The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 16, 1964, Page Page 3, Image 5

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    Friday, October 16, 1964
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 3
Xavier Bans The Bunnies
Protesting Playboy Club
(Sdtairffen
The Cincinnati' Playboy
Club is 'still going strong de
spite efforts of some Xavier
University students to picket
it.
Seventeen students marched
nightly following the club's
opening last month, objecting
to the presence of the key
club because of its connec
tion with Playboy Magazine
They described the magazine
as "pornographic trash.
Most of the first-nighters ig
nored the pickets and went on
into the club. One fur-clad
matron, however, read the
picket signs, grabbed her hus
band by the arm, and
marched him back to their
car.
Xavier's Student Council
voted against officially sanc
tioning the efforts of the pick
cting group and the playboys
played on, but the band of
volunteers vowed to continue
their boycott efforts.
pilllll!llllll!llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
I PLACEMENT 1
I INTERVIEWS I
3
Monday. Oil. 19
Douglas Aircraft Co.. students receiving
dexrees in C.E., E.E., M.E., E.M. and
Physics; M.S.. Hi.D.-ChE.. Math and
Chem. ,,,
Standard Oil Co. of California. California
Research Corp., students receiving de
crees in B.S., M.S.-E.E. and defirees
in B.S., M.S.-E.E. and M.E.s all de-grecs-Ch.E.
The B E. Goodrich Co., students re
ceiving deerees in M.S., Ph.D.-Chem.,
Math., Physics, Ch.E., M.E., E.M.i time
permitting, B.S.-Ch.E. and M.E.
Tuesday, Oct. 20
Staidai d Oil Co. of California, California
Research Corp., as above.
The B.F. Goodrich Co., as above.
Argonne National Laboratory, students
receiving degrees in EE.; R.S., M.S.
Math.; M.S., Ph.D.-Ch.E.. M.E.; Ph.D.
Muclear E., Physics and Chem. (analyti
cal, inorganic, physical).
Allied Chemical Corp., students receiv.
lug detirecs in Chem. and Ch.E.; B.S
M.S.-M.E.
General Motors Corp.. students receiv
ing degrees in M.E., E E., Ch.E., C.E.,
Chem., Physics and Math.
Douglas Aircraft Co., as above.
Wednesday, Oct. 21
The College Life Insurance Company of
America, students receiving degrees in
BS., B.A., M.S. -General Bus., Account
ing, Financing, Lib. Arts.
Employers Mutuals of Wausau, students
receiving decrees B.S. -Bus. Adm., Lib.
Arts.
Hooker Chemical Corporation, students
receiving degrees in Ph.D. -Chem. (organ
ic or polymer).
The Bendix Corp. -Kansas City Div., stu
dents receiving degrees in Ch.E, E.E.,
41. L., Chem., Statisticians.
Continental Oil Company-Ponca City,
Okla., students receiving degrees in B.S.,
M.S. -Math., Accounting, M.E.. E.E.; all
degrees-Ch.E.; M.S., Ph.D.-Physics; Ph.D.
Math.; all degrees-Chem.
General Motors Corp.. as above.
Howard. Needles. Tammen & Bergen
HoK. students receiving degrees in BS.,
M S -C.E.
Wisconsin Electric Power Co.. students
recoiwng degrees in B.S.-M.E., EE. and
Thursday. Oil. W
international Han-ester Co.. students
receiving aecrces in BUS. Adm., Ag.E.,
C.E.. EE.. M.E.
The Bendix Corp.-Kansas City Div., as
!ove.
Northern Utilization Research and De
velopment Division, Northern Regional
Research Laboratory. U.S. lepartinent of
Agriculture, All degrees-Chem. (organic
a:.d physical); Hiochem.
General Motors Corp., as above and
Bus. Adm. (accounting and nug. super-
ision )
Friday Oil. 2.1
U.S. Army Engineer Dist., Omaha Corps
ot Engineers, students receiving degrees
in B.S.-C.E., E E. and M.E.
American Cyanamid Co., students re
ceiving degrees in Ph.D., Post-Doctoral-Chem.
U.S. Army Audit Agency, St. I,ouis
District, students receiving degrees in
BS., M.S. -Accounting.
Wilson Concrete Co., students receiving
degrees in B.S.-C.E.
Fust Nebraska Securities, students re
ceiving degrees in B.S.-Bus. Adm., Lib.
Arts.
Metropolitan Utilities District, students
receiving degrees in B.S.-C.E., M.E., I.E.
CLASSIFIED
ADS
WANTED:
Flexible hours as part-time Ttipperware
Home party demonstrator. No initial
investment. 466-1770.
Four part-time students to work with
cars. Schedule to lit yours. See Mr.
Hemmlngcr at Room 340 between 12
Noon and 3:00 P.M. Thu . Oct. 15th,
1964.
Girl to share furnished apartment win
T.U. and kitchen. 435-81)08.
il-6 College men to work in pizza hut.
Call Larry Kaiser for appointment
4y-4tit)l.
FOR SALE:
Unguis Ki-Di ulile barrel Shotgun, Gulitar,
bicycle. For Students. Call 435-8500.
l'.)59 C u s h m a n Scooter-side car and
screen. Thoroughly over-hauled, econom
ical. 434-68ttj.
Kew hardtop to fit 1963-65 Corvette.
4S9-IW11.
Framls twelve string guitar and case,
less than 6 months old. Call 477-8249.
l Ford, new tires, excellent running
condition. Contact Mr. Cummlngs, Art
Dept. Woods Building, Ext. 2631.
LOST:
Ladles Bulova Watch. Keepsake. Reward.
432-7728.
Come on darling.
you're cut in on
the theft of
the century
.Mi. ,
f'J I've got
vvitai t
If:
Melina m Maximilian
MERC0UR1 USTINOV SCHELL
Pipy
ADUL a I Imkntti
.Mi fjl
The boys and bunnies at
University of Iowa will use a
mechanical matchmaker in
an attempt to solve their com
patibility problems.
A computer dance T,vlll be
held there on November 7.
All students going to the
dance will be required to take
a personality test of 100
questions. The information
will then be programmed in
a computer. Each person will
then be matched up with three
partners during the evening.
The annual "Pancakeathon'
at the University of Illinois
has been held for this year
and a new record has been
set.
Tom Remic, an Illini fresh
man, won this year's contest
by gorging himself with 32
and three-quarters buttermilk
pancakes.
Tom and his opponent Ted
Ralston had a hard-fought
battle. They were to eat at
least 10 pancakes within
each hour and were given six
hours to complete the con
test. They could only drink
water and were allowed five
minutes rest each hour.
After two hours, the con
testants were neck and neck
as each had eaten 30 pan
cakes. However, Remic ap
peared to be slowing down
and Ralston looked like a sure
winner.
Soon however, Ralston was
no longer at the table. He
had excused himself. He had
surpassed his capacity and
wanted to be alone.
Contests furnished much en
tertainment at University of
Minnesota as the Freshman
Welcome Week was held.
A special relay race was
held in which freshmen were
asked to carry water from a
mucky lake, and put it, drop
it, or spit it into a can. No
containers were given the
freshmen, and they soon dis
covered that although not the
most sanitary way, a mouth
ful was the most effective
way.
Another contest required
the freshmen to find their
way through a forest while
blindfolded. The game vague
ly resembleed a freshman's
first week of classes on campus.
State Retail Sales
Up Four Tenths
From Last Year
Nebraska retail sales in
August increased nearly one
per cent from July and rose
four tenths of a per cent from
the same month a year ago,
acording to Business in Ne
braska published by the Uni
versity of Nebraska Bureau
of Business Research.
General business activity
was unchanged from August
1963 based on reports from 20
municipalities. General busi
ness activity includes bank
debits, building activity, re
tail sales, electricity and gas
consumed, water pumped,
postal receipts and newspa
per advertising.
The Bureau reported a con
tinuing increase in the dollar
volume of business index and
the physical volume indexes.
The increases in the Nebraska
physical volume indexes were
greater than those for the
U.S. as a whole.
TODAY
M E D I A CONFERENCE
EUGENE ZUCKERT. 12:15
p.m., 235 Student Union.
PLACEMENT LUNCHEON
12:30 p.m., 24J Student Union.
LUNCHEON FOR EU
GENE ZUCKERT 12:45 p.m.,
Pan American Room in Stu
dent Union.
NEBRASKA ALUMNI AS
SOCIATION 3:30 p.m., 240
Student Union.
JUDGES FOR HOMECOM
ING DISPLAYS 7:00 p.m.,
240 Student Union.
PALLADIAN LITERARY
SOCIETY 7:30 p.m., 332 Stu
dent Union.
MOVIE "PAL JOEY" 7:00
p.m., Student Union Auditor
ium. TOMORROW
COFFEE HOUR Immedi
ately after game, Pound,
South Lounge.
OPEN HOUSE 4:30-6:30
p.m.. Pound.
ORGAN RECTIAL by Har
ry Kelton, 8:00 p.m., West
minister Presbyterian Church.
SUNDAY
PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
American Student Orienta
tion, 2:30 p.m., Student Un
ion.
UNIVERSITY BABY SIT
TING SERVICE in the down
stairs conference room of the
Union, from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Cost is 50 cents per child.
Weekend Features
NU Victory Dance
A highlight of the weekend
will be the Homecoming (vic
tory) Dance at Pershing Au
ditotrium featuring the music
of Maynard Ferguson. Other
highlights you will have to
find on your own.
TODAY
PHI DELTA THETA house
party, 9 p.m. to midnight.
SEATON I AND GUSTAV-
SON III mixer, Selleck TV
Lounge 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
'Soybean Loss
Isn't Necessary'
Delbert Lane, extension
agricultural engineer at the
College of Agriculture and
Home Economics, says that
a large percentage of soybean
losses before and after har
vesting isn't necessary. When
conditions are right and
equipment is in good shape
and properly adjusted, soy
beans can be binned with
very little loss.
Losses can amount to $16
per acre when beans are sell
ing at $2 per bushel and are
yielding 20 bushels per acre.
Losses can be checked easily
by counting the beans left on
a square foot of ground. Four
or five beans per square foot
equals one - bushel per-acre
loss, Lane explained.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
Low Calf Crop Per Cent
Means Major Beef Loss
uk .,.,., i "nil r. ... wvsrt
vvt-itN -i h OUING GETS' KOU&H WHY ,CZ -Zf&Z..
CANT YOJ JU5T PACE UPANP POvVN LIKE OTHEfc COACHES?
Assistant Professor of Ani
mal Science Dr. Donald Clan
ton said that the low calf
crop percentage represents a
major loss to the beef cattle
industry.
"The economic importance
of this problem is readily ap
parent when one considers
the size of the cattle popula
tion and the impact that even
a small improvement would
have on the industry," Clan
ton pointed out.
He added that improvement
in the calf crop also repre
sents a great opportunity to
cut production costs.
University researchers, in a
four year program headed by
Clanton and Assistant Profes
sor of Animal Science Dr,
Dwane Zimmerman, are
studying the relationship of
energy intake by the bred
heifer on subsequent calf pro
duction. One hundred half-sister heif
er calves will be used this
season in the first part of the
study, and an attempt will be
made to acquire 50 pairs of
identical twins for the second
part of the study in 1966-1967.
"Most beef cow herds sub
sist the year round on native
ranges," Dr. Clanton contin
ued," while others use pas
tures and ranges part of the
year and use hay the remain
der. In either case "Dr. Clan
ton pointed out," major em
phasis is placed on native
forage and avoiding feed sup
plements." Recent evidence indicates
that adequate energy intake
is necessary for good repro
ductive performance. "Little
is known about the influence
of energy intake on the en
docrine function, and an un
derstanding of these mechan
isms would aid in the devel
opment of feeding practices
which would support maxi
mum reproductive perform
ance." Dr. Canton outlined the over-all
objectives of the pro
ject as follows:
To determine the changes
in post-calving endocrine func
tion in the two year old beef
heifer induced by high and
low levels of pre-calving en
ergy intake.
To determine the energy re
tention in the post calving
two year old heifer influenced
by pre-calving energy intake.
To determine the relation
ship between endocrine func
tion, energy retention and the
interval from calving to first
estrus (heat cycle).
i . .
CHEMISTS-B.S. M.S. & Ph.D.
Expanding utilization research program has treated challenging
career opportunities for hasic and applied chemical research and
development in diversified fields.
ORGANIC.
Structure, synthesis, derivatives; hasic and applied
research.
PHYSICAL-
Polymer structure; solution and solid state properties.
BIOCHEMISTRY-
Proteins, enzymes, natural products; isolation, struc
ture, and properties.
ANALYTICAL-
Development and application of instrumental methods.
O O
Sign up for an interview with our representative oju
Octoher 22, 1964
At your placement office
Or write to
Northern Regional Research Laboratory
1815 North University Street
Peoria, Illinois 61604
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service
. ; i
FEDDE HALL hour dance
9 p.m. to 10 p.m.
UNICORNS hayrack ride 7
p.m. to 11 p.m.
SIGMA CHI mothers tea
1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
TOMORROW
HOMECOMING DANCE
Pershing Auditorium 9 p.m.
to 1 a.m.
AG MEN date dinner Cong
ress Inn 7:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
CATIIER HALL open house
4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
SUNDAY
ALPHA GAM M A RHO
pizza supper 5 p.m. to 7 p.m
University Celebraties
Among the names listed in
the Builders Directory last
year were Lyndon Johnson,
Buster Brown, John Glen,
Douglas McArthur, Frank
Morrison, Clifford Hardin and
Mary Martin.
All were bonafide Univer
sity students.
The ranks of the celebri
ties were joined this fall when
Robert Frost enrolled as a
freshman.
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school.
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For complete
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