA, program meeting, 7:15 p.m., Food and Nutrition Bldg. WEDNESDAY: RELIGION STUDY GROUP, racial tensions, 5 p.m., Presby House. CITY YWCA, community service, 4 p.m., 341 Union. CITY YWCA, religion group, 5 p.m., 232 Union. STUDENT COUNCIL, meeting. 4 p.m.. Union. LAW ENFORCEMENT SEMINAR, meetings, 8:45 a m., 7 p.m., Little Auditorium, Union. AG EXEC BOARD, meeting, 7:15 p.m., Ag Union. THURSDAY: PSYCHOLOGY SYMPOSIUM. Dr. David Radaport, Dr. Fritz Heider and Dr. Robert White, 9:30 a.m. and 2 p.m., 332 Union. LAW ENFORCEMENT SEMINAR, meetings. 8:45 a.m., 10:15 a.m., 11:15 a.m., Little Auditorium. Union. PHYSICS COLLOQUIUM, Dr. Gordon A. Gallup, 4:15 p.m., tea 3:45 p.m., 211 Brace Laboratory. CITY YWCA, projects, 4 p.m., 334 Union. CITY YWCA, world community, 5 p.m., 340 Union. CITY YWCA, love and" marriage, 5 p.m., 334 Union. RELIGION STUDY GROUP, politics and evangelism. 2 p.m., Cotner School of Rehgion. FACULTY CONCERT, Leon Lishner, vocalist, 7:30 p.m., ballroom. Union. AQUAQUETTES, "Pacific Cruise," 7:45 p.m., Coliseum pool BLOCK AND BRIDLE, meeting. 7:30 p.m., Ag Union. AGRONOMY CLUB, meeting, 7:30 p.m, 307 Keim Hall. FRIDAY: PSYCHOLOGY SYMPOSIUM, Drs. Radaport, Heider and White, 9:30 a.m., 2 p.m., 232 Union. LAW SCHOOL CONVOCATION, Dean Roscoe Pound, 11 a.m., Law College, luncheon, 12 noon, Indian Suite, Union. NEWS PANEL CONVOCATION, featuring William Mc Gaffin, 2:30 p.m., Little Auditorium, Union. PI MU EPSILON, business meeting, 3 p.m., room num ber not yet known. AQUAQUETTES, "Pacific Cruise," 7:45 p.m., Coliseum pool. LAW ENFORCEMENT SEMINAR, meetings, 10:15 a.m., 11:15 a.m., Little Auditorium, Union. KOSMET KLUB, spring show, "Pajama Game," 8 p.m., Pershing Auditorium. SIGMA DELTA CHI, spring banquet, 5:30 p.m., Corn- husker Hotel. RELIGION STUDY GROUP, militant non-Christian faiths, 4 p.m., Episcopal Chapel. SATURDAY! KOSMET KLUB, spring show, "Pajama Game," 8 p.m.,' Pershing Auditorium. HIGH SCHOOL PLAY DAY, 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Grant Memorial Hall. MU ErsiLiUN INU, banquet, 7 p.m., Cotner Terrace. SUNDAY: RELIGION STUDY GROUP, Bible, 7:30 p.m., Lutheran Student House. POT LUCK DINNER, Student-Faculty, 5:30 p.m., Ag Union. Slip of Tongue Has Clergy Give (ACP) From the Collegian of Kansas State University: In an English Literature class recently, students were discussing Chaucer's -England. The professor explained inai ai uiai ume mere were three groups of people , Men who f v Skin protection, that is. Oid Spice refreshes and stimulates, guards against the loss of vital skin moisture. Feels great, too. Brisk, bracing, with that tangy Cid Spice scent. It don er.m 1o gftrart lem.'lc admirers, nm wnai ren-nmoura wian JT-erls protection sjrain't pirk? 1 .00 .''- clergy, laity and aristocracy. Each group was about one third of the total population. One coed, obviously im pressed by this, gasped. "I certainly didn't realize the clergy "compromised" one third of the people." face wind and weather' choose the AFTER SHAVE LOTION Booth Is Up For Yellers A booth Is open outside the Crib today and tomor row for freshmen who wish to sign up for cheerleader. Two women and three men will be chosen for next year's squad. Practice sessions for ap plicants will be held March 24, 28 and 29 in the Colise um beginning at 4:30 p.m. Trvouts will be held at 7:30 p.m. March 30 in the Coli seum. All applicants must have a 4.5 average. Camp Jobs Available For Summer Applications are now avail able for summer co-op recrea tion camps for people inter ested in club or community leadership. The three sessions of the camp for students, ages 17-21, will be held in June at Wil liam Jewell College, Liberty, Mo. Information on the function of co-operatives in business and service will be given along with instruction in lead ing recreation for clubs and communities. Applications will be ac cepted until April 20 in the 4-H office in Ag Hall. At that time the 4-H executive board will consider the applications and select the representative from the University. Information can be obtained from the 4-H office or from Wes Gradv at IN 6-2436. Dr. Hiskey Heads Child Federation Dr. Marshall S. Hiskey, University of Nebraska educa tional psychologist, has been elected president of the newly formed State Federation of Exceptional Children Coun cils. Dr. Hiskey, who is also the Nebraska membership and promotions chairman, was elected following the introduc tion of two new chapters in Nebraska. A state conference on ex ceptional children is being planned by the new federation for June. The needs of excep tional children, new legisla tion and the certification of teachers in the area of special legislation will be discussed. IF YOU C3 NEVER SEE ANOTHER 1 S?i urn-inn PirniftP in? YOUR UFE YOU MUST SEE protection of. SHU UTO Alpha,Beta, Gamma Rays Dusted Away With Paper Know the ABG's of ra dioactivity! . Keeping tab on Alpha, Beta and Gamma rays is a task which keeps Ed Simp son, University public health engineer, busier than a geiger counter in a pile of uranium. Radioligical Health Simpson is in charge of the University's radiologi cal health program and is responsible for. seeing that the researchers working with radioactive materials do not absorb harmful amounts of radiation namely Alpha and Beta particles and Gamma rays. Director of 13 different laboratories on the three University campuses which use radioactive materials, Simpson has his own meth od for checking radiation. Simpson's method is sim ilar to that which a house wife might use in her liv ing room 'with one impor tant exception the dnst is checked in a $1,300 Intern al Proportional Counter be fore going in the garbage can. Circular pieces of filter paper serve as Simpson's dust cloth, which he uses to wipe the tops of lab tables. The particles collected are put in the counter which tells him whether the radio active atoms on the "dust cloth" are throwing off a dangerous number of par ticles. Alpha Particles If the lab particles are found to contain radioactive material omitting more than 15 Alpha particles per minute in an area about as big as the palm of your hand, the lab is closed and scrubbed with water. One of the problems which Simpson has faced was how to safely dispose of radioactive lab materials such as broken glass, speci mens used in experiments and other equipment. This problem was finally solved, said Simpson. A small concrete-block struc ture was built on the Ag campus which serves as the University's "garbage can" in which all radioactive waste is stored until it loses its radioactivity. Some "radioactive mater ials such as gold need to be Tfie most difficult puzzle in the in i nfn V A .. ....... vl I GET SET Ed Simpson, University public health en gineer, sets his Internal Proportional Counter for measur ing radioactivity contained in dust from a University laboratory. kept in the block house only about 20 days while Stron iium 90, must be kept in the house for 200 years. Badge System In addition to monitoring the laboratories, Simpson also maintains a film badge system for measuring radi ation amounts to which each researcher is exposed during a two-week period. Marriage Course Begun In Japan (ACPI The Asian Student, published by the Asia Found ation as a service to Asian students in the United States, reports that a school for Jap anese prospective bride -grooms has been opened in Tokyo. The two-month course is free. The Metropolitan Govern ment opened the school in view of many complaints from Japaness women that their husbands w e r too 'bossy." Classes are held twice a week. Subjects taught include political economy, law litera ture, housekeeping and ele mentary medicine. " J. The pizzle? How to find your Jifes work. Th sohirton? It come? onlv with searching. It may be right uodtr your oota or it tMf stifi be far awav io the future. But the solution wiU come. YouViB wmj probatJjr sd ft fcxXbe woA you undertake after college. This You proved true many time at IBM. For tnrtHnoe, young ngV ners and scientists after learning the scope of IBM activrtiot la research, development and manufacturing have found their inter ests leading them into such vital growth fields as microwaves, ovwtft design, solid state physics, magnetics and manufacturing reseacb Depending on individual talents and inclination, a college graduate may acquire skills at IBM that lead to a variety of careen. When a person is able to move into areas where his true interests la, and when he has many areas to choose from, it will certainly he umiat for him to find his life's work. After all, it's easier to find the solution to The Most Difficult Puzzle the world when you have access .Yoi art invitrd to tncttHgate opporfanitiet in Reeatch, ftcvelrtpmcni, Motwfae Hiring, Trogramming, and other fields. "Your Placement Director can tell ynu v ken our reprenentatives will next Dixit your campus. Or you may write to: Manager of Technical Employment, Dept. 673, IBM Corporation, 5S0 Umiuon Avenue, Sew Vork 22, A'. Y. , ' . . X -s'i i The badge, which each worker wears pinned to his clothing, contains a piece of photographer film. When developed, it indicates the radiation level to which he was subject. Every two weeks the film is changed and sent to the Radiation Detection Com pany which shows that the wearers are exposed to ra dioactive sources emitting about 113 particles each minute a level which is not harmful. , Radiation to which all of us are subject fallout, cosmic rays from the sun and radon gas from radium in the soil amounts to about 80 Beta particles be ing emitted from these sources each minute. If a person receives a small overdose, be is warned to be more cautious. If the exposure is quite large, be is no longer al lowed to work with radio active materials since ad ditional radiation, might cause harmful effects. Simpson says that in the past four years, only a handful have received slight overdoses and no one has experienced and overex posure which would dismiss him from work. Do you have a solution? In high school, you may have tiiought yam h4 the solution, only to have it vanish. In ooUeg it may seem well within your grasp, only to vanish again. But this k not ttausiud. Its a vary difficult puzzk. to all the clue, ra i Nai'l Science Foundation Awards 15 Kational Science Founda tion graduate fellowships v amounting to $30,000 have been awarded to 15 University students. Those receiving direct scholarships from the Found ation for the 1960-61 school year are: A'red Witte, Rob ert Allington, Donald Mc Arthur, Eldon Shuey and John Anderson. All but Anderson will con tinue their studies at the Uni versity. Anderson plans to study at Harvard. Those receiving summer fellowships are Paul Dussere, Charles Heuer, William Mc Crady and Robert Zey. Those receiving coopera tive fellowships by the Found ation and University are Mar lin Bolen. Mildred Goss, Wayne Lang, John Park, James Swanson and Allan Vennix. Slam Foregone For Food's Sake (ACP) There are hazards to teaching in a woman's university reoorts the Dailv Lass-0 of Texas Woman's University. Take the case of Dr. Richard Harrrove, whse wife is enrolled in one of his classes. - Mrs. Hargrove, late to his lecture one morning. entP'-ed the classroom saying, "Hon estly, the car wouldn't start." Giving her a skeptical glance. Dr. Hargrove remark ed, "I could make a terrific slam, but I like to eat too much" Read the Daily Nebraskan piassified Ads. Better still USE THEM! DOOR OPEN 12:45 i world ' s