The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 31, 1956, Page Page 4, Image 4

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Page 4
THE NEBRASKAN
Wednesday, October .31 , , 1 95.6
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Courtesy Lincoln Journal
3sc& To
Ag Dorm Rises
Construction is presently under- University's 1956 construction consists of two wings connected
way on a new men's dormitory program, will accomodate 236 by a one-story entrance lobby
for the Ag campus. The build- men students. The dormitory, to and lounge room,
ing, which is a part of the be completed by the fall of 1957,
Homecoming:
Alums To Flock
Ccampus
King Don Beck of Fremont. She
will be met by Chancellor Clifford
Hardin.
Candidates- for queen are Janis
Davidson of Minden, Sandra Kad
lacek of Omaha, Donna Sawvell
of Sioux City, la., Janice Shrad-
er of South Sioux City, and Nan
cy Tucke of Omaha.
The University Band and card
section will present. a special
halftime program.
The annual Homecoming
Dance will be held from 8:00
p.m. until midnight at the Coli
seum. Winners of the house dec
oration and float competitions
will be announced at intermis
sion. Music will be furnished
by Charlie Spivak and his orches
tra and by the Hilltoppers.
Nov. 9-10:
NHSPA
Back to the campus" will be
the word Friday and Saturday as
thousands of University alumni
return for the annual Homecom
ing festivities.
The Alumni Association board
cf directors will meet at 3 p m.
Friday in the Student Union fac
ulty lounge. There will be a din
ner for board members and their
wives at 5:30 p.m. at the Uni
versity Club.
The lights for the organized
house's homecoming displays
will be turned on at - 7:30 p.m.
Friday evening. Competing for
honors will be the women's hous
es and two divisions of men's
houses. The display competition
is sponsored by the Innocents
society. The displays also will
be operating from 11 a.m. until
noon Saturday.
Festivities Saturday will open
with the parade at 9:30 a.m.
Floats will be entered in three
women's residences (except for
organizations.
The University ROTC march
ing band will lead the parade,
and several ROTC dress units
will participate.
Queen will ride in convertioles.
The parade will start at 14th
and Vine, move east on Vine to
16th, down 16th to O, west to
llth,xup 11th to R, east on R to
12th, and then disband.
The Alumni buffet luncheon
"will be held from 11:30 a.m. to
12:45 p.m. at the Cornhusker
Hotel Ballroom . Cheerleaders
will lead the luncheon guests in
University songs and yells. There
will be free buses from the hotel
to the stadium.
The Homecoming Queen will
be crowned at halftime by Carol
link of Ainsworth, last year's
queen. The new queen will be
escorted onto the field by Yell
Ag Students
ligible For
USDA Jobs
University seniors enrolled in
College of Agriculture are eligible
to apply to the U.S. Department of
Agriculture for government posi
tions according to W. V. Lambert,
dean of the College of Agriculture.
Students enrolled in agricultural
economics, business administra
tion, biological sciences and agri
cultural statistics may apply also.
The regular salary for most
Government Service-5 positions is
$3670 per year. Those with Mas
ter's Degrees are eligible for GS-7
and are ordinarily employed at an
entrance salary of $4535. Both
grades GS-5 and GS-7 have an
nual increases which are auto
matic for satisfactory service.
This year salaries for engineer
ing positions at grade GS-5 will
start at $4480 per year and GS-7
at $5335. Foresters eligible for
grade GS-5 will start at $4210 per
year. Those eligible at grade GS-7
will receive a starting salary at
4390 per year.
Many of the positions at the
GS-5 and GS-7 levels in the phys
ical sciences have had new en
trance rates which are consider
ably higher than the usual starting
salaries of $3670 and $4535.
Chances for advancement in all
positions are exceptional. Positions
are located in Washington, D.C,
and throughout the United States.
Those interested are advised to
send their applications to D. E.
Hutchinson, State Soil Conserva
tionist of the Soil Conservation
Service.
To Moid
Meeting
A news service bureau chief
and a leading business journalist
will headline a list of 15 profes
sionals scheduled to address the
25th annual meeting of the Ne
braska High School Press Associa
tion Nov. 9-10 in Lincoln.
Miss Marguerite Davis, Chicago
bureau "manager for the United
Press, will give the convention's
keynote address at 10:30 a.m. Fri
day, Nov. 9. She will be inter
viewed by members of the profes
sional and high school press after
her talk.
P. D. Allen, vice president of
the Maclean - Hunter Publishing
Corp., Chicago, will be the Fri
day night banquet speaker. He is
chairman of the speaker's bureau
of the Associated Business Publica
tions. Both major talks will be pre
sented in the Student Union ball
room. The University's School of
Journalism plays host each year
to the convention.
The Nebraska High School Press
Association is an organization of
Nebraska high schools that have
some form of publication or in
struction in journalism.
Coed Models
Set Meeting
For Thursday
A meeting of models for the
Friendship Dessert Thursday at 4
p.m. in Room 316 of the Union
according to Carolyn Williams,
publicity chairman of Coed Coun
selors. Models who will attend the meet
ing are: Mona Huberman, Al
pha Chi Omega; Jackie Shaffer,
Alpha Omicron Pi; Mary Patrick,
Alpha Phi; Breanna Johnson, Al
pha Xi Delta; Joyce Young, Chi
Omega; Lynn Meyers, Delta Del
ta Delta;
Bobbie Jorgensen, Delta Gam
ma; Gretchen Saeger, Gamma
Phi Beta; Sylvia Riggs, Kappa
Alpha Theta; Sharon Fangman,
Kappa Delta; Ellen Stokes, Kap
pa Kappa Gamma; Sally Miller,
Loomis Hall; Donna Peterson,
Love Memorial Hall.
Monica Ross, Pi Beta Phi; An
nie Bartholomew, Residence Halls
for Women; Elaine Duni, Sigma
Delta Tau; Janice Link, Sigma
Kappa; Dorothy Glade, Towne
Club.
Courtesy Sunday Journal and Star
MEYERS
NU Schedules
Geology Talk
For Thursday
The University Research Coun
cil, the department of geology, and
the American Association of Pe
troleum Geologists are sponsoring
a lecture by Donald Myers of the
Texas Field Unit, Fuels Branch,
in Denver.
Myers will speak on "The Geolo
gy of the Late Paleozoic Horse
shoe Atoll of West Texas on Thurs
day, at 8 p.m. in Morrill Hall
Auditorium.
Horseshoe Atoll, in the last ten
years, has produced more than
300 million barrels of oil from its
5,000 wells. This region of prolific
oil production has been the sub
ject of a recent comprehensive
study by a group of geologists in
cluding Mr. Meyers.
A coffee hour, sponsored hv
Sigma Gamma Epsilon, honory ge-
oiogy society, will be held immedi
ately following the lecture.
Five Engineer
Editdrs Plan
For Convention
Five members of the Nebraska
Blue Print staff will attend the
annual convention of the Engineer
ing College Magazines Associated
in Fayetteville, Ark. this weekend.
Roger Berger, editor; Jim Sou
ders, business manager; Bob
Young, layout editor; Dave Lin
strum, art editor; and Roger
Koehn, assistant advertising man
ager are the Blue Print's repre
sentatives. Dr. Merk Hobson, na
tional ECMA chairman, also, will
attend from the University."
ast year the Blue Print won
awards for the "best written mag
azine" and "best student article"
in 1955.
Delta Sigma Pi
Tours Colorado
Thirty-one members of Delta
Sigma Pi, professional business fra
ternity, took their first semester
business tour to Denver, Colorado,
October 25, 26 and 27.
They visited Sofiway Warhouse,
Gates Rubber Company, United
Airlines Operations and Coor's
Brewery of Golden, Colorado. The
trip was climaxed with the Nebraska-Colorado
game Saturday
afternoon.
The Inside World
Home Ec Dinner
Set November 10
The Home Ec Club on Ag Cam
pus is holding its annual smor
gasbord dinner, Nov. 10, from
5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. in the Food
and Nutrition Building. Chairman
Edna Cleveland announced that
tickets are being sold in the Ag
Union at $1.50.
The assistant chairman of the
dinner is Lorraine Barthuly, and
faculty adviser is Shirley Keyso.
Live Stock Show
Harvey Jorgensen placed third
in quarterhorse judging in the in
tercollegiate livestock judging con
test at the American Royal Live
Stock Show last week.
The University livestock judg
ing team placed fourteenth in
competition with 21 teams. Okla
homa, Kansas, and Iowa teams
placed first, second and third re
spectively. The University team placed tenth
in the sheep judging division.
Newman Club
Mass will be held at Newman
Club at 6:45, 7:45, 8, 9 a.m. and
at 5 p.m. on Thursday. This is a
Holy Day of Obligation for all
Catholics.
Sp
anish Club
The Spanish club will hold its
first meeting Wednesday at 7:30
p.m. in Room 316 of the Union, ac
cording to Hal Carney, faculty
sponsor. All students studying
Spanish are eligible to become
members.
Dues are 50 cents per semester
and will be collected by instruc
tors during the week. The meeting
will consist of Spanish music,
gams, a movie, election of of
ficers and refreshments.
Classified Ads
P. B. Daitch, Physics Dep't, desire to
ull hit three bedroom Dutch Colonial
House Just south of Sherlilan school.
Family room, fireplace, built In storm
and acreen windows, lovely backyard,
etc. Sacrifict price. Home phone 4-4896.
BILL MURRELLS
Drive In Barber Shop
and
Sportsman Barber Shop
15 & P
7 Barbert
To Serve You
Rivalry
Chris Burns, University of Colo
rado assistant professor journal
ism, was fined $100 in Boulder
County Court last week for shoot
ing to death the dog of Frank
Potts, University track coach.
Burns admitted he shot Potts
collie-police dog after seeing it at
tack his own dachshund last July
29.
Use Nebraska!?
Want-Ads
PRINTING
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CRAVES PRINTING C0.:
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GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS
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I - i BLOCK NORTH OF MAGEES
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Engineering grads
otf you inffsfd in iinilpcfj
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OCllfiC
staffs
in those development areas?
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V.-.VA
A Collins rtpresentativt
will interview on campus
Thursday,
November 1
Contact your placement officer
for an interview appointment.
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SINGLE SIDEBAND The most advanced development in SSB for
complete air ard ground communication systems for commercial,
military, and amateur applications. Example: Collins SSB HF pro
gram for intercontinental airair, airground, ground air, and ground
ground for USAF.
SCATTER PROPAGATION Pioneering development in complete
point-to-point Transhorizon systems employing UHF tropospheric or
VHF ionospheric scatter propagation. Systems engineering integrates
this new type of transmission with existing equipment or entirely new
designs. Example; Coilins Transhorizon communication systems
for DEW-Line.
MICROWAVE, MULTIPLEX Collins is now the leading designer
and manufacturer of complete communication and control micro
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microwave system for Continental and Sinclair pipe line companies.
AVIATION ELECTRONICS Already supplying 80 percent of the
airline electronics, Collins is now engineering an entire new airborne
electronics system for airline and business aircraft Developments
underway for complete communication, navigation, flight instru
mentation and flight control systems. Example: First radar anti
collision system now in development
MILITARY ELECTRONICS Many basic development airborne and
ground equipment programs are underway for the Air Force, Navy
and Signal Corps. Example: Collins new integrated electronics pack
age, CNI (Communication, Navigation and Identification) for new
military jet aircraft
PREDICTED WAVE RADIO SIGNALLING Linearity and highly
stable frequency characteristics of Collins advanced SSB equipments
make possible great improvements in the frequency spectrum utiliza
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Land line and HF experimental circuits in operation between Cedar
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Whether you choose one of these development areas or one of many
others equally stimulating, at Collins youH join a small close-knit
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