The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 11, 1963, Page Page 3, Image 5

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Monday, March 11, 1963
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 3
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MAY QUEEN Finalists for May Queen were chosen In elections last Wednesday. They
are: from now: JKutnanne Head, Kim Pohlman, Pam Hirschbach and Marty Elliott.
Back Row: Marty Anderson, Julie Westerhoff, Vicky Cullen and Helen Landis. Not
pictured are Judy Tenhulzen and Gale Brannigan. t.
Coeds ote Wednesday
lliasd
Ten finalists for May
Queen were chosen in the
all women's primaries. The
May Queen and Maid of
Honor will be chosen by a
vote of all junior and senior
women on Wednesday at All
Women's Elections and the
winners will be revealed on
Ivy Day.
The finalists include:
Marty Anderson, Alpha
Omicron Pi. Her activities
include Union Board of Man
agers,. Union Program Coun
cil, Recording Secretary of
her sorority, past president of
Red Cross and a member of
the 1962 Ivy Day Court.
Gayle Branigan is affiliated
with Pi Beta Phi. Gayle was
president of Pi Beta Phi in
1962. She is a member of
Theta Sigma Phi, Young
Democrats, AUF and New
man Club.
Vicky Cullen is a member
of Gamma Phi Beta. Her act
ivities include Builders past
vice-president, Gamma Phi
Beta past president, 1962 Ivy
Day Court, Coed Follies skit
master, Greek Week chair
man; Spring Day executive
committee, 1961 finalist for
Honorary Commandant, Pi
Sigma Alpha and Regents Up
perclass Scholarship.
Marty Elliott is a member
of Kappa Alpha Theta. Her
activities include lassels,
1962 Homecoming chairman,
Cadence Countesses secre
tary, Alpha Lambda Delta,
Sigma Alpha Eta, Pi Lamb
da Theta, dorm . counselor,
Cornhusker Beauty Queen
finalist, 1962 finalist for Ne
braska Sweetheart, 1961 Miss
Navy and Lincoln Project.
Pam Hirschbach is a mem
ber of Chi Omega. She is
AUF past vice-president, Chi
Omega past president, Coed
Follies skitmaster, A W S
Board member, 1962 finalist
for Nebraska Sweetheart and
Kosmet Klub spring show.
Helen Landis is affiliated
with Alpha Chi Omega. Her
activities include Union past
chairman, AUF past chair
man, Alpha Chi Omega past
chaplin and activities chair
man. Kim Polman is a member
of Alpha Phi. Her activities
include Aquaquettes, Union
past chairman, YWCA past
cabinet member, Alpha Phi
past treasurer and president,
AWS vice-president, 1962 Ivy
Day Court and Regents Up
perclass Scholarship.
Ruthanne Read is a mem
ber of Pi Beta Phi. Her ac
tivities include Union past
chairman, Orchesis past
vice-president, 1961 Miss Air
Force, Angel Flight com
mander and 1960 finalist for
Miss Lincoln.
Judy Tenhulzen is a mem
ber of Kappa Alpha Theta.
She is in the University
Singers, Mu Phi Epsilon, Pi
Lambda Epsilon, Kappa Al
pha Theta past pledge train
er, Red Cross past chair
man, 1960 finalist for Miss
Lincoln and 1961 finalist for
Miss Iowa.
Julie Westerhoff is a mem
ber of Alpha Omicron Pi.
Her activities include AWS
board member, past corres
ponding secretary of her sor
ority, Builders past secre
tary, Cadence Countesses and
Lutheran Student Assembly
past secretary.
SS Test Applications
Are Due March 27
Applications for the Select
ive Service College Qualifica
tion Test to be given April
18 are now available at the
Selective Service local
boards throughout Nebraska,
according to Lt. General Guy
N. Hennigner, State Director.
Applications must be post
marked no later than mid
night Wednesday, March 27.
The test will be offered at
the University.
Test scores will provide lo
cal boards with evidence of
aptitude for continued under
graduate and graduate study.
The scores will not of them
selves determine eligibility
for deferment. But they are
considered with other Infor
mation by the boards In de
termining whether to defer
Campus
Calendar
TODAY
UNICORNS meeting, 332
Student Union, 7 p.m. Linda
Jensen, Daily Nebraskan edi
tor will speak.
TOMORROW
FACULTY SENATE, 4 p.m.
Student Union.
FACULTY RECITAL, Leon
Lishner, 7:30 p.m., Union
Ballroom.
SIGMA XI annual business
meeting, Dr. Robert B. John
son speaker, 7:30 p.m., Bess
ey Hall Auditorium.
WEDNESDAY
RED CROSS mass meeting,
7 p.m., 333-334 Union.
Tickets Now Available
For Air Force Ball
Tickets for the second an
nual Air Force Ball go on
sale today at the Military and
Naval Science drill hall, ac
cording to Terry Miller, Com
mander of the Arnold Air So
ciety. The tickets will be sold
each day for two weeks from
8:30 a.m., to 4 p.m., for the
March 22 ball at the LAFB
officer's club, Miller said.
The cost of a ticket for one
couple is seven dollars, he
said. That will cover a buffet
style dinner and the dance
featuring Bobby Lane's Or
chestra. Presentation of graduation
sets to senior officers of the
Arnold Air Society will be
held at the ball.
for
individual registrants
further study.
To be eligible to take the
test, the applicant must be
a satisfactorily pursuing a
full-time undergraduate col
lege course, leading to a de
gree. The applicant must be
a Selective Service registrant
who intends to seek defer
ment as a student. He can
take the test only once.
At the present time, local
boards reach men for induc
tion at about age 23. Students
generally can be nearly
through their undergraduate
studies at that age. But those
hoping to continue studies in
graduate school, for example,
will need a deferment to do
so.
In addition, heavier draft
calls would lower the age at
which local boards reach
men for induction, and de
ferments might be necessary
to finish undergraduate. work.
In either case a test score
in the file will give the local
board an additional piece of
important information to use
in determining whether a reg
istrant is eligible for a stu
dent deferment.
NEBRASKAN
WANT ADS
FOR SALE
Smlth-Corons portable typewriter, MO.
Contact Jack Stout, 2911 R HI. AIM, two
7.50x15 brand new whit walla, 119
spires.
19511 edition Encyclopedia Brttannlca
complete with language dictionaries,
atlaa, and fitted bookcase. 1U5D-IIK2
yearbooks and research stomps In
cluded. Like new. $228, 4M-MJM ffler
1:00 p.m.
FURNISHED APARTMENTS
Near University. Neat 2 bedroom fur
nished apartment. Lovely view of Lin
coln Available Mar. 18. 432-8222.
WANTED
Independent off-campus students Interested
in Joining a fast-growing campus or
ganization (UNICORNS) designed to
meet their needs and desires. Meeting
In 332 Student Union, Mon. Mar. 11,
7:00 P.m.
PERSONAL
Latin American desires to meet people
vho are broad-minded. Interesting and
nonconformists for discussions of all
kinds. Contact John Remos, 17U L 8t.,
4324008.
BRIDGE
If you Ilk bridge ylu will like Duplicate.
Student Union, Mondays, 7:16 p.m. and
Sundays, 2:16 P.m. Entry 1.5(1. Free
cokes and coffee. Come alone or bring
a partner. Kibitzers welcome.
ROOMMATE WANTED
Man to share house with Orad student.
IneKpenslve. Convenient. Phone 4WMIM0.
" LOST
Shoe tote bug and pair of ski boots near
music rooms, reward given U returned
to music room a'.tew!"t
Foreign Language
Program Offered
Students at colleges and
universities across the nation
are eligible to participate in
a unique foreign language
program in Europe, offered
this fall by Michigan State
University in cooperation
with the Foundation for Euro
pean Language and Educa
tional Centers Of Zurich,
Switzerland.
Twelve-week ex t e n s i v e
language programs will be
offered, beginning Sept. 30,
in French at Paris, France,
and Lausanne, Switzerland;
in German at Cologne, Ger
many; in Italian at Florence,
Italy; and in Spanish at Bar
celona and Madrid, Spain.
Language students will re
side with European families
in order to more quickly gain
ing uistic proficiency and to
understand more fully the
people whose language they
are studying.
Cost of the program varies
between $750 and $850. Par
ticipants will leave New York
for Europe Sept. 23 and re
turn Dec,. 23.
Applications or additionali
information may be obtained
by contacting F. J. Morti
more, Kellogg Center, Michi
gan State University, East
Lansing, Mich.
By JOHN LONNQUIST
Nebraskan Staff Writer
The end of the present aca
demic year will bring an end
to the career of one of the
University's most prominent
faculty members.
At this time, Dr. James M.
Reinhardt, professor of crim
inology, and one of the na
tion's foremost authorities in
the field of sex offenders, will
retire because of the Univer
sity's mandatory age limit of
65, which he has escaped for
threeyears.
An appreciation fund for Dr.
Reinhardt has been estab
lished by Robert E. Morrison
and other former students of
Ms. The fund was set up "in
appreciation and in acknowl
edgment of Dr. Reinhardt's
many years of outstanding
teaching and of the academic
honor he has brought to the
University of Nebraska
through his internationally ac
knowledged excellence in the
field of criminology," said
Morrison.
Ag Experts Give
Garden Advice
To Land sea pers
People across the state are
writing University Extension
Horticulturists for advice on
spring plant tips.
One of the first steps to
take with an old lawn, the ex
tensionists advise, is to clean
up the dead grass so the young
blades can grow.
Power rakes, rented for a
few dollars for an afternoon,
can give new grass a lot of
breathing space, advise lawn
experts. .
The next step in growing
a luxuriant lawn is finding out
what nutrition it needs.
Kits for testing soil are
available from the University
Extension Service. The kits
help in finding the soil's pH
and lertilizer requirements.
1 trtn ft11 1CUT
The fund will finance gradu
ate fellowships in the areas
of criminology, psychology,
sociology, anthropology, and
philosophy.
Dr. Reinhardt was born on
the 5th of October, 1894.
There was no high school in
Dalton, Georgia, his home
town, and not much of a
grade school either. As an
orphan, he was fortunate to
obtain the meager four or
five month-a-year education
which he did until he was
about twelve years old.
At twelve he began to wan
der around some. He worked
successively: herding cattle
in the Georgia mountains, la
boring in a cotton mill, talc
mine and clay mine. "Some
of this sounds fantastic," he
said, "but in those days,
there were no child labor
laws, and kids were ex
ploited."
"I was a hobo, but I was
never destitute. I never had
to beg. As a hobo on the
railroads, I was kind og
lucky. I got to see America
first."
When he was seventeen, Dr.
Reinhardt decided that he
ought to get an education. He
read about a church school in
Tennessee and applied there.
"I was afraid that they
wouldn't admit me because
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SU)ET INNOCENT KITE OUT AND
TANGLE IT AROUND 5uMe TKcfcf
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HOW CRUL .'OH, HOW INHUMANE!
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March II through March 17
Tuesday:
Faculty Recital 7:30, Ballroom
Wednesday
Take Five 3:30, Lounge
Thursday: v
Contemporary Music Symposium
8:00 Music Room
State Basketball Tournament Donee
(High School Students Only)
Friday:
Weekend Film "Please Don't Eat the Daisies"
7:00 & 9:00
State Basketball Tournament Dance
(High School Student. Only)
Saturday:
State Basketball Tournament Dance .
(High School Students Only)
Sunday:
Spring Orchestra Concert
4:00 Ballroom
Weekend Film "Please Don't Eat the Daisies"
7:00
Writer Holthusen
To Give Lecture
Dr. Hans Eeon Holthusen,
program director of the Goe
the House in JNew i one ciiy,
will give a lecture at 8 p.m.
Wednesday in Love Library
discussing the dramatic
theory of the German play
wright Bertolt Brecht.
Brecht is the author of "The
Three Penny Opera." The
Dublic is invited and there is
no admission charge.
Dr. Holthusen, a native ot
Germany, has been an inde
Dendent writer since 1945. He
has been at the Goethe
House, the American-German
Cultural Center and Library,
since 1961.
His present tour includes
lectures at Northwe st e r n,
Washington, Kansas and Colo
rado universities. His lecture
is being sponsored by the
University chapter of Delta
ft Tt V"Vr-
DR. REINHARDT
Phi Alpha, honorary German
fraternity.
I hadn't had any education."
They did write back, however,
and with some money given
him by his grandfather, Dr.
Reinhardt boarded a train
and went to see Grandview
Institute.
Grandview was a combina
tion grade and high school.
Reinhardt, being seventeen,
applied for admission to the
high school. "We can't let you
go to high school," said the
registrar, "we don't have any
of your transcripts." "But
heavens," said Reinhardt, "I
didn't know what a transcript
was."
They decided, after the sec
retary came to the boy's de
fense, that he should be giv
en a chance. He enrolled, and
three and one-half years lat
er he graduated.
After high school, Dr. Rein
hardt worked for seven years
to earn enough money to go
to college. He enrolled in
Bera College, in Kentucky,
where he completed his un
dergraduate work.
On graduation, he went im
mediately to teach sociology
and criminology at Chicora
College in Columbia, S.C.,
which was an exclusive girls
college. He taught there for
one year, before deciding to
do some graduate work.
Due to scholarship changes,
Dr. Reinhardt alternated be
tween the University of Chi
cago and the University of
North Dakota, where he final
ly received his Master of
Arts, and his Doctor of Phil
osophy degrees.
With his Ph.D. completed,
he taught at a small college
in West Virginia, the Univer
sity of Oregon, and Wayne
University in Detroit. In 1931
he came to the University of
Nebraska where he has been
ever since.
At the University, Dr. Rein
hardt is presently teaching an
advanced course in crimin
ology, a seminar in personal
ity and social adjustment, and
an introductory course in
criminology.
Dr. Reinhardt has had about
70 articles printed in profes
sional journals and has writ
ten nine books, among them,
Sex Perversions and Sex
Crimes, and The Murderous
Trail of Charles Starkweath
er. Dr. Reinhardt said that at
the end of the year, "I think
I'll settle down and finish
some writing projects that I've
been interested in. I've gath
ered a lot of material on ju
venile violence, some on al
most perfect crimes.
"These almost perfect
crimes are fantastic," he com
mented. "The men involved
would almost certainly have
not been caught had it not
been for some little slip like
drinking too much and then
saying the wrong thing."
During his lifetime, Dr.
Reinhardt has received many
awards, among them the Dis
tinguished Citizen award,
Admiral in the Nebraska
Navy and Distinctive service
in the cause of justice. He has
also been listed in three Who's
Whos and in several other
directories.
GUADALAJARA
SUMMER
SCHOOL
University of Arizona will
offer in cooperation with
professors from Stanford
University and Guadalajara,
in Mexico, July 1 Aug. 10,
art folklore, geography, his
tory, language, Se literature
courses. Tuition, board &
room, $245. Write Prof. J. B.
Rael, Box 7227, Stanford,
California.
Here's why so many young women
become United Air Lines Stewardesses
Fascinating citieif to visit Only
half the working hours of an office em
ployee Association with interesting
people Opportunities in the new Jet
Age with United's growing jet fleet.
In United's own Stewardess
School, you train for this exciting
career at our expense. From the very
first moment, you begin forming
friendships with alert, personable,
young women from all parts of the
country. In school, Jet Age subjects
awaken new interests and stir your
Imagination. Special classes give indi
vidual attention to you and the pro
fessional techniques of keeping that
freshly groomed look while you travel.
in thnU. S.A.. clus ouarter-farfi
- - , .
privileges on many overseas lines.
Even when you choose to be
"grounded" by marriage (as a great
many of you will), United offers other
career opportunities.
As a United Stewardess you'll be
living in some of the country's most
exciting cities-Los Angeles, New
York, Philadelphia, Seattle, San Fran
cisco, Denver and others.
There's time for fun and leisure, too.
Before you know it, the 4V2 weeks of
training have flown by. It's graduation
day and your United wings are pinned
on at a special ceremony. You're be
ginning a career that offers so many
special advantages; an attractive
starting salary with regular increases,
opportunities for advancement and
expense allowances for trips. With
United, you also get free vacation
You'll be flying many different routes,
visiting fabulous cities and resort
areas. You'll meet and work with in
teresting people from all parta of the
world. And because of you each one
of your United passengers will have a
more pleasant trip.
If you're between 20 and 26, be
tween 5'2" and 5'8" and single, you
may qualify for this challenging, re
warding career. Wouldn't you like to
enjoy these wonderful experiences in
the jet age as a Stewardess with
United Air Lines?
A United Air Line Representative will be on campus March 18 and 19 to
diHCUSs this exciting and challenging career. The film "Jet Age Stewardess1'
will be shown Monday, March 18. Mainliner Stewardess Jane Deppen, a
recent University of Nebraska graduate will be on hand to answer ques
tions. Interviews will be held on Tuesday.
For Additional Information Contact The Placement Office