Monday, May 20, 1963 The Daily Nebroskan Page 3 Five' Arrivals Swell Five additional Peace Corps representatives arrived in Lincoln last night to further implement the new, enlarged recruiting program now un derway at the University. They are: Dr. Joseph Gal lag', director of the Medi cal Division; Dr. David Dieh ter, in charge of Afghanistan and Pakistan Affairs ; Mr. El mer Skold, Division of Volun teer Support; Mr. Sam Stiles, Division of Management; and Harriett Parsons, Division of Agriculture. Peace Corps team members will appear this week before numerous class sessions, Clubs, fraternities and soror ities, and other organizations to speak on the opportunities for Peace Corps service. An advance three-member team has already set up head quarters for the Corps' pro gram in the South Lobby of the Union (at the "R" Street entrance). Headqu a r ters will be pen today through F r i day from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., and in the evenings after 7:15 p.m. On Sat 1 itmk urday the Gallagher headquarters will be open 9 a.m. to noon. During these times students may take the Peace Corps test, see movies or have in formal talks. The one-h our test is a shortened version of the original four-hour exam. Applicants taking the test while the team is here will be notified within two weeks as to whether they may enter this summer. Those appli cants with a knowledge of ei ther French or Spanish should take an additional language lasts one hour. The test is non -competitive. Chief of University Rela tions for the Peace Corps is Dr. Rogers Finch, a mem ber of the advance team. Before joining the Peace Corps, Finch earned an inter national reputation for his en gineering research ac complishments and adminis trative efforts both in the U.S. and abroad. Nebraskan Newly-elected officers of the Nebraska chapter of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, national mu sic fraternity, are: Don Thomson, president; Gary Winkelbauer, vice-president; j Steve Halter, secretary; Mi-; chael Veak, treasurer; D o n Remmers, alumni secretary; Jim Wickless, publicity a n d j historian; Rod Gibb, chorale j director; Frank Richardson,; pledge trainer; and D e n n i s i Schneider, faculty advisor. ' New Officers for Student Chapter of the American In-: stitute of Architects i Student! AIA) are: Dick Farley, Pres-; ident; Tom Ragland, Vice-, -President; Joe Johnson. Sec-i retary; Jim Goodell, Treas-i urer. Committee heads elected are: Allan Elliott, Program; I Mark Raemaker, Public Re-1 SCHEDULE OF FINAL EXAMINATIONS memd SnnnUr IBBZ-flli TfWriDAY. MAY 211 -12 a.m. Clas.e meeting al 1:00 p.m . 6 or 4 day., or MWF, or any one of the -5 pm. CM meeting at 1:00 p.m.. TTh. or either one of these two day.. All auction, oi HuHlwis ommizatior i :i. 4. WKDNIiSIMV. MAY -12 a.m. Cla meetina at 10:01) a.m., 5 or 4 days. MWF. or any one or two of 2-5 p.m. cif meetiiiB at 10:00 a.m.. TThS. or any one or two ol theae day.. FKI1M) . MAI 31 D-12 a.m. Claaw meetlnx at 4:00 p.m., TTh, or either one of theae two day.. 2 5 p.m. ('Lr'meetinK W:) P.m..S or 4 day., or MWF, or any one or two of thesi dvs. All uprtmrwiil Knulinh B, :i ... in I r.v.,li.H(j 1 IliriliiCV 1 ! a.m. Claaaea meeting at 11:00 am.. 6 mese ciuvh. All wctione of fcpeech 8. 1 IH2 a m 2-5 p.m. Claw meeting at B:00 a.m., 5 or 4 duya, or MWF, or any one or two of Oawtiwm'elliiit at :) am. TThS, or any one or two of theae day. All aecticim, ol ISuinenfi Organizations 21. All net-lams ol Education 'il, 2. 710 p.m. K-12 a.m. v.mm meeting al 2:00 p.m.. 6 2-5 p.m. Clan meetlnK at 2:00 P.m., TTh. ll ftet'linilH wi r.i;,,,,"",..'. All aectioliH of French 12. 14 All sertmnB ol npanwn at. . All aeouon. 0. SSSSSoTmin 6 , , 6-12 a.m. Claaam meeting at 3:00 p.m., 5 or 4 day, or KIWt, or any one or two of the da.vh. All (Mictions of Er-nnomica 11, 12. All Hei'tionR of Education .10. .11. 'laI meetin at :t (Ml P.m.. TTh. 4..MOM meeilll w e 2 ." p.m Claantw meeuii' hi .t:, i..., 1-3 p.m Al) auction of Math U. 4fc 8-12 a.m. Claaae. meeUng at 9:00 a.m., 5 or 2 5 p m KaaW at B:00 a.m.. TThS. or any one or two of theae day.. Note , i 1. In the event of conflict, regularly achedutad claaaea take precedence over unit , 1 nSSlafmertinK on the half hour .hall be examined on the hour which ha. been j h ?l7 Fm example, cla.e. which meet from 14.30 to 16:00 o'clock on Tuewlay. n llye,5; or, a mr..n T. m,ni t the time aat tor B aa which meet at i 1-1:110 o'clock Tueday. and Thur.day Graduation Near And Need TRANSPORTATION ? We have oil Mokes and Models Priced to Suit your Budget 5, Ford, .etr.o.ah.e Jp C.,.( W 01 Mercury. Everything;. Save Dollars Peace Corps Yearn After taking a Bi. in me chanical engineering at Mas sachusetts Institute of Tech nology, Finch received a com mission in the Army Quarter master Corps. By the end of World War II, he was chief of a textile research group at the Jeffersonville, Ind., Quar termaster Depot where he di rected the development of a fireproof finish for tent fab rics and a tropical finish im pervious to mildew. Dis charged a Major, he returned to M.I.T. to obtain advanced degrees (M.S. and Ph.D.) in textile technology while serv ing at the same time as a member of the faculty. Dr. Finch, an assistant "pro fessor, was named director of the Slater Memorial Textile Research Laboratory at M.I.T. where he supervised the development of a' n e w high-impact suspension-1 i n e system for parachutes, an item demanded by the new age of jet airplanes. In 1951 a trip to Japan started him in the "interna tional business." He spent two months in Tokyo as an ad viser to the Ministry of Edu cation and to Japanese uni versities on problems of en gineering education and the engineeiing profession in the United States. The following year, he was sent to Burma for two months to develop a relationship be tween M.I.T. and the Univer sity of Rangoon, and on his return home, he was placed in charge of the Rangoon project at his own university. In 1953, Finch returned to Burm-afor a stay of 17 months first as -deputy di rector and then director of the Foreign Aid Mission there. It was a time in which Burma, for i n ternation al political reasons, be come the only foreign nation ever to end a U.S. foreign a i d program, and Finch, Finch Applauds 1 a t i o n s; Steve Wilson, Li brary. New officers of Alpha Kap pa Psi Psi Professional Bus iness Fraternity are: John Hasselquist, President; Jim Jochim, Vice-President; Eldo Bohmont, Secretary; Gary Oye, Treasurer; Bill Busier, Master-of -Rituals. New members are: Sam Baird, Joe Howard, Jr., Jike Jeffrey, Eugene Lentz, G i f ford Leu, Jerry Lindvall, Bill Mowbray, Jr., John Mullins, Richard Packwood, James Rambo, Larry Roos, Dennis Siefford, and Mike Velte. New officers of Unicorns are: Jean Tilman, President; Stan Foster, Vice President; M a r b r o Rush, Secretary; Shari Colton, Treasurer. or 4 ttsy, , MWF, or any on or fwo of or 4 day., MWF, or any one or two of or either of there two day.. . . . . or either one ol theae two day.. .jthm- nn ol thaao two day.. 4 day., or MWF, or any one or two of fa -r . A ' XX size charged with closing up shop, watched with satisfaction as the Burmese government took over and continued most of the components of the Amer ican aid program. It was an orderly transition assisted by Finch's personal friendship with Burma's former Pre mier U Nu and the present Secretary General of the United Nations, U Thant. After a side trip to Java as an adviser to the Indone sian Education Minister on school training and university engineering education, F,inch returned to the U.S. as as sistant director of the Re search Division of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He be came associate dean of the school of science and then research director at Renssel aer as well as consultant on science and engineering education in Latin America for the Ford Foundation. While he was performing these tasks he was contacted by Seargent Shriver of the Peace Corps. Robert Bryan, assistant to the Chief of Public Informa tion for the Peace Corps, also a member of the ad vance team, has been work ing for that organization since March 13, 1961. When the Executive Order was signed on March 1 ini tiating the Peace Corps, he was with the U.S. Informa tion Agency, and was bor rowed by the Peace Corps on a loan basis in its need to expand rapidly as a new agency. An official permanent transfer was made in Septem ber, 1961. Bryan has served with the U.S. Information Agency and its predecessor organiza tion under the Department of State since July, 1949. His most recent assignment was as information specialist with the Office of Private Coorler ation which dealt largely with the People-to-People Program. Before that he worked two years with the U.S. Informa tion Service in Havana, Cuba (195fi-568), then returned, to Washington, D.C. with the ex ecutive secretariat of USIA and with the Voice of Amer ica as a liaison officer. He is a 1949 graduate of the Foreign Service School of Georgetown University, Wash ington, D.C. Bryan served three years "with "the "U.S. Army (1943-46), including about one year of duty in Okinawa. Previous to that be studied a little over a year at the University of Chicago. Bryan received a two-year 4ihonor entrance" scholarship to the University of Chicago upon graduation from Grass Valley . High School, Grass Valley, California, where he had studied for two years. Before this Bryan lived with his parents in Manila, Philip pines. The third member of the advance team is Barb Laney, Staff Assistant for the Office of Public Affairs. "want ads FOR SALE '58 Hillmon, 4 dr., rebuilt enclne. $250, lfilil "A" evenings. '112 Valiant. 4-door. Call 432-8001 evenino., ask lor Vomits'. BRIDGE If you like Brldiie. you will like Dupli cate. Student Union, Mondays. 7:16 P.M. and humlays, 2:16 P.M. Entry 50 Free cuke, and coffee, (tome alone or bring a partner. Kibitzer, welcome. . FOR KENT I Itonma for Hummer on campus, inexpen ive. 331 Nu. 13th, 4US-U505. AIR TRANSPORTATION For air travel reaervations, call Ed Con nerly, your Frontier Airline. RepreMli tative. 477-1B11 or 477-03H8. Order your subscription For next year's Rag now! DA LY Chatfield Featured At Grange Graduation from a large high school is no guarantee of success in college, although these students do seem to have some scholastic advan tage over their college class mates from small schools, ac cording to Lee Chatfield, di rector of the University's jun ior division and counseling service. He spoke Saturday night to the Policy Conference of the Nebraska Grange held at the Lincoln Telephone auditorium. Chatfield said a 1962 Ne braska study showed pupils in larger high schools "dem onstrated higher achievement in mathematics than pupils in smaller schools" and that a survey of achievement in Re gents examinations confirmed the finding. Academic achievement, he said, seems to depend heavily on three factors: The talent and effort of the student. The ability of the school to provide competent teach ers and adequate facilities. The competitive atmos phere in, which the student performs. Nation wide corporation needs alert well groomed college stu dents for promotional work in new division: $1,000 scholarship award to outstanding applicant. Work local ly or transportation furnished to resort area, Lake of the Ozarks, Grand Lake, Colo. etc. Excellent pay and opportunity to enjoy swimming boating, fishing. Qualified students can continue em ployment on parttime basis after school resumes in the fall. no phont soils pitas READ UNIVERSITY t. Stanton Chief At Art Gallery Dedication Dr. Frank Stanton was the chief speaker Friday at the dedication of the new Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery. Stan ton joined CBS in 1935 and was appointed Director of Re search in 1938. In 1942 he was elected Vice President and General Executive of Colum bia Broadcastings System, Inc., and in 1946 was elected President. Stanton wras born on March 20, 1908, in Muskegon, Mich. He graduated from Ohio Wes leyan University in 1930. In 1931 he joined the staff of the Department of Psychology at Ohio State University and re ceived his doctorate there in 1935. Stanton is a fellow of the American Psychological As sociation. He is a trustee and the former chairman of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (Stanford, Cal.), the Rockefel ler Foundation, a director of Stanford Research Institute, chairman of the board of The Rand Corporation (Santa Monica, Cal.), and a member of The Business Council. He is also a director of the Lincoln Center for the Per June to September $ 84.50 per week Apply to Mr. Campell, Wednesday May 22 7 p.m. Hotel Cornhusker .. ..aaeaaeaaaaaaaaeaaaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaeeee.a LET YOUR PARENTS : ALL ABOUT YOUR IN THE STUDENTS ; forming Arts and chairman of its rt Committee. Among recent honors Dr. Stanton has received are the Distinguished Service Award (1959) of the Radio-Television News Directors Association, the Honor Award for D i s tinguished Service in Journal ism from the University of Missouri School of Journalism (1958), and the Trustees' Award of the National Acad emy of Television Arts and Sciences U959K In I960 Dr .Stanton was named a fellow of Sigma Del ta Chi, professional journal ism society, and received the George Foster Peabody Pub lic Service Award from the University of Georgia. In the Spring of 1961, in recognition of Dr. Stanton's sustained effort to bring about the "Great Debates," he was again awarded the Peabody Award. In a congratulatory t e 1 e gram President Kennedy com mended "His role in making it possible for last year's TV debates to take place" and noted that this was a "sig nificant advance in American politics." 1 U Ifil w CLIP AND MAIL DAILY NEBRASKAN ROOM 51 NEBRASKA UNION UNIVERSITY of NEBRASKA LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Find I- Speaker In March of 1962, Dr. Stan ton received the Gold Meaal of the International Radio and Television Society, "In recog nition of his immeasurable contribution to the advance ment of radio and television, his insistence on the highest concepts of journalistic free dom for the broadcast media, h's abiding trust in the Amer ican people and the demo cratic process ..." From 1937 to 1940 he was Associate Director of the Of fice of Radio Research, Princeton University, and dur ing World War II was con sultant to the Office War In formation and to the Secre tary of War. Dr. Stanton is the editor, with Dr. Paul Lazarsfeld, of "Radio Research, 1941", "Ra dion Research, 1942-43" and "Communications Research, 1948-49." He was the co-developer of the Lazarsf eld-Stanton Program Analyzer and was the first to develop and use an automatic recording de vice placed in home radio sets to record listening be havior. Tjv-Iimiwi Thank You! FRED GORGES LINCOLN-MERCURY 14th jand L STOP IN AND SEE OUR SAFEBUY CARS 1 ' ifO Per Per School Year 1 1 5 ..yw Semester m-nnrimi st www mm