Page 4 Three-Day Trip: Twenty-Seven Sign For Nebraska Tour t The Daily Nebroskan i-riday, March 2Q ir Twenty-seven international sti dents have signed up for the an nual Mortar Board International Student tour, scheduled for April 15, 16 and 17, according to Linda Buthman, publicity chairman. The tour will last three days this year instead of the usual two because of the foreign students' increased interest, Bev Dee pe, general chairman announced. The annual tour will attempt to give University foreign students a representative view of Nebraska. The students will leave Lincoln April 15 from the Union and will arrive in Boystown for a guided tour at 9:30 a.m. Then they will visit Joselyn Memorial Art Mu seum in Omaha at 10:30 a.m. and will visit the Omaha Stockyards at 11:30 a.m., eating lunch at the same place. Leaving for Grand Island at 2:30 p.m. the group will arrive in Grart Island at 5:30 p.m. for din 'ner and a brief program before they retire to the individual hous ing set up for the tour. Tuesday the group will eat breakfast in the homes at 8:30 a.m. and leave Grand Island by 9:00 a.m. for Lexington alfalfa mills and a coffee hourN At noon the group will have lunch and vis it commercial cattle feeders. Then at 1 p.rn. they will leave for Curtis to visit a high school, to be enter tained at a brief program and then stay overnight. Wednesday the group will have breakfast in Curtis and leave for Holdredge at 8:45 a.m. There they will have lunch and visit Franklin School, Central Nebraska Irrigation and Power District at 1 p.m. and leave for Hastings at 2 p.m. Arriving in Hastings at S p.m. the group will visit Hastings Col lege, House of Yesterday and De- Register Deadline Scheduled Friday The deadline for Lincoln resi dents to register for the April 9 primary election is Friday at 5 p.m. in the election office in the Trust Building at 10th and O. All persons who have changed their names or moved since the last election are required to regis ter in order to vote at the primary. Lincolnites will vote for nomi nees for mayor, the City Council, School Board and Wyuka Cemetery Board. Classified Ads VOST green Sheafer Snorkel pen 1n room 202 Social Science. Phone Erma Smith, at 6-7527. Sentimental value. Reward. bus Baking Company. Dinner that night will conclude ttie tour and the group will head back for Lin coln. The annual tour began at a Mor tar Board convention in Colorado in 1953. Last year 39 students at tended the tour. Cost for the tour for each for eign student is only $5 which in cludes food, transportation and lodging. The students receive this low rate because the Mortar Board-sponsored Late Date Night Dec. 12, 1956. Hours were extended from the usual 12:30 a.m. Friday night hours to 1:30 a.m. Money received from the fine of one cent for each late minute went to In ternational Student tour fund., Foreign students attending the tour include: Laurel Marr, Jamai ca, BWI; Jivan Patel, India; Az izbegloo Azar, Iran; J. J. Bru wen, Sher Sakander, Afghanistan; Sermchito Sinhaseni, Thailand; Gleun Sanjume, Hawaii and O. P. Agarwala, India. Others are Paul Munoz, Puerto Rico; Harvey Ebanks, Jamaica, BWI; Aubrey Sexter, Melvin Ching, China; Hamid Alghrooy, Iraq; Ernest Haunald, Austria; B. N. Patel, India; Goonhyon Choi, Korea; Nelson Chuang, China, and Mohammed Masoom, Afghanistan. Charles Nemeth, Hungary; Moonsoon Sedarat, Iran, Stan Shei bert, England; Sara Laszlo, Hun gary, Geoziana Lazzadino, Italy; Shaik Imam, India, Joseph Kal patoo, Trinidad, BWI; Henry Jed linski, Poland and Twefik, Ka wa, Sudan. Morar Board members accom panying the students include Dot Novotny, Virginia Hudson, Marian Sokol, Shirley Richards and Bev Deepe. A meeting for all foreign stu dents interested in the tour will be held in Room 315 of the Union Thursday at 5 p.m., Miss Buth man said. "The tour is very different from past years and we urged as many international students as possible to attend this year. We would like to beat the attendance record of last year, if possible," she added. ! lj L ! ."" - ... :-::s. -i-:-. y. . ... e. :.-. .v.. .-; - ' ... - ml 3 1 A Nebraekaa Phot KKG's Win Intramural Award Jane Jeffry, (left) past presi dent of WAA, awards the Wom en's Intramural Participation Trophy to Marial Wright (second from left) president of Kappa Kappa Gamma. The Kappa's, under the leadership of Billie Prest (right) coordinator of KKG intramurals, received the annual award based on intramural participation. Instructor, Students Attend Workshop Two students and an instructor from the Home Economics depart ment at the University are partici pating in a workshop of the College Clubs of the American Home Eco nomics Association, at Chicago, 111. Shirley. Keso, instructor In home 4 economics will be a member of a panel discussion of the problems of college clubs in larger univer sities and colleges. Marilyn Jen sen and Norma Wolf are the stud ents participating in the workshop. The three-day workshop ends Saturday. ..NOW IT EXPLODED OUT INTO THE OPEN -tt wotk mm Between nte ueuiemin who a teaa n men inywhere - and the ;Srf tant who'd fallow him into Hell. ..just to jet even!. S!. enoroT dvmm - junrrniiv III II 1 MM! T1P.M J 4 W. 1 Tip for a perfectionist who's anything but perfect! .. , . , EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND erases without a trace Just because you make typing errors, you needn't make a spectacle of them not with Corrasable to cover up for you. This is the Eaton paper Vith the like-magic surface that actually erases without a trace. Just a flick of a pencil eraser and presto disappear-o! Not a suspicion of a jemndge or smear. our favorite stationer, right in town, has Eaton's Corrasable in all Veights from onionskin to heavy weight bond, in handy 100-sheet packets and thrifty 500-sheet ream boxes. It's fine quality paper, absolute tops for typed assignments, theses in fact, the kind you can be proud to use for all your typed work. Backed by the famous Eaton name. EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND ,A Berkshire Typewriter Paper CHRISTIAfikTS PIZZARIA 8 VARIETIES OF PIZZA 3 SIZES $2.00 1.50 .75 DINING ROOM SERVICE 5 P.M. OPEN EVERY DAY EXCEPT TUESDAY 4 P.M. -12 P.M. Ph.2-4859 889 No. 27 focus Your Future': Ag Home Ec Hospitality Day To Attract 1000 Girls Hospitality Day will be held Tuesday in the 'home economics department on the Ag College Campus, according to Sara Alex ander, committee member for the days activities. The annual event will attract nearly 1000 high school girls throughout the state who are inter ested in entering careers in home economics." Highlights of the day will include tours of the campus and the home economics department, skits by college students and talks by Dr. Florence McKinney, chairman of the home economics department and Chancellor Clifford Hardin and a style show presented by home economics students. The Foods, Journalism, Clothing, Vocational Education, Child Devel opment, rnd Extension divisions of home economics will have displays showing ( the job opportunities in their respective fields. The girls and experiments that are being will also be told of the research carried on in the different fields of home economics. Shirley Richards is the student chairman of the event, the faculty advisor. The other committee members Have a WORLD of fUH I Travel with IITA Unbefievabl Lew Cost Europe 60 on TL $525 Orient 4365 o-r SL mm $998 Many tovrt Ntchxf Abo fawceit trip to Mexico I6V vp, Soath America M99 p, Hawaii Study Town J528 up and Around lb World U3Sm up. CHICAGO irsL are: Evonne Einspahr, Allice Ann Sides, Lou Forney, Judy Erickson, Karen Boning, Carol Smith, Patsy Kaufman, Delores Kieckhafer, Bev West, Gertrude Sokol, Vivian Long and Sara Alexander. HS Visitors Thirteen boys froni Beatri High School will be on the Ag r lege campus Friday, accordinet Dr. F. E. Eldridge, Associate rector of Resident Instruction. Ag Builders will be on hand to take the boys on tours of th campus. The boys are all seniors in hife ested in -going into some tyn. f college training 01 '4 Per on Campus: Ivy Wash ; Wear Sportswear trom , MAGEE'S n v I. LJ Warren Christenson tees off for spring in McGregor's Ivy, short sleeve shirt, (striped or checked) over Higgens' Ivy Slacks, half-and-half dacron and cotton, McGregor Shirt, $4 Ivy Slacks, $9.95 Men's SporUwear Magee't First Floe TTTJ J " . En Qass of '49 rfiYfrtrWrtffWrtWl r jf '' JV'" s jpww'W ' s F ' I JT ' ' 1 1 i - f ' r h l",.-----! j -mi ; - - - 4-. I L m.. 4, i-.Lil , X 4 a u XffisisS: y, ; . f . s N:::-!S.:Sff;:iKi,vS::'SSifi:K;iiS? Jf t It" i I f i ' I to NliiASSCA MM GRADUATING ENGINEERS "Emerson is a growth company entering a terrific spiral of expansion from a solid base . . . just the place for the ambitious graduate' "You're in on the ground floor of a fast-growing established company when you take on a job with Em erson Electric. A vigorous, planned expansion pro gram in our aircraft, electronic, and commercial di visions makes Emerson distinctly a "growth" com pany with wide-open opportunities for young men. We are at work on a great variety of projects, many of them fascinating jobs including aircraft of the next 'decade. "And believe me, it's to your advantage to get into a medium sized company. For one thing, you're in close touch with top management They really get to know you as an individual, not as a cog in a giant ma chine. They give you a chance, too, to put youi own . theories into practice. If you have a new Idea, they'll giveit a try. Emerson's future is big. Your future can be big, too, as an Emerson engineer!" Harry William's Emerson career is a good example, of the diversification of experience Emerson offers its engineering personnel. With his M.S. in Electrical En gineering under his arm, Harry came to Emerson in 1949 as Calibration Engineer in production. Next po sitionflight Test Engineer and from there onto Flight Test Project Engineer, to Assistant Develop ment Engineer and now Production Project Engineer. There you have Harry William's current career ladder at Emerson. Here, in brief, is a sample of Emerson's diversifica tion of projects: the Commercial Division, established in 180, ranks among the leaders in fractional horse power motors, fans, and includes air conditioners, heaters, power saws and arc welders. The Electronics and Avionics Divisio nhas been a leader nationally since 1940 in the design, development and manufac ture of the yerey latest fire control systems (for ex ample, the supersoncis B-58 Hustler bomber) , missiles and rockets, supersoncis air frame sections like the F-101 Voodoo and mortar locators. Emerson is one of only five companies in the U.S. in production on mis siles of any kind. Find out how you can get in on the ground floor of this fast growing, medium sized company. Meet Em erson's engineering representatives and talk it over with them. If it's impossible to make a date, be sure to write A. L. Depke for full details. ENGINEERS . v. A.E., C.E., E.EV M.E. . Interviews on Campus-Tuesday, April 2 Sign up for your interview with the Engineering Placement Office. Do it today! BATON fAHR CO ft t O ft. AT lO N Jnj T T S P I S L MASSACHUSETTS 8100 W. FLORISSANT SAINT 10UIS 21, MO.