6 -. , . ' '' $ - H 1 If 1 ' i t r ' i '( I Page 4 Non-Appearance Hurts Students In Council Parking Board Cases By John Hoerner The Student Council park ing board has heard 24 ap peals cases this semester. Bob Krohn reported to the Council Wednesday that of thes 4 appeals, four had been grcsted. Late Appearances A large percentage of the denied appeals were due to the defendants not appearing Past Lincoln At Historical Ever wished you could live In the past for a few hours just to see what it would be like? Then the . Nebraska State Historical Society is the place for you. Album of Grow'h On the second floor Is a display entitled "Centennial Alburn" in which Everything from photo murals of early Lincoln to Victorian parlors depict the growth and change in Nebraska's capital city from early lS70's through the turn of the century. One of the photo murals, "Tell Us Where the Good Times Are" features a pic ture of daring damsels in early University gym bloom ers and an 1888 Journal edi torial which gives thumbnail descriptions of the most eli gible bachelors .of Lincoln. In period setting enclosed in a white and gold frame is a wine silk ball gown worn by Mrs. Torrey Allen Thayer,, wife of a former Nebraska governor and senator, John Milton Thayer. Early Lincoln Not far from Mrs. Thayer's display is a spread of sketches of early Lincoln by her son, John Milton Thayer Jr. Drawings by the late Louise Pound, who was a Phi Beta Kappa at the University at the turn of the century, are also included in the layout. Another period setting con tains the huge walnut desk of David Butler, Nebraska's first governor. Butler's picture and that of his secretary of state hang on either side of the desk. Cozy Corner "Cozy Corner", one part of the more fashionable homes of Lincoln in the late 1890's and 1900's, is the third period rrtuir. jj toe gunysuiiTwie: on American Express 1959 Sfudenf Tours of Europe Wherever, whenever, however you travel, your best assurance of the finest service is American Express! On American Express Student Tours of Europe you'll be escorted on exciting itineraries covering such fascin ating countries as England . . . Belgium . . . Germany . . . Austria . . . Switzerland . . . Italy . . . The Rivieras , . . and France. And you'll have ample free time and iota of individual leisure to really live life abroad! 7 Student Tear f iarapt . . . featuring distinguished leaders from prominent colleges as tour conductors . . . 49 to 62 days . . . by se and by air . . . $1,37 and up. 4 Iitwitit" Stodert Taws Enron . . . with experienced escorts ... by sea ... 44 to 57 days . . . $872 and up. tther turapwt Tears Availabte . . . from 14 days . . . $672 and up. Mat, Tears to Florida, Btrowdi. Medea, Wast Indies an1 Hawaii You can always Travel Now Pay Later when you go American Express! Member: Institute of International Education and Council on Student Travel. For complete information, see your Campus Repre sentative, local Travel Agent or American Express Travel Service ... or simply mail the bandy coupon. AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVEL SERVICE I 65 Broadway, New York 6, X. Y. ' Tr. nim Um 5 Yes' Please send me complete information C-39 about 1959 Student Tours of Europe! ; Nam.. I Z Address " City..; Zona State J MOTtCT 0V TKVl f UNDS U" MKWCM tXWta TMrtUK CMOt-SPLNl)Bll mHi HI jrru HW roa reus tomrtmtMun muocm umum woms-wim csumt cars before the parking board at the scheduled hearing time, Krohn said. Krohn told the Daily Ne braskan of several represent ative cases that had appeared before the board. Student A appealed his six parking tickets due to the fact that he had mechanical troubles with his car. He stated he could not get it Depicted Society setting. Sealed off from the rest of the home by screens or portieres of beads, the room is filled with influences of the Near East. The "cozy corner" usually had a dual purpose; it was used for courting and as a smoking room for father. Reporductions of rooms from early Nebraska homes fill the Speicial Exhibit room. The very earliest, the one and only room of the sod house, was furnished with the be longings of the many pioneers "who uiit nomes on the prairie when poverty was shared bv everyone on the frontier and who looked with courage toward the fu ture." An early American bed room was donated by David Whitney, Professor Emeritus of the University and a par lor of the Carson house in Brownville has been donated by Miss Rose Carson of Lin coln. Portraits of Charles Henry Gere, first publisher of the Nebraska State Journal. John Gillespie, first Nebraska aud itor and the late James t,. Lawrence, former president of the Historical Society and former editor of the Lincoln Star adorn the walls. Pharmacists To Open Spring Meet The 1959 Spring Pharmacy Seminar will open at 9 a.m. today. The two-day meeting will feature lectures and labora tory demonstrations in the Union and Lyman Hall. Seminar speakers will in clude Louis J. Fischi, Oak land, Calif., president, Amer ican Pharmaceutical Assn.; Dr. James Tollman, dean of the University College of Med icine; Dr. Peter Farago, med ical department, Abbott Lab oratories; Frank Sojat, dis trict supervisor, Bureau of Narcotics, Kansas City, Mo.; W, D. Cairns and R. J. Man ning, Eli Lilly and Co. Plumbers Strike Work ground to a halt re cently at Kansas State on a new men's dorm. Reason was a plumbers' strike over em ployee classification. A H started for a week, and that he was unable to tow it be cause of a poor transmission. The board felt that mechan ical failure was no excuse for disobeying traffic regulations. Student A did not have a permit at the time of his six violations. Appeal was de nied. Red Line Park Student B was charged with parking on a red line. He appealed his ticket be cause of the curb being par tially covered with snow and the red paint being badly faded. The board checked the painting on the curb and found the paint partially worn off. The rest could well have been covered with snow. The board felt also that due to the fact that Student B is a married student he is not as familiar with the zonemark ings at Selleck Quadrangle as campus students. Appeal was granted. Wrong Lot Student C received a ticket for parking in the wrong lot. He claimed that he was not parked in the wrong lot, but the appeals board could see no reason for an officer to give him a ticket unless he was in this particular lot. The board felt he was mis representing the facts either deliberately or because of misinformation so the appeal was denied. Student D appealed his three tickets for wrong area, red line and driveway park ing. The board felt that D was violating a law of which he was fully aware. The only reason he could give for the three violations was the lack of time to look after his car. Car First The board felt that he should have taken the respon sibility of his car ahead of personal activities. Appeal was denied. Five of the 20 defendants did not appear before the board at the scheduled hear ing time of 4 p.m. Thursdays. Hearing are held in Room, 305 Union. Four of the students appeal ing stated that the lots in which they illegally parked were improperly marked. Only one appeal was granted on these grounds. One appeal was based on the fact that the library had taken too long to procure the student a book. The board felt that 30 minutes was an excessive amount of time to check out a book. Visual Aid Has Ten New Films Films for preview Monday to Friday in the Bureau of Audio-Visual Instruction are: "Name Unknown," "Strang ers," "The Terrible Truth,' "No Smoking," "The Miracle of Reproduction," "Minimum Tillage," "The Doctor's Di lemma." Other new films at the Bureau are: "The Labor Movement: Beginnings and Growth in America." "Be yond Our Solar System" and "Rural Community Defense." Liquor Stamps Back in Vogue From Ihe Daily Texan, comes this quip: "Diplomats may be splitting hairs, scien-i tists may be splitting atoms,! Pogo may be splitting oranges, and students may be splitting Quizzes . . . but the Oklahoma House of Represen tatives passed a repeal reso-, lution on legalizing liquor. 1 Save your federal liauor stamps, boys, the South may rise again. , LITTLE MAN l UNDERSTAND TH' DEAN HAD TKe Doily Nebroskan THEFT NYU Plans Junior Year Program Students all over the coun try may vie for the opportun ity to take their junior year at New York University's Wash ington Square College of Arts and Science. Under the Junior Yean pro gram, the University will ac cept a limited number of men and women students who have completed theif sophomore studies in good standing and have the approval of the deans of their institutions. New York University is a private, non-denominational institution with 14 schools, col leges, and divisions at six cen ters in Manhattan and the Bronx. Washington Square College and seven other graduate or undergraduate units are lo cated at Washington Square. The College is coeducational and open to all qualified stud ents. The student body num bered about 3,100 during the 1958 fall term. Applications for the pro gram should be sent no later than May 1 to: Dr. William Buckler, Washington Square College of Arts and Science, New York University, New York 3, New York. Butler Institute Here Wednesday The annual meeting of the Nebraska Butter Institute will be held Wednesday in the Union. Speakers following a noon luncheon will be Pearle F. Finnegan. state secretary of agriculture; Myron Clark of the American Dairy Associ ation, Chicago; Samuel Fine, chief of the Kansas City Dis trict of the Federal Food and Drug Administration; and Dr. Philip Kelly, chairman of the University dairy department. A business meeting and elec tion of officers will conclude the meeting. UFA lnnUillation The Independent 'Women's Association BABW) will hold installation of new officers and board members today at 8:15 in the Union. ON CAMPUS MlM $L)6PfNPEP FCKTUg Interview Job interviews with 11 in dustrial firms and government agencies are open this week. Individual interview lists are in the office of the committee on occupational placement in the Administration Building. The interviews list is subject to change. The bulletin board outside the office door gives interview notices. The firms and agencies are. Monday Convair, San Diego Division; A. E. Staley Mfg. Co.; Joy Mfg. Co. Tuesday The Procter ,1 Gamble Company; Convair, Non-Resident Requirements Tightening The University is one of three Big Eight schools which has 'established additional re quirements for nonresident students since 1952, accord ing to a recent survey. The survey of admission requirements of colleges and universities was made by the American Council on Educa tion. The University and the Uni versity of Kansas now require that nonresident students rank in the top three-fourths of their graduating class. The University of Missouri requires nonresidents to be in the upper half of their gradu ating Hasses. At the University of Colo rado all nonresident students in the lowest one-third of their class must take entrance ex aminations and the Colleee Entrance Board Scholastic Aptitude Test will be required of all entering students be ginning in 1960. Nonresidents must have a "C" average or better at Ok lahoma State University. At Kansas State University, non residents are admitted on the basis of record, test scores and recommendation of prin cipal or counsellor. 110 V THAT Sere's Why Tareytoa't Dual Filter filters is no tingle filter can: 1. It combines sn officiant purs white outer filtar... UL. Jd 1 2. with a unique rrivTf r r.HRmi . . whirh hc been definitely proved to make the smoke of cigarette milder end smoother. Notice how many Dual Filter Tareyton smokers you see around campus these days? Why so? Just try the cigarette yourself. You'll see "why so"! THE TAREYTON RING MARKS THE REAL THING! NEW DUAL FILTER TaTtWtOn ilXJ Xfi C, , yJU M.r.M Schedule San Diego. Division; United States Gypsum Company. , Wednesday The Procter & Gamble Company; Bureau of Reclamation. Thursday Swift & Co., Re search Laboratory; U. S. For estry Service; Crane Co. Friday Navy Electronics Laboratory (San Diego); Cali fornia State Personnel Board; Swift & Company, Research Laboratory. ' Mousy Men Take Time For Mickey The University of Detroit's 'Timeless Tower" has gone Mickey Mouse. A band of student patriots under cover of night put white gloves on the tower's clock hands. 'The Varsity Times, U-D student newspaper, hailed the clock as a boasting point for the University the world's largest Mickey Mouse clock. KUON-TV Moaaar 5:JO Tha Parmer in the Dell 5:45 Fianewlon'i Newipaper C Evening Prelud i:N TV CliKroom 7 Japanese Brugh Painting The Fine Art t Great Ideal Special for this week ... Coconut Macaroons 3 doz. 33C Federal Bake Shop 1211 "O" Typewriters For Rent Try Our Rental-Purchase Han Special Student Rates NEBRASKA TYPEWRITER CO. 125 No. 11th Phone 2-4284 Typewriter Ribbons Put On RING GETS Inner filter of A '''::.i.'.Ji : I K K i i Monday, March 9; 1959 Insects Cause Loss Of Millions A University College of Ag riculture Extension entomolo gist, R. E. RoseUe, spoke at the Nebraska Weed and Pest Conrtol Conference in Grand Island. He told the group that in sects cause a multi-million dollar loss in Nebraska each year by damaging 10 per cent of the agricultural crops grown in the state. Oat Production Under NU Study Studies on oat production are being conducted at the Northeast Nebraska Experi ment Station. J. C. Swinbank, extension agronomist of the University, says that the researchers have found that oat production can be increased from 15 to 20 per cent '"y planting certi fied seed of recommended varieties. EUROPE Dyblhi t rfcw Iron Cartoln; Africa to Sweden You're accompanied aot nerdca1 around. Colleea aa anle. Aha ahort trip. EUROPE SUMMER TOURS 15 Sequoia ;Boa C), Pasadena, Cat A ROUND Tareyton -. I it I i V 1 DUAllUltR If 1 j . A