.Page 4 The Daily Nebraskan Thursday, December 1, 1966 Music Clubs To Perform In Concert Members of the profes sional music fraternities in the University Department of Music will present a con cert at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Nebraska Union ball room. The concert, featuring a variety of compositions, will be presented by members of Delta Omlcron, Mu Phi Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Iota and Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonta. The Intersorority Sing ers, directed by Terri Bil liard and accompanied by Loretta Tubbs will present Thompson's "Rosemary," and "Blow, Prairie Wind." Painter's "Notturnino di Luna" will be performed by a flute quartet composed of Nancy DeFreese, Pam Primmer, Karen Glover and Janice Wiebusch. The Slnfonia Glee Club, under the direction of Craig Ramsey, will perform "Brothers, Sing On" by Grieg, "Dona Nobis," ar ranged by Wilson, "Master .of Human Destinies," by Ingels and arranged by Ramsey, and "Sinfonia, Glory in Thy Name," by Lubin. Soprano Sally Arneson, . accompanied by Gene t 'O'Brien, will sing Kohl's " ''Aquarium." An instrumental ensemble will perform Marsh's "Transformed Ob jects," and Pinkham's "Easter Cantata." Gene Bedient is director, Miss Tubbs is the accompanist, and Nancy Miller is re hearsal accompanist. Oiloson To Voice Agriculture Views Dr. Howard W. Ottosom, new director of the Univer sity of Nebraska Agricul tural Experiment Station, will speak at an Economics and Business Roundtable Thursday. He will give an economist's view of the future of agri culture. The program, open to the public, will begin at 7:30 p.m. Room 232 of the Nebraska Union. be a Hero or "How to practice your one-upmanship on industry". We do It all the time at LTV Aerospace Corporation-dreaming up big shiny things like a plane's plane or a missile's muscle. In fact, ur Hero engineers have come up with some of the nation's superest Super Stars. The word is out that there are some great star gazer spots open fow (some earthy ones, too). So whether you're a circles, waves or angles engineer, you, too, can be a Hero In such areas as aerodynamics D avionics and instrumentation airframes design systems analysis reliability dynamics systems design propulsion 6tress analysis Industrial engineering technical administration . . . and others. Get the whole story. Ask your Placement Office, then write College Relations Office, LTV Aerospace Corporation, P.O. Box 5907, Dallas, Texas 75222. And when you write, be sure to ask, "how's your LTV bird" . LTV is an equal opportunity employer. ODDS BODKINS M ithXt MS WWK SOOTH tWS as en 2l P&8KHSH I muos ntr T iy t 5, MNffNBu . . . V? Corsair V V r 1 V 1 4r Foreign Student Group To Co-Exist With PTP The International Student Association of Nebraska (NIA) has recently been formed to act as a coordin ating body for all foreign student activities on cam pus. According to Ashok Da var, NIA co-chairman, the group is to act as a uni fying body for activities and in no way is to take the place of the existing foreign student groups. Joel Swanson, People to People president, at a pre vious meeting, has said he would be willing to dissolve People-to-People if the move would in any way help to unify the efforts of the two groups. Davar said this was not the intention of NIA and that NIA and People-to-People should be able to func tion effeciently as separate and distinct bodies. People-to-People is basi cally a group of American students attempting to as sist foreign students while NIA is a group of foreign THE HUNGRY Id The COFFEE HOUSE at 640 No. 16 OPENING World-wide Engineering andTechnical I f 1 V 'TJv "TW-l ( f A. ServlceeShiDs Instrumentation ' -J f(,l p ) NS Sffe - 25) w rv MSfc students functioning among themselves. Both groups willingly ac ( cept and encourage Ameri can and foreign students to join the organizations. Davar said that during the Thanksgiving vacation he was in Washington and contacted several foreign ' ambassadors about the pos siblity of appearing at the University in the near fu ture. He is hopeful several of his invitations will be ac cepted. Davar noted that students benefit from NIA because they learn the customs of foreign countries. They also make acquaintances who will be valuable contacts in countries they may visit. The new officers of Ne braska International Associ ation are : Ashok Davar, foreign co-chairman; Dar- rel Diednchs, American co chairman; Dele Aborunrin, treasurer; Gay Gustafsen, secretary; Trinidad Balag tas, Bashir Ahmad, Jeane Chen, Mohi det Atwal, ex ecutive committee. Sautrday Dec. 3 8:00-12:00 PM. Pi Kappa Phi has an nounced its new officers: Jim Guretzky, president; Noel Phetteplace, treasur er; Steve Plettner, secre tary; Dave Nixon, his torian; Charles Balsiger, pledge trainer; Gary Pleas, chaplain. Sigma Kappa pledge of ficers are: Bonnie v Miller, president; Cindy Null, standards vice president; Janice Z 0 0 k, treasurer; Peggy Bargen, secretary. Nebraska Student Gov e r n m e n t Association's President, Rich Thompson, announced the newly ap pointed administrative staff. They are: Dave Lan dis, executive secretary treasurer; Mick Lowe, Ju lie Morris, Kathy Curtin, Nancy Fritzler, presiden tial advisory staff; Cindy Mazurak, planning and programming; Twila An dreasen, public relations BETTER THAN MISTLETOE Dminlown Hmin: and communications; Ed Carson, records; Vince Van Zago, newsletter. Orchesis has announced its new members. The new junior members are: Gloria Winger, Nancy Nix, Susan E a k i n, Claudia Schaefer, Linda Bauer, Elaine Burgard, Doris Hays, Sally Cowden, Linda Diers, Elaine Richart, Judy Duerschner. The new sen ior members are: Doris Adams, Gloria Adams, Janis Hiddleston, Barbara Doublas, C h e r i e McCul lough, Lu Wallace, Sherri Housewright. READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS PRO You'll find many new gift Ideas, this year, ot Magee's . . . boutique end fashion gifts for your Mother, Father, Girl or Boyfriend even your kid brother. So make it merry! Choose your gifts at Ma gee's. Free gift wrap. Blue Stamp savings. 10-5:30, 10-9 Monday, Thursday, Friday Gateway: 10-9, .TVEROSRACE CORPORAT70W " ""' - IT n,. ,, . (- ITV ASTRONAUTICS DIVISION - LTV MICHIGAN DIVISION . I TV stunr DIVISION . LTV VOUUiT ALROWUTICS OIVIN . KWR0N HAWAJiLTiX Winters: Teacher Role 'Sculptor Of Humans' j . Teachers must teach their students to be crea tive cooperators rather than clever competitors to help the world advance, Dr. Carl Winters told an all-Teachers College convo cation sponsored by Mu Epsilon Nu Wednesday. He termed teaching "one of the two most glorious professions," because teachers, like ministers, work to help people grow. They take a person from where he is to where he ought to be, Winters said. He defined a teacher as a "human sculptor whose business it is to mold the living clay". Dr. Winters, a minister in the First Baptist Church for forty years, said that teachers and ministers have the same problems and satisfactions. "Life is exciting for those who are in the business of making people better, and Downtown 6- this is the teaching profes- slon," he noted. j Quoting Albert Schweit-j zer, whom he met on one of his three trips around the world, Winters com mented that example is the only important thing about teaching. "One example is worth a thousand arguments," he said. The "glory road" of teaching is also a know ledge road, he added. "This is the world in which knowledge is king and the prizes are king sized. In today's world, it is dangerous to be dumb," he stated. In addition to knowledge, a teacher must possess character, he said. "We must teach more than pure knowledge. We must be a guide into un born tomorrows," he added. Gateway 10-6 Saturday