r Page 4 -Explosions to Robots- Education Key to 47th E-Week; Displays, Info Sessions Featured "Education will be the key word during the 47th Annual E-Week," Tom McMahon, publicity chairman, said. Dust explosions, a cutaway display of a tractor, a lady robot these are only a few of the items to be displayed April 23-24. McMahon expressed the purpose of Engineering Week as follows: "Participating students will attempt through displays, models and Information ses sions to inform the public and student exactly what engineer ing and architecture involve." A movie and question and answer session for high school students interested in engineering will start E-Week at I p.m., April 23. Students from various de partments will speak to the students. Sigma Tau, honor ary engineering fraternity, will sponsor the period. Open house will be held from"! to 10 p.m. the same day. During open house, displays fru.i each department of the i ollege may be seen. , The centennial will be the Get W1LDR00T CREAM-OIL Charlie! I. PAUL Sheedy, hair expert, saysi Wildroot tames those cowlicks!" W HI 3. JTarrM IhU JM.. ITwmmt.i1., h T. Jus a little bit of Wildroot and. ..WOW! 10 BAY EiWEAIJ TBAVEl STUDY TOUR INCLUDE Airline Transportation 39 Days in Paris 10 Hour Course in Culture I Europe Today At Private Accredited University 30 Day Tour. 5 Different Itineraries, Including USSR ' Organized Weekend due Ad boo r mi I MYEI m STUDY II East 4M Srratt. Nt Ysrt 17. .T, Niatt ana- aa par ksa M atai J rIS-FltANC-EUR0PE ASSOCIATION FOR TRAVEL AND STUDi 19 East 49th Stfwt. Hw York 17, N. T. coennusKERs all: Congregate at the LANDMARK TEE TEE PEE Open 'til 1 A.M. weekdays and 'til 2 A.M. Fridays and Saturdays ENJOY SUNDAY BRUNCH ... Served from 1 1 :30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Adults $2.00 Children $1.00 theme of the architectural de partment displays. Nebraska's architecture past, present and future will be represented by models and drawings. A scale model of the Kel logg Center as well as a dis play on the redevelopment of Lincoln are included. Tractor Controls A r a d i o-controlled trac tor will be the agricultural en gineering department's con tribution, One operator will be able to start, stop, and steer the tractor, control its engine speed, actuate the clutch, con trol implements and shift gears all from a distance. A cutaway display of an 8,000 pound tractor will also be shown. The shaking floors of t h e Governor's mansion prompted the civil engineering depart ment to display a barjoist construction such as was used in the mansion. Displays of aerial photogra phy and its relation to high way location work, an ex planation of how the suffici ency rating system is used to decide which roads will be built first and a question and answer session completes the C. E. department's contribu tion. Hi-Fi to Robots ! The. electrical engineering i department will demonstrate I high fidelity and stereophon ic sound, the operation of the police radar system, closed circuit television that enables you to see yourself on TV, high frequency cooking and the only woman over which man has complete control lady robot. A dust explosion will be of fered by the mechanical en gineering department. It is to demonstrate the hazards of open motors or flames while Slide Rule Instruction To Be Given A six-week class on slide rule operation wil begin March 30. Any University student is eligible for the one-hour a week course to be held in 205 Stout Hall, according to Charles Kress, chairman of the Sigma Tau slide rule com mittee. The sessions will be held on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Section 1 meets March 30 at 4 p.m.; section 2 on March 30 at 5 p.m.; section 3 on March 30 at 7 p.m.; section 4 on March 31 at 7 p.m.; sec tion 5 on April 2 at 5 p.m.; and section 6 on April 2 at 7 p.m. Tassels Banquet Tassels banquet will be n,,tct!,rt;,Y a. .! formed to draft the questions Outstanding pledge andf ,u .. ...u.u v. outstanding active will be" named at the banquet which will be held in the Union. HliUSECER PEE POW WOW working around dust-f i 1 1 e d air. They will set up a display to show outboard owners that when motor speed is i n creased at high speed, the speed of the boat does not al ways increase. Theory of Flight A model airplane display by the engineering mechanics de partment will be composed of models driven by rubber bands and weighing less than a pound. With them, the de partment will show the theory of flight. The chemical engineering Hays Gets 'Shrew' Lead; Several Play Roles Open Bonna Tebo Hays will play the starring role of Katharine, the shrew, in "Taming of the Shrew," a Howell Theater production in May and June. Katharine's sister Bianca will be played by Sally Wen gert. Madeiyn Miroff will por tray the widow. Other Parts John Gerber will play the Delis Off Social Pro , Council Told Delta Tau Delta has been taken off social probation, Jack Muck reported Wednes day to the Student Council. Muck, along with Council member Kathy Roach, are a a 1 part of the faculty subcom j mittee on student social af fairs which took the action. According to Muck, the com mittee heard the Delta Tau Delta appeal to be removed from probation on the grounds that they have made im provement in the following areas: 1. Their alumni advisory committee now has complete control over the activities of the fraternity. 2. They have a more effec tive policy towards pledge training scholarship and com pliance with University regu lations. According to Muck, t h e ap- peal was granted on tne evi - dence produced by Delta Tau Delta of improvement made and being maae new policy. under their Bates Joins Living Study Croup to Form Housing Queries Dr. Allen Bates, chairman oi the department of sociology, has been named to work on a minority housing survey in Lincoln. He is one of a committee for the survey which is to be gin in June. Other members, also sociol ogists, are Dr. Glen Callen of : Nebraska Wesleyan and Dr. Russell Nelson of Union Col lege. ! The three also have agreed to find someone who will be i responsible for making the survey and tabulating the re- ( suits. j The survey, sponsored by the Mayor's Council on Ilu I man Relations, will investi gate housing and living con ditions of Lincoln minority groups. More Opinions Are Needed For Finals Plan The Student Council has re ceived 16 letters from individ uals and organizations con cerning the proposed final exam change. The Council is asking the administration to extend the final exam period one day. leaving the first day for study Chuck Huston, chairman of the final exam committee, told the Council Wednesday that more letters were needed to allow the committee to ac curately determine student opinion on the matter. SPEEDWAY MOTORS 1719 N Sr. LINCOLN, NEBR. Speed Equipment Hollywood Mufflers TKe Daily Nebraskan department will stress equip ment used in their work. They will show the process of de velopment and production of rayon, a chemical oddities room with magical tricks and surprises, and an information room to tell visitors about the general aspects of education of chemical engineers and the relation of chem engineering to production. The program the following day, April 24, will consist of an engineer's convocation at 11 a.m., a picnic and field day in the afternoon, and a banquet in the evening. part of Baptista and the role of Vincehtio will be portrayed by James MacDonald. Steve Schultz will be in the role of Lucentio and Zeff Berstein that of Gremio. Bendcllo will be played by Francis Hemer and Grumio by John Erickson. Robert Grote will play the part of Curtis. Tom Perry will play two roles, that of a tailor and of a pedant, a person who dis plays his learning. Suitors Concern "T a m i n g of the Shrew," one of Shakespeare's come dies, is the story of the con cern of Bianca's suitors. Bi anca's father says that she cannot marry until her older sister Katharine is married. But Katharine is a shrew and no man will have her, thus the problem. The prob lem is solved when the suitors find Petruchio who is able to tame the shrew for a sizable dowry. Production dates for the "Shrew" is Ann Prentice and St.; June 6 and 7 at Pinewood Bowl; and June 11 and 12 in Howell Theater. I nfilled Roles There are still several male roles unfilled as yet, accord ing to Jerry Carlson, produc tion director. Production manager for the "Shrew is Ann Prentice and the assistant to the director is Charles Piper. Anyone who desires to read ; for the remaining male roles should contact Carlson at j n0well Theater. K B 'ltlietaiaW9 L , i r I iiMfimtii i jm (STRIKf WsWii l-iTlvyi fmtm "tlililiJ cigarettes i ii.ViT v:;viii:- viVVim -ii iivi::::iV- ii " nv ... SCHOOLTEACHER English: RUS Thinklish: BEOAGOOue aOKALB EODDASD. KANSAS CITY Seven Feted For Flying, Rifle Firing Three advanced and four basic Army ROTC cadets were honored in a ceremony in the office of the PMST, Col. V. R. Rawie. The advanced cadets sucess fully completed the Army ROTC Flight Training course conducted by Arrow Airport. Satisfactory completion of the program qualifies ROTC ca dets for further flight training when ordered to active duty. Those completing the course were Bruce Abernethy, Honor Oschner and Gilbert MacGar raugh. Medals were awarded to Michael Flannigan, William Holland, Conley Cleveland and Howard McNiff for their par ticipation in the Midwest Camp Perry Smallbore Rifle Matches. The University Army ROTC rifle team placed second in a field of 19 teams. ' Star Theatre Draws 35,000 More than 35,000 people have viewed the stars and planets at the University Planetarium, Theatre of the Stars, since its opening. Of that number, 5,500 were school children, members of 175 groups from 40 Nebraska counties. Commemorating its first an niversary the Planetarium will feature a new show Thursday, "Our Star the Sun." FLAT OUR SPECIALTY OB'S BARBER SHO 1315 "P" Street English: LIARS' CLUB Thlnkllsh translation: These guys know stories so tall they tell 'em with skywriting! Their imaginations are. so wild they keep them in cages! The one thing they don't' lie about as you might have guessed is the honest taste of a Lucky Strike. (Fine tobacco is fine with them!) In Thinkjish, this bunch is a braggregationl And that's no lie. Start talking our language we've got hun dreds of checks just itching to go! We're paying $25 'each for the Thinklish words judged best! Thinklish is easy: it's new words from two words like those on this page. Send yours to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Enclose your name, address, college and class. Get the genuine article Get the of fhmkttsh: "A J. COLb S TA T Principals9 Frosh Hold Conference The fifth annual Principal- ! Freshman Conference was held Thursday -at the Univer sity to discuss transition from high school to university work. Approximately 550 Univer sity freshman and 78 high school principals registered at the Union, then dispersed to rooms throughout the cam pus to discuss and seek ways in which both schools may aid students in the transition. Following a noon luncheon in the Union, a panel discus sion was held on 'The Role of High Schools in' Admission Practices." Panel members were: Dr. Floyd Hoover, University reg istrar; Lee Chatficld, director of the University's Junior Di vision and Counseling Ser vice; William Bogar, Princi pal of L i n c o 1 n High; Ray Meyers, principal of Schuyler High; and Noel Lawrence, principal of Grand Island High. Alumnus Article An article by Marcia Ray, senior in Agriculture, is ap pearing in this issue of the Nebraska Alumnus. Entitled P. T., the article concerns the University phys ical therapy department. , CANOE TRIPS Personal service for wilderness cenoe trips into the Quetico-Superior wilder nets. Camping equipment. Grumman aluminum canoes and choice food sup- i plies only $6.00 per person per day. For complete information, write Bill Rom, CANOE COUNTRY OUTFITTERS Box 717 C, Ely, Minn. T Phone 5-9323 Engh honest fasfe a LUCECY STRIKE MARTINI RECIPE h: Engli G,NFORMATOrV Friday, March 20, 1959 KUON-TV Frlaaj J: JO Children's Corner I Evening Prelude IM TV Classroom 1 Frontiers ol Health 7:30 Passln Notes on Muiie I Channel 11 Presents ( Tactic CAMPUS CHATTER Janet Hoeppnet Sharon Anderses) You will be the picture of spring and feel fresh as a breeze in this cotton floral print. The pleated skirt has a self-belt with a bow to add that femi nine touch. The three quarter length sleeves and the V neck make it possible to dress it up or dress it down to fit any spring; occasion. This fashionable dress sells for only $10.98. See you soon, Sharon Andenon and Janet Hoeppner H08 .th to WOTS f ' ' ' V .. J. v. i if I Thinkhsh: PIGAyiST CHSISriNS JiMSEN. MONTANA STATE 'f. ' En9"tb: MUDV HIGHWAY OF CHICKEN FEED STUDY i' Thmklisr,.- PECKONOM1CS irr riscMis. u"- Product of jnMitm iJij&ou-vnyxatty- Jj&eco- uour utMU C a. t. Cm nam