Puge 4 The Daily Nebraskan Wednesday, Jonuory 14, On the Social Side Finals Haven't Intimidated Cupid Cigar smoke filled the cool Monday night air as nine pin nings and eleven engage ments were announced. Pinnlngs Meg Hansen, a Kappa Kap pa Gamma senior in Arts and Sciences from Galesburg, 111. to Jim "Hiram" Walker, a Delta Tau Delta senior in Business Administration from Lincoln. Marilyn Hill, a Pi Beta Phi junior in Arts and Sciences from Fremont,' to Bill McQuistan, a Theta Xi sen ior in Agriculture from Pen der. Yvonne McGee from Desh ler, to Jack Potts, a Sigma rni cpsnon sopnomore in land, to Norman Gieseker, a! Delta Sigma Pi grad student in Teachers from Lincoln. Ruth Ann Lind, a freshman , in Medical Technology from; Columbus, to Keon Gompert, j a senior in Engineering from ! Mitchell. Shirley Plaeutz from Den ton, to Earl Eno, a Delta Sig ma Pi senior in Business Ad ministration from Lincoln. Phyllis Wallman of L i n -coin, to Ron Lahm, a Delta Sigma Pi junior in Business Administration from Hal- lam. Kathy Helgoth, a student at ; the Lincoln School of Com- mprrn from David Citv. to Tom Peters, a Delta Sigma' Business Administration from 1 Pi. sophomore in Business Ad urant. v rL.-j T! r - diian r rangman, a rvappa q Delta junior in Teachers from i 5 Omaha, to Wes Berry, a Sig ma Chi freshman in Dentis try from Sidney. Jake McShane, a s o p h o ministration from David City. enale Alters Committee Continued from Page 1 THE STRANG! WORLD rfe mlxti-vitamn 111 H&KH I I-VKH I I I I im m ii Space Age Brings Space Taifc Exam Schedule Auntie, Brain Exotic Fuel Get; Split Personality. more in Arts and Sciences j contracts related to such pub- from Om aha, to Bruce "Beep" Houston, a Phi Delta Theta senior in Business Ad ministration from Omaha. Marie Kester from Omaha, to Kenneth Krohn, an Acacia senior in Business Adminis-I tration from Neligh, lications. The Student Council may select three students, one each from the sophomore, (Eight Join Chase For Raff Award (Continued from PI) junior and senior classes, , Theta Sigma Phi, secretary either from its membership ; of Pi Lambda Theta, and a or from the student body. I member of Mortar Board and They will serve for the aca- Kappa Kapp Gmma University from Fremont. Reba Kinne, a Chi Omega senior In Teachers from Sid ney, to Harry Huge, a P h i Betty Noerrlinger, a C h i I demic year with voting priv-1 "She hs served on the Un- Omega sophomore in Teach- j ileges. ers from Fremont, to Jon Coo-1 Organizations mas also a committee chair- ver, a Tau Kappa Epsilon The Subcommittee on Stu- man of the Union, alum at George Washington I dent Organizations will rec-i "in her sorority Sharon ommend the estaDlisnrnent j has been activities chairman and termination of any or-j and is now chairman of the ganization for students. It ( house committee, shall be concerned with the : she has an approximate 7.5 Kappa Tau senior at Nebras- structure and financial affairs : grade average and is atlend ka Wesleyan from Madison of aU organizations, with the , jng the University on a Uni- Wisconsin. I exception ot iraierniues ana versity Grant scnoiarsnip Engagements T" i H 1 1 rai tsoya, an Aipna umi- rnnpiliatinn cron Pi senior in Teachers ;wn rinnted which will in- 1 1 7 , 1 frnm Pir Rili t nnoir w". a?op efl . ."'v . scholar and leader ' . r . ' vesugaie imporiani pruuivmtt, ,lH h. thp highest three a Sigma Chi senior m Arts lnvo,vlng faculty members I veap averaee of anvone in the and Sc ences from Lincoln. relation to the University, i , ,er av?raS 01 an ne 'n J"f Pum t?iiq a1W . t Liiivcisuj. I University, i He is one of the Ruth Ellen Albm, a Love: a motion concerning the fpw ..," ln attain a Der. Memorial Hall senior in ; university Policy Committee P! et0(9a ,He is a toSLSSS?uSfte.?55l5!WMKtabIed and! "ehw I member of Pi Mu Epsilon SrS.,0. lae.mbe"leLe:)f ftCd t0 the: honorary math fraternity and land. Juanita Boeckenhauer, a;Iusic Faculty senior in Home sc from his opinion, free expression was ehattled, he left the lime light of the Nebraskan edi torial page." Edited Scrip "But more than anything I ... n .. ... iL. sororities, ana win review me Rogge Cited Constitutions. nwaiiip Rnrpp was riled in Committee l0it0- 0. an mitctanrlino 111,3 lllll i3 Ull UUIJLUIIMIII cital Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. Wayne, to Leo R. Fehlhafer, i Qf f ers Recital a kornnusner uo-op junior in Teachers from Utica. Janis Baker, a junior at Kearney State Teachers Col lege from Grand Island, to Jack Westerhoff, a senior in Agriculture from Alexandria. Anne Nordquist, a Kappa Delta junior in Teachers from Lincoln, to Glenn Hoy, a sen ior in Teachers from Lincoln. Mary Berger, a grad stu dent in Home Ec from Up- Vice-President of Sigma Tau He was, at one time, a column writer for the Daily Nebraskan and president of a dorm house. He has been a Six faculty members will' . ., . , .. . , ii. -n I'll 1UI nil rc Tcais aiiu nun participate m the Faculty Re- . nrpsi(1 r "Last year Dwaine headed tUe Crvvi rr Tit Pnm m ii too Miss Priscilla Pars o n s, i and was asjstat copy editor lTyn,ZT' a-: f the Blueprint. f II " IKHNICOIOH" VI V4 HOURS OP DIUCMT1 j Jack Crossan, A u d u n Rau- nan and Harvey Hinshaw will play in the recital. Miss Parsons, playing the cello, and Hinshaw, play ing the piano will Join for two numbers. They will play Sonate IV by Vivaldi and Sonate in A Minor by Schubert. Thpipttpr nf nnminalinn for Snider will play the french steve chultz called Schultz horn and Ravnan the piano n "nrHinarv loaripr " in Sonata by Heiden. Ravnan, Reist playing the clarinet, and Snider will play Trio for i Piano, Clarinet and Horn by; does on this campus. It is Reinecke. Reist and C r o s s a n, also playing the piano, will play Sonata in E Flat by Brahms. Admission to the recital is i free !,. j vivta harH s i. ! else, Schultz' outstanding con lull anu i. w v ' 1 m. .. .. . . . it- i. , been the founding and the editing of Scrip, a literary magazine which has fed the intellectually starved campus with new ideas, introduced it to new writers and gave Uni versity students with a flare for letters a chance to be read. "His interest in letters doesn't stop there, though. Schultz, as president of Masquers, has introduced a playwriting contest to the campus which is also unprec edented." Of Dick Shugrue, the letter of nomination said: "Just a suggestion of his range of activities will be suf ficient. He is past editor of the Daily Nebraskan, he has served as president of Sigma Delta Chi, he has been con sistently one of the top de baters on the University team and was founding president of the new speech therapy hon orary. "During his editorship of the Daily Nebraskan, Dick distinguished himself by his forth-rightness and vigor. Characteristically, he chose to defend causes which he knew would be unpopular but in which he believed. He chose his pauses with foresight, de fended them with dignity, and accepted criticism with pa tience. "Few people knew that he has twice served as a coun selor for All-State, the Uni versity's summer session for outstanding high school stu dents. During both of thee summers, Shugrue estab lished himself as one of the most popular counselors serving. During his sophomore year he served as Secretary of Delta Upsilon and is now president of Innocents. "It is superfluous to say that Dwaine is a leader as this is obvious by his out standing record." Not 'Ordinary "It is quite one thing for leadership to take the form of "followership as it so olten Typewriters For Rent Try Our Rental-Purchase Nan Special Student Rates NEBRASKA TYPEWRITER CO. 125 No. lltS Phone 2-4284 Typewriter Ribbons Pvf On Do you have a 15,000 word vocabulary? If you cannot truthfully say that you have an aver age person's vocabulary of 15,000 words, then you had better supplement your meager command of the English language with a few pertinent terms from the space dictionary written by Dr. W. O'Donnell, Chief Engineer for Aircraft and Missile Development at Re public Aviation Corporation. If you were under the im pression that "alcohol" was the 90 proof stuff, you are wrong. It is either ethyl or methyl which is used with liquid oxygen as a propel lant. (There's a new angle bars should be equipped with liquid oxygen as a mix for highballs.) An "auntie" is just some slanguage for "antimissle missle" nothing female here. "Brain" usually refers to the man-made kind used for navigational units and sys' terns, not the 8-plus college student. "Dog house" is the mound outside of a rocket which houses instruments. The small building that houses "the old man" occasionally isn't even mentioned. "Pick up" is . . . Not what you think, Sir! It is a sens ing unit vhich "picks up" and measures variables such as temperature, pres sure and velocity during flight. A "moon suit" is 1 the recommended wearing ap parel in high altitude flights and space tests. Few "moon suits" are seen on campii, although one blossoms out every now and then. "Exotic fuel" may be a mistaken synonym for "booze," however, in this case it is fuel which uses chemicals having a very high rating such as liquid oxygen. (Back to liquid oxygen again lead' me to the "Grill"!!) 9-12 a.m. 2- 5 p m. 1-12 a.m. 3- S p.m. 7-10 p.m. 2- 5 p.m. 7- 10 p.m. 8- 12 a.m. 2- I p.m. S-12 a.m. 2- 9 p.m. 9-12 a.m. 2- S p.m. 1- 3 p.m. 1- 4 p.m. S-12 a.m. 2- 5 p.m. 9-12 a.m. 2- 9 p.m. MONDAY, JANUARV 19 Cla mwtl.Tg at !:0O a.m. 5 or I ...or MWK or anv ou TUESDAY, JANUAR 20 Clasi... meeting- at 10:00 a.m. or 4 daye. or MWF. or any on. SiaiE me!:,g Htai:00 a.m. TTh or either o. of the, tw. da, All aectlon of Naval Science. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21 ClKw. meeting at 11:00 a.m. b or.4 daye. or MWF. or any on. SnZZ m'ec'un? .VJ!:00 a.m. TTh or ...her on. of the,, two All eectlonn of Education SI. THURSDAY, JANUARY 23 Cla.e meeting at 1:00 p.m. a or 4 daye. or anv one or two of these dftvs. Classes meeting at 1:00 p m. TTh oi either one of these two daye. All aectiona of Business Orcanlzatiun 3. 4. All aectlons of Speech 9, 10. FRIDAY, JANUARY 23 Classes meeting at 2 no p.m. ft or 4 dayi. or MWF. or any one or iwo of these days. Classes meeting at 2:'!0 p m All sections of Economics 10. All sections of French tl All aectlons of Spanish 61. SATURDAY, JANUARY 24 Classes meeting at 3:00 p.m. 5 or 4 days, or MWF. or anv ona or two of these days. I'lasses meeting at 5:00 p.m. 5 or 4 daja, or MWF. or any ona or two of these days. All sections of Kconnmlcg 11. 12. All sections of Education 30. yl Classes meeting at p.m TTh or either of these two dara. Classes meeting at S:(iO p.m. TTh or either of these two daya. All sections uf Math 11, 18. 17. 42. All eectone or Math 1. 14, IS, 115. 118. 201. MONDAY, JANUARY 26 Classes meeting at 4:00 p m. 6 or 4 days or MWF. or any on. or two of these days. All sections of Enullsh A, B. Classes meeting at 4:sl p.i TTh or either of these two daye. TTh, or either one of these two dava. .ll sections or Knjrllsh 3. 4. TUESDAY, JANUARY 27 Classes meeting at :00 a.m. 5 or 4 days, or MWF. or nv on. or two of these days. Classes meeting at K:nn a m TTh or either of these two daye. All sections of Business Organization 21. -I Epsilon Chi Tau Elects, Initiates Charter Group Joel 31oss To Telecast YELLOW MlQm LINES LOCATED AT PARKING LOT SOUTH OF BUS DEPOT For Information Call 2-5209 No Information given or ticket told at but depot. McCOOK, HASTINGS, LINCOLN Sun. pm 3:00 3:22 3:30 3:40 3:50 4:02 4:12 4:43 5:00 5:15 5:55 1 6:00 6:25 6:50 7:00 7:08 7:20 7:32 7:45 8:00 8:30 Exi. ' " ' Exl Sun- am P"i m 8:00 Lv. McCook, Nebr. Av. 10:30 2:30 am 8:15 Indianola 10:12 2:12 8:22 Hartley 10:00 2:00 8:30 . Cambridge 9:43 1:43 8:40 Hoibrook , 9:35 1:35 v8:50 Arapahoe 9:25 1:25 9:02 Edison 9:12 1:12 9:12 ' Oxford 9:02 1:02 9:43 Holdrega 8:30 12:30 10:00 , Axtell 8:15 12:15 10:15 Minden 8:00 12:00 am 10:55 Ar. Hastings, Nebr. Lv. 7:15 11:15 pm 11:00 Lv. Hastings, Nebr. Ar. 6:55 11:05 11:25 Harvard 6:30 10:40 11:50 Sutton 6:10 10:20 12:00 Grafton 5:57 10:07 12:08 Fairmont 5:50 10:00 12:20 Exeter 5:40 9:50 12:32 Friend 5:28 9:38 12:45 Dorchester 5:15 8:25 1:00 Crete Lv. 5:00 9:10 1:30 t Ar. Lincoln, Nebr. 4:30 8:40 Kxt, Hxrept Sunilnrs and Holiday. Sun. Sunilayi and Holiday. Only. quite another thing for lead ership to show creative gen ius, which it so seldom does on this campus. t it.mn; Kunift niij iui'"i it might be good to point out the 'ordinary form of leader ship exhibited by Schultz on : f!iA lammic: Ifrt has hoPIl i0 Kosmct Khib skitmaster for Family Sd'ies j Phi Kappa Psi twice. He was J elected president of Dr j00i Moss wju appcar ! Masquers. He has performed nn a new scries 0f programs both on stage and behind the based 0n marriage and fam- scencs at the University The- jy life on channel 12 begin- atre. " I ning Feb. 4. "As a columnist for the The scrjeSi prepared by Dr. Daily Nebraskan ... he said;Moss wilj consist of 15 half- what he believed, a commod-1 hour sessj0nSi They will be ity hard to come by in these , correiated with Dr. M o s s days of conformity. He stuck evcnjng home economics 191 by his beliefs and when, in (.ass whicn can ais0 be takcn for credit through the Univer sity Extension Division. The program will empha size marriage relationships and will attempt to present problems and solutions in volved in working out har monious relationships. Dr. Moss will provide visual demonstrations with movies case studies and illustrations which will be , introduced, summarized and interpreted for the TV viewers, At least one panel will be featured. The program will be pre sented weekly on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. . Main Feature Clock Stuart: "The Sheriff Of Fractured Jaw," 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:20, 9:20. Lincoln: "Some Come Run ning," 1:15, 3:50, 6:25, 9:00. Nebraska: "Frontier" Gun," 1:23, 4:42, 8:00. "High So ciety," 2:39, 5:58, 9:17. Varsity: "Auntie Mame," 1:16, 3:55, 6:34, 9:13. State: "The Fearmakers," 1 05. 3:56, 6:47, 9:38. "Cop Haters," 2:41, 5:32, 8:23. Starvlew: "Cartoon.'f 7:15. "Home Before Dark," 7:25. "Girl Most Likely," 9:35. Last Complete Show, 8:30. Joyo: "Mardi Gras," 7:00, 10-10. "Showdown At Boot Hill," 8:50. 5:30 6 6:30 7 7:1S 7:30 8 8:30 9 5:30 5:45 6 0:30 7 7:30 S 9 KUON-TV Wednesday Story Lady Evening Prelude TV Classroom Industry on Parade Memo The Criminal Man Children (Jrowinfi Conversation Piece Japanese Brush Paintinf Epsilon Chi Tau, an organ ization for students interested in agriculture and home ex tension work, recently ini tiated thirty University of Nebraska students as charter members. Membership is limited to those who have completed or are enrolled in an extension' course. Any state or county; extension workers and others i associated with or interested in agricultural extension may receive membership upon paying the required dues. Under the supervision of ad visors Duane Loewenstein, state extension leader of studies and training, and Miss Agnes Arthaud, state leader of home Extension work, the dub promotes professional development of individual members and good social re lationship among people in terested in the extension di vision. Officers elected for the year include: Raiimond Sail, presi dent; Robert Klein, vice presi dent; Virginia Svitak, record ing secretary; Dorothy La vicky, corresponding secre tary; Kenneth Dvorak, treas urer; and Charles Ehresman, publicity director. Charter members in addi tion to the officers include: Virginia Hughes. Sally Miller, Sandra Phelps, Judy Sieler. Mary Seberuer, Mnriheth Powell, Juanita Boeckenl.-alier, Marilyn Evans. Beverly Shepardsun, Marcele Barelman. Tarry Hendrix. Jerome H. Ifaase, I.yle Vawser. Don Miller,- Ralph Ander son, James Cerny, William Puusley, R. Lee Roed, Dale Kriedemann. Larry Gruchow, Clark Jenson, Donald John, ston, Marvin Sefrna, and Paul F. Van lie Walle. fif.; Thursday Magic Doorways Mr. Murgie'a Musee Evening Prelude TV Classroom Passing Notes On Music Atomic Primer Varsity Basketball Press ana the People HOLLYWOOD BOWL Open Bowling Saturday & Sunday 24 Lanes Automatic Pinsetters Restaurant . . . Barber Shop 920 IV. 48th PIIOXE 6-1911 i Loaded for trouble? fry5-"' V1 To th youngjten, a drive with th mony of them. killed by driver whoso gang it great fun. But driving it teri- mindt weren't wholly on their job. So out bosinett, too. tott year, nearly ttoy alert every minute when yow 40,000 people died in traffic accidents drive. Keep driving fun and tafe I Help stop senseless killing on our highways. Drive safely yourself. Insist on strict law enforcement for your own protection. Work actively with others to support your local' Safety Council. Remember where traffic laws are strictly enforced, deaths go down. Published m; an effort to save lives, tn cooperation wilh The National Safety Council and The Advertising Council, bf THE DAILY uEBRASIiAi