Thursday, November 29, 1962 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 i i j m w am mmvt una) i Aeoyr v FWH THE WAU.fffeT sjoornaw mmev I piwjt Bftiewe A m6it WORD I SAWS. AMI? J PiPWT eglfCTf ABPI1KWSHfflTBER siuieARWHewn OR A5BJ6U MewSPAPER iio MwnHi to ft 4? TZ ME THAT AW7HIU5 AlWWW HAP Tap M 10 HfARS. Wat peeP lUSIPflHBOJW HMJ6I RfAttY gaievPWAmr FVERYBODV WA$- I THAT If WAS Alt 6rWA. ttft M 1HM! IT X V A eecAUse f lies i veR0 womj coiw mw. IN HOW GOES 0(JE 60 ABdUr s&ecmjs the: CM THAT Wef- tyUIVl. 1.11 T rt ,.lr-li HrVMirA YZi THAT J COULD ffFOKD 10 WK SUCH GQflSrWTS? AfcreMT TUBS IIJ ftoSrn3J5 Of AffHoeiTW FAR BETTER TftMUO? WM evivtoxx i should m&pt vxwkw mm mem coisavwvs ms. so mm ue cum mxvics v ml? &X3NK. tome raosras UC 600(7 sense? op rue spaas.1 Tigris flUAU-l TO win?, B6HT OR 3 9' i "" f L I I 1 ? ' V' CHARLES lAUCHTCN-Ora MURRAY WALTER PIDBEONirPEeiAWFORD GENEm'EYFRSfOOnDKE ?LEWfffiESirBl)RKSS MEREDITH EDDIE HODGES -frPAULFflRD-SrCr GHiSSEGiaZZUa) INSaSVENSO! Ag Groups Plan Sunday Concert The first Christmas concert of the 1962 season will be pre sented Sunday by the 96-voice Cornhusker Choraliers of the College of Agriculture. Gene Dybdahl will direct the Choraliers and Cynthia Dybdahl will be accompanist in the concert at 4 p.m. in the Activities Building. Featured soloists will be vi olinists Carol Copeland and Janet Hafward and soprano soloists Karen Edeal and Jean Wilcox. The Husker Choristers, a 32-voice select group, will sing seven numbers. PTP Will Explain Plans for Programs Council, Groups To Hold Meeting A self-analysis of all jour nalism organizations and pub lication groups will be held next Thursday in a meeting with the Student Council Ac tivities committee. Representatives of each of these groups will be present They will discuss the pur poses, problems and obliga tions to the campus and stu dent of each of "these organ izations. The other main discussion area to be covered at that time will be the Student Council-organization relationship. This will include coordination between organizations, obliga tions of the Council to organ izations and vice versa. IWA Sponsors' Charm Course Cider, popcorn, explana tions and socializing will compose a People to People (PTP) general meeting Sun day from 2:304:30 p.m. at 4 Via T iifViAT-on Cfiifonfr WnucA An explanation of what Application deadline for PTP is now doing, including i Nancy Quids Charm Course, the Brother-Sister program ; sponsored by the Independ and the job placement and ent V, omen s Association, has European e x c h a n g e pro- been extended to Monday. k rri.ron tn tho The course will be a series group, jvational fir rela tionships and plans for the future will also be explained. For Those SUNDAY Meals Oat TRY THE PIZZA HOUSE 1324 0 'The finest Pizza in 432-6866 Toirn" of five one and a half hour sessions on consecutive Thursday nights at Raymond Hall Recreation Room in the Women's Residence Hall. It is open to all University women and costs J2.75 for all five sessions. The first session will be an nounced as soon as 100 girls have signed up for the course, said Marian Cast, public re lations chairman for IWA. In terested girls should contact their IWA House representa tive or call Sheryl Saner at Fedde Hall or Janet Watson Jv at the Women s Residence 3 Hall. fS? BP JSS5 5K5 JKE W SST KSH JBSf W5 America's largest jew eler presents an excit ing new line of bridal diamonds ... our own exclusive award-winning designs . . . the ultimate in superior craftsmanship. Today, see Zaie's unsurpassed diamond values. A jKiom ptut ttf rro money down convenient term $395 a. 5 fine bCJ" highlight lti minty oi ttii mat- a a f st Cinwnnnl Tarms Y b. ficowtite mrouf imond 1 accented by 4 radiant buttet in vddinc pair of UK cotd. uaat Tanmt C. Sndaf cat fturet rare emerald-cut KXaira, .... richly mwjrrted in vprtoJid 14K g-jid I S lla Manay Daam tfl. l 4, W;mfieet nrt)ia diamond flanked by 4 flfl breathtafcmc baguettes. KK otd. Caay Tm ftvv Itlastratim enlrf4 Is cIhmi 4rtil Most fitiet M'W a ar arUw mggmmmmmmm' m'mm- .ijhiwwi mini &,mnmhmm$ ,3mg0 Campus Calendar TODAY Fellowship To Be Given Graduate women students SPANISH CLUB, 7 p.m., 234 are eligible for the eleventh Union. Prof. Carl Schneider $1 Fellowshi p awarded by VV1U aUTTCIIV VII VUU viet Foreign Policy." CONTEMPORARY MUSIC symposium on serial music. University String Quartet will play, Union, 8 p.m. LAMBDA TAU initiation, 7 p.m. at Wesley Methodist Cen ter. There will be a film on Open-Heart Surgery at 8 p.m. All NUMEDS welcome. ALPHA KAPPA PSI, initia tion and dinner, 5:15 p.m. 240-41 Union. TOMORROW JAZZ 'V JAVA, Union Crib, 4-5 p.m. Sigma Chi combo will play. "ABANDON SHIP", week end film starring Tyrone Pow ers and Stephen Boyd. 7 and 9 p.m. Ladehoff Receives Top Judging Honor A University student, Har lan Ladehoff, won high indi-j vidual honors in the Intercol-; legiate Judging School Con-j test at Manhattan, Kansas re- j cently. ' Ladehoff won first place in j beef judging and fifth place j in sneep juaging, accuruuig to judging coach Richard Warren, assistaat tprofessor of animal husbandry.' O t h e d Nebraskans who nlaeed were Dave Mcuaicn- ey, second in beef judging, and Roger Wilshusen, second in sheep judging. the Soroptimist Club of Los Angeles, Calif. Minimum requirements for the award is a Bachelor's de gree or equivalent The com petition is open to both Amer ican and foreign women, and an unusual field will be given special consideration. i Previous awards have been in the study of blood im fmunology, student dean pro i gram, economics, musicology, i speech correction, aeronauti cal engineering, social wel jfare and international rela tions. Deadline for the fellowship is Feb. 1, 1963. Further in formation may be obtained I from Mrs. A. Gran Pre', Room "j 702. 510 South Spring Street, j Los Angeles 13, Calif. Peffer Says Institutional Employees Aid Therapy "All employees of institu tions for the mentally re tarded are really potential therapists, and that includes custodians as well as the pro fessional staff," said Dr. Pet er Peffer, superintendent of the Glenwood "and Woodland State Schools in Iowa. Dr. PeTfsr was the keynote speaker this week at the first ; informational conference on dynamic health at the Uni-! versity. He said that the most im- j portant informational work ; now needs to be done with employees of the institution, i as well as the general pub-; lie and relatives. "The staff and all em-; ployees must really believe in the efficiency of treatment or ! training, and must be enthu-; siastic," he said. "It is well! known in this business that' most employees' problems fall within the category of j social incompetence rather than work incompetence," he said. Dr. Peffer said there has; been far too little understand- -ing of the problems of em ployees in mental hospitals' and retarded institutions. 4-H Loaders Attend Meet With Delegates University 4-H leaders are accompaning Nebraska's 32 delegates to the National 4-H Congress in Chicago this week. The leaders are W.M. An tes, state leader at the Uni versity, Gerda Petersen, Uni versity extension clothing spe cialist and P. H. Cole, exten sion dairyman at the University. dppIcuudA. New officers of Kappa Ep- silon, national professional or ganization for women in phar-: macy: Betty L. Frazer, pres- ident; JoAnn Kersten, vice' president; Constance Dana her, treasurer and Susan Christensen, secretary. William H. Webster, new president of the University chapter of Rho Chi, national pharmaceutical honor socie ty. Other officers are: Thom as Cunningham, vice presi dent and Louis D. Allison, secret arv-treasorer. STUDENT AND FACULTY 6.70-15 or 7.50-14 Chain Bar OK Mad St Snow Recap Blackwall $8.95 6 hour Custom Capping1 all 4 tires Including ALL COMPACTS Bernlar Tread or Mod & Snow Wheel balancing, $1.25 per wheel weights included Brake Relining, Ford, Chevrolet, all 4 wheels $14.95 Wheel Alignment $ 6.95 All Tire prices are ate Mnsd rarrass tt Tax VV T. o 500 Weit "O" HAAS 435-3211 'anieiAon FLORAL CO. J. ARTHUR ROBERT B. dor. 1306 N. Sr. 5ag f .1 eS for the ee us for A Phone No. 432-7602 WarM-Wirfe Floral Service ooms SiJJ aru a i t t 1598$ Assignment: find new ways to reduce vehicle weight y,, - Mm maiftnw- " f ' T - IT . ' ' . . r asr X. I Action: Now under Army test, a Ford-designed glass filament torsion bar that's lighter, stronger, more flexible than steel "Looks Jite you've Got something there," the Army Tank Command said in effect to Ford Motor Company engineers. "Let's do a feasibility study on trackiaying military vehicles." The story begins in 1957 when Ford engineers conceived the idea of a plastic-bonded gjass filament torsion bar for vehicle suspension systems, it was a revolutionary departure from the use of solid steel. It promised dramatic weight savings in battle tanks, in personnel carriers and other miJitary vehicles. For example, as much as 1,000 pounds in medium tanks. Compared to steel, the tubular-shaped glass fiiarrjent com position has greater energy storage potential is stronger and more flexible under heavy load. H may well prove to be the automobile suspension material of tomorrow . . . cars suspended on glassl Another example of engineering leadership at Ford and new ideas for the American Road. MOTOR COMPANY The American Read, 0?!ftNr! Michigan rnooucro ron tmi umiricam noo thr mowr THt FARM IROORTRV RHO THt 0f OF ACR 1329 "0" ST. FH. 4324217 1