Poge 4 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Thursday, April 23, 1953 orkin UimScini wqi Dim I emits By MARILYN TYSON i ued, is . the greater number or Staff Writer American women being educated. The outstanding difference be-; India's women are definitely in twecn the American college stu- the minority in colleges although dent and the student in India is their number is increasing, the American student is willingl Kuriyan, head of the depart to work to add to his educational !mcnt of geography at the Univer funds. Isitv of Madras, was a visitine This statement was made by Dr. George Kuriyan, exchange pro lecturer at the University of Perm sylvania in Philadelphia for the fessor from India on the Fulbright!y0ar 1952-53 "iJ 4v -mm He came to the United States jlsi ivui i j ail oaiu iimw v ui cviiig your way through college" is un known to the Indian college stu dent. Working would cause the student . to lose prestige. "They won't carry their own suitcase," he remarked.. Another difference, he contin I ' IV J in August '52 as a delegate from India for the International Geo graphical Congress in Washington, D. C. Kuriyan received his first two degrees at the University of Mad ras and his Ph.D. from the Uni versity of London in 1942. The University system is run much differently in India than in the United States, Kuriyan said. The University of Madras has 150 cated to undergraduate instruction. Higher degrees, he said, are ob tained from the University itself. The average student in India enters college at the age of 15 or 16 and goes to college from five to six years. Pre-English school for India's children lasts four years after which the student goes to English scnooi lor six or seven years. Instruction in the English lan guage is compulsory in India's school. mm Student Visits In New York iCfin nmnc Hit COSef jief: Jjw - - - w 'Old Sol' Rules Campus ;!Home Ec Honorary Elects 11 Members colleges affiliated with it. These colleges are distributed through out a large area and are dedi- DR. Courtesy Lincoln Star GEORGE KURIYAN Government To End Vet Book Supply No books or supplies for the current semester will be issued to veterans at government ex pense after Saturday the Office of Veteran's Affairs has announced. Any authorized books which are now on order, however, may be obtained after that day if the vet crans report to the store con cerned before Saturday and sign a charge ticket m advance. The store may then issue a bill enabling the veteran to pick up his book after the official expira tion date. No bills may be honored after June 6, 1953. Students whose theses are being completed and accepted during this semester may be reimbursed for authorized thesis expenses af ter Saturday but not later than July 1. 1953. Veterans who will graduate at the end of the present semester should retain their Purchase Au thorizations after Saturday for the purpose of renting caps and gowns for the June Commence ment Exercises. Barbara Colwell To Give Slide Display On Mexico Miss Barbara Colwell, junior in Arts and Sciences, will present a scries of colored slides at a Span ish Club meeting in the Union at 4 p.m. Thursday, room 313. Miss Colwell recently attended the University of Mexico at Mex ico City and will show slides on the city and other vacation spots in that country. Eleven new members have been initiated into Phi Upsilon Omi cron, national home economics honorary. New junior members are Ge neva Berns, Shirley Flanagin and Beth Rohwer. Sophomores mi tiated were Phyllis Colbert, Pat Graham, Martha Heuerman, Nan cy Hemphill, Betty Hrabik, Elaine Millen, Joan Meyers and Chloryce Ude. Lura Ann Harden is the new president of Phi Upsilon Omicron. Virginia Barnes is vioe-president, Joan Reifschneider, secretary and Mary Ellen Maronde, treasurer. Other new officers are Chbryce Ode, historian, Terry Barnes, edi tor, Beth Kinnier, librarian, Con nie Clark, marshall and Shirley Flanagin, chaplain. 4 . ; q c V ' - i i 1 ) V"v k r r ! ! t I A New Pi Tau Sigma Members Extension Plan Provides Class On, Off Campus Town and county superinten dents of education will meet with -faculty members of Nebraska's junior colleges, state teachers col leges and staff members of the University Extension Division in towns throughout Nebraska to de velop tentative schedules for off campus classes during the 1953-54 school year. The Extension Division has pro vided 43 Nebraska communities with 54 off-campus classes. These classes carry credit hours just as classes on the campus carry credit hours. In the past, students, class or ganizers and advisors from the campus have indicated that the tentative schedules have aided students la. planning an educa tional program coordinated with a full-time job. When enough interest in a par ticular subject is indicated to the Extension Division, it may then organize an additional off-campus class in the community where the interest has originated. Thirty-nine University instruc tors expect to journey over 150, 000 miles this semester to provide off-campus instruction in the eve nings and on Saturday mornings in several Nebraska cities and towns. i The. on-campus evening classes! sponsored by the Extension Divi-1 sion were attended by 1,216 indi viduals during the 1952-53 school year, an increase of 83 over the! enrollment during 1951-52. ; Of the 1,218 attending last year, 112 attended non-credit classes. The most popular classes, enroll ment wise, were pottery and cer amics, home nursing, photography, English, history, mathematics painting and speech. j NU SAI Chapter Ho!cfs District Meet! Approximately 65 chapter offi cers and delegates of Theta prov- jnce of Sigma Alpha Iota, worn-! en's international proiessionai music sorority, met in Lincoln Fridar for a two-day conference. Barbara Jones, freshman in Teachers College, was elected president of Kappa chapter, and nine new members were initiated. Miss Helen Snyder, assistant dean of women, spoke on "What a Professional Fraternity Can Mean to a College Campus" at the 60th anniversary banquet Satur iay. A public Concert was given by a member and former University THsno instructor, Mary Louise Boehm Kooper, pianist, accom parued by Kees Kooner, violinist. Miss Mary Jane Waggoner, in structor in piano at the Univer sity and president of the prov was in charge of the ar- j-s.y;;.;;nientS, ' CONVERSATION AT THE BILTMORE . . . Harriett Wenke, Jun ior majoring- in advertising: (right), is shown here in the Hotel Biltmore in New York talking to Ruby Branch, Georgia University (left), and Betty Koke, University of Baltimore. The three girls were part of a 36-studcnt contingent representing the nation's top advertising students. Advertising Student Sees Sights, Gets Lost in City Courtesy Lincoln Journal CITED FOR ACHIEVEMENT . . . Chosen for membership in Ti Tau Sigma, national honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, these five students received recognition for outstanding achieve ment in the field of mechanical engineering. The new members (left to right, front row) are: Donald P. Miller, Cedar Bluffs; Laurence C. Schirck, Omaha; Samuel P. Thaut, Hastings; (second row), Darrel H. Grothen, Juniata, and Wesley J. Shultx, Omaha. Three Students, One Faculty Member Elected To Honorary Dental Fraternity Three students and one faculty member wer elected to member ship in Omicron Kappa Upsilon, honorary dental fraternity, Mon day at their annual awards luncheon. By MARIANNE HANSEN Staff Writer "It's a wonderful place to visit tnere is so much to do and see but I would never want to live there," is Harriet Wenke's opin ion of New York City. Harriet, one of 36 top college advertising students who spent last week in New York participating in "Inside Advertising Week," noticed partic ularly the terrific pace and con stant rush of the big city, and was "just overwhelmed by every thing." Eleven of the city's largest ad vertisers, ' agencies, and media gave the student group tours, con fidential conferences, lunches, and dinners to introduce them to ad vertising as a career. "Their style of advertising is certainly differ ent from what you learn in the text books," Harriet commented after touring several of New York's top advertising agencies. New York Sights Harriet's very first stops in New York were to Greenwich Village and Times Square. The lights of Times Square proved particularly fascinating. "I sat in an automat for half an hour just watching one of the big signs, which was virtually a movie in neon," she confessed. Advertising Week activities be gan with a tour of Look magazine and a talk with the top executives. At the same time the students were being conducted through the various departments, Look executives were making the de- Awards for" highest scholarship in basic science courses. William E. Murphy received the American Academy of Dental .cision to discontinue publishing Medicine Award and a subscrip- "Quick" magazine. "The an- 4 . 1 . : 1 ji Thf ;pninr fuHpn aro William1 "u" lu uigdiiuduuu s juurnaiiiiuuiitcineiH was iduitfi a sui- ine senior stuaen-s aie wnuanv , Qmo,, ; u (;u c-,m a t ii iui. n v. 1 1 a v. i,ui.iiw 111 me iiviu ui H1 'fti Aiai 1 n t cam. mici an, w c dental medicine. had just been through the "Quick" Willard F. Guard of Aurora won department, where we watched the American Society of Dentis(rv:the staff working on the next is Rinne, Pawnee City, and Robert C. Tickner, Lincoln. Dr. W. Wal lace Webster, chairman of the de partment of oral surgery, was elected as an honorary member. for Children Award and a sub scription to the society's maga- The seniors represent the upper; zine for work in children dentis- 107o scholastically of their class. Outstanding seniors in the Col lege of Dentistry, who were hon- try, Dr. C. Vin White, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church in Lin- ored at the luncheon held in the coin, was speaker at the lunch- Uninn. arp Tlarvin snhripmnlror pnn attpnripri hu ahmif ion Rcntin. ami Vornnn W Pinno uhn! ripnts faniltv mnmhorc anrl 'hJiyards where they went through received -the $25 Dean Grubbl wives. ' 1 the Queen Mary at dock Because 111 was uie uay ueiuie liiug, uie huge liner was open to the public. "It's just like a complete city in sue. It was probably more of a shock to the staff, however." "I got lost," admitted Harriet, describing the next day's adven tures. The group went to the Her ald Tribune building; but she and a companion, unable to find the rest of the crowd, visited the ship' itself," Harriet said admiringly. "The swimming pool looked so inviting I was ready to jump in right then except there wasn't any water in it," she added. Visit Union Meeting Continuing their exploring, the two "lost" travelers deserted the shipyards for Macy's Department Store, whose employees were on strike. There they were booed and jeered by strikers as they entered the store, blighthly ignoring the picket line. Once inside, they, at tended a meeting of the labor un ion. "I think they thought we worked there," Harriet explained. Sight-seeing trips and extra jaunts may not have added to their advertising knowledge, but they sure were fun. Harriet sur veyed New York from the van tage point of the Empire State Building, visited the UN, went shopping, and took in as many sights as possible. The busy days were topped with visits to Eddiei Condon's dixieland nightclub in Greenwich Village, Curutti's, and the German-American Club. A farewell dinner at the Hotel Astor, where the Three Suns were enter taining, was a special highlight of the week. Tour Wall Street The tour of the New York Stock Exchange and the Wall Street Journal produced one re action. "I've never seen so many limousines and chauffers in all my life!" Harriet laughed. One of those limousines would have come in handy the next day when the group was forced to take the 5 o'clock rush subway. Harriet declared the pushing and crowd ing of the rush mob is every bit as bad as rumored worse, in fact. "It's like trying to put a pound of hamburger in a xk pound con tainer" she said. The faithful sunlamp has once again been thrown in its corner or the closet. University coeds, after using the sunlamp all winter, are now adoring the sun decks around camous taking advantage of the real stuff. Old Sol is out in all his glory just in time to give the coeds am ple opportunity to get those golden tans which are so becoming with spring formals. The guys and gals alike are out doors soaking up some of that sunshine. Sun porches, back lawns, and rooftops are all scenes of activity. The center court of the girls' dorm is a beehive of activity. Co eds in bathing suit and plasuits lie on. blankets and towels play ing bridge, sleeping and talking about boys and the weather and boys and new spring wardrobes and boys. As a result of this all-out drive for suntans, afternoon classes are rapidly losing attendance. Old Sol is a magnet drawing even those of us with the best intentions out in the wide open spaces. Taking a noon tour around cam pus ,one can see shorts-clad co-1 n n eds showing off their newly ac-lJ Pint KIYiri Qllired tans r.irlo pnrrvina hnth- W IXWWIV ing suit wrapped in towels were hurrying toward the girls' dorm to pick a spot on the sun deck. On one side of 16th street the coeds were out sun bathing on their sun porch and, on the other they weren't outdoor bird watch ers either. The drugstores, which are hav ing a run on suntan oil, soon ex pect a demand for sunburn oil. Unfortunately, an afternoon on the sun deck all too often results in a peeling pink sunburn rather than a golden brown tan. In that case, the frustrated tan-seeker has wasted his time, for, when the burn peels off, he'll be right back where he started from. Even a sunburn can be danger ous. Overexposure to Father Sun may result in first or second de gree burns. Even if the burn is not serious, the effect of a peel ing back in a strapless formal is enough punishment for the of fender. A word to the wise: "Don't be iooiea Dy a coonng Dreeze; n doesn't phase the ultra-violet rays and heat of the sun" or "You, too, can get a sunburn." March Blood Donations Set side of the street, male students were on their rooftop with binoc mars in hand. In all probability Francis Flood To Lecture On World Affairs Francis A. Flood, assistant di rector of the United States De partment of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service, will give a lecture Thursday at 8 p.m. in Love horary auditorium. ine address is the fourth an nual Avery Memorial lecture. sponsored by the Palladian Alumni Association. The subject will be "Nebraska's Stake in Wolrd Affairs." A graduate of the University Flood is a native of Seward County. He served four years as associate editor of The Nebraska Farmer. For 10 years he was travel editor for a group of U. S. farm magazines. Flood's service with the De partment of Agriculture includes a five year assignment as agricul tural attache with the U. S. em bassy in Ottawa. He has traveled in Europe, Africa, South America, Mexico, Alaska and the South Pacific. The 46 pints of blood donated by University students during March was the most the campus has given in one month toward meeting the Red Cross quota of 70 pints. Mike Greenberg, blood recruit ment chairman, said Monday that according to Red Cross re cords the total amount of blood donated this year not including March was only 30 pints. "The March donations prove that col lege students are interested in giving blood," he said. The bloodmobile will visit Lin coln April 28 and 29. Enough students have signed up to help meet the Lancaster R. C. quota so no more students can donate this month, Greenberg explained. May 18 and 19 the bloodmobile will again visit Lincoln. "Stu dents interested in donating dur ing May can fill out a donater's card," Greenberg said. Cards are available on the activities board in the Union. OPTOMETRY IN THREE YEARS, IF YOU HAVE SIXTY L. A. CREDITS QUICK RE SUITS WHEN YOU USE (Daily. TkbhaAkcuv Classified To place a classified ad Slop in the BiuineM Office Boom 20 Student Union 9 Call 2-7631 fled Servico Ext. 4226 for Qjui- Jfovrs 1-4:30 Won. thn FrL THRIFTY AD RATES No. words I 1 day I 2 days 1 days 4 days 1 ween 1-10 I .40 I $ Mi ) I .88 11.00 I $h20 IMS I M $D ) I JOS I 125 I 1.43 ie-20 I jwi I M I 1.25 I IM 1.70 21-28 I .70 I 1.10 I 1.45 175 lJto 26-80 I 0 I IM I 1.85 2.00 I 22U Mother's Day "..J. A Really VrfQTUS Nice Selection Goldenrod Stationey Store 215, North 14th Street COLE PORTER'S "ANYTHING GOES" K os met Klub Spring Show April 27, 30 and May 1 Nebraska Theatre See Kosmet Klub Workers for Tickets In three college years, you can prepare lor the attractive profession of optometry, if von have a minimum o( sixtv reaulred Liberal Arts credits. , There is a shortage of optometrists in many btates. tighty per cent of the Nation's millions depend upon the Doctor of Optometry and his professional skill in conserving vision. The optometrist possesses the dignity of being a professional man. He renders a service essential to the health and well being oi his community. Substantial linancial rewards are obtainable almost from the beginning of his practice. Op tometry is specially attractive to women. The U. S. Department of Defense end Selective Service grant optometry til dents the same consideration accorded medical students. Chicago College of Optometry, nation alyly accredited, is located in the heart of the world's greatest center tor teaching in the healing arts. It is famous for its eye clinic. A building program it in progress. Dormitory accommodations, apartments and other facilities are avail able on a large campus. For catalog and ether literature, address Registrar, Chicago Colleg of Optometry. 1845-K Larrobee St., Chicago 14, 111. Adv. MISCELLANEOUS Applicants Interested In summer dud 7 ranch Job tn Montana for boys anil girls, Call Win Cady, 2-781 at 6:00 p.m. FOR SALE NOTICE TO CAR OWNERS WANT to earn some extra money? pay you to wear our attractive car tup advertiser carrier, atnp your car. Win For sale 1BM Chevrolet two door sedan Kadlo lieater, full accessories. Metallic blue. May he seen at Logan Texaco ltlth and Streets. Call Pete Ber sten ufter , 4-1713. not damage car In any way. Call or ne MUST SACRIFICE immaculate 1941 NASH ua now. Travel-Ads Inc. rat Lincoln, Nebr. Tel. 2-255. R" St. TYPING Ambassador. 148 Motor. R and It. 0 cylinders with spark plugs, rotation crankshaft, lubricated transmission, till glass windows. Call Stu Reynolds, 2-7737. Typing Experienced with theses and term papers. Make urrangements early. I Cull Mr. Kmr V.vmrmlt J.iQr.4 I ryriNO of all kinds d"ne In my home Mrs. Marrlin 4-liiHU. TUXEDO -Site 3 Practically new. Lion Huston, S-l'197. Call LOST AND FOUND :X)BT f " K Model "slld'e" rule." iMvi Library or Brace Lab., on April 18. Call liauiou lirown alter 8, il-GOlii. STtTDKNTS for full time work as laborer on the campus during Hummer. You can start now If you Hre able to work full mornings, or afternoons. Laborers ntiirt t fl.00 nn tiour. Apply Personnel lrpt., Admin. HMft 11 It ii St. Daily Nebraskan Want Ads iBririg Results. Cessna Aircraft Company America's Leading Producer of Business and Personal Airplanes has OPPORTUNITIES for AERONAUTICAL ELECTRICAL MECHANICAL . ELECTRONICS CIVIL INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERS with ideas & initiative for DEVELOPMENT & DESIGN of Diversified line of light commercial airplanes Helicopters Military Liaison Aircraft Military Jet Aircroft OPENINGS FOR RECENT GRADUATES INCLUDE: Aerodynamicists Designers Structural Specialists Mathematicians Physicists Vibration Analysts WRITE EMPLOYMENT MANAGER Cessna Aircraft Company 5800 East Pawnee Wichita, Kansas "You'll like working at Cessna ask any Cessna employee" When passing means your life's at stake.,. and panic leads (jou to the lake, don't jump just... ft give yourself a When you have to use your head . . . head straight for a cup of coffee! Coffee can help you think better ... for coffee gently stimulate your mind. It can help you work better . for coffee helps efficiency. i uuivui cvciy way ...after a coffee-break I Pan-American Coffee Bureau. 120 Wall St,NewYork5,N.y. 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