'T "jf , V -H. V -. Page 4 The Nebraskan Monday, October 3, 1960 .1 Waring Will Highlight Lincoln Concert Series Fred Waring and the Penn sylvanians will highlight this year's Lincoln Community Concert presentations 'A student membership drive is underway this week to sell memberships good for attendance at all of the per formances. ' Memberships The memberships will cost $4 and will be sold Oct. 3 Oct. 7, according to Paul Scheele, student membership drive chairman. Students may purchase memberships by presenting their ID cards at the ticket f. it a i r j.i ooom at me entrance oi xne Crib this week. A workers' coffee is slated for 4:00 today in the Student Union Pan American room to kick off the campaign. Lou Roper, president of the Lincoln Community Concerts, will speak at the meeting to- 4w ' i 1 in" i Dixie Waring, Fred War ing, Jr. and Fred Waring, Sr., will appear in Lincoln Dec. I for the "Stereo Fes tival" at Pershing Auditorium. day. Scheele urged that any students interested in selling and not previously contacted should attend. Workers "All workers must attend the meeting in order to re ceive their membership kits and to register." Scheele said. Workers will receive free membership for each ten they sell. The prize for the top seller will be a hi-fi record-player, At the , performances, all scheduled for Pershing Audi torium, there will be no re serve seats. ' First come, first served." Scheele said. Programs Besides Waring, who will be featured in t he "Stereo Festival" Dec. 2, also appear ing will be the Spanish Bal let group, Oct. 26, the Vienna Choir Boys, Mar. 6 ana tne Dallas Symphony Orchestra with Leonard Pennario, Mar. 28. The Spanish Ballet is con- sidered the "spectacular cav alcade of the Spanjsh the atre." Included in the Aime nez-Vargas Ballet are 14 dancers, flamenco singers and guitarists. The Vienna Choir Boys will present a concert of sacred music, folk songs and costume operettas. World-famous Dallas Sym phony Orchestra will feature Pennario at the piano. He has won laurels with many or chestras and is considered one of the outstanding con cert pianists today. Scheele added that the Community Concerts organi zation is popular nationally and "this is due to greater student interest and better programs." Scheele said that any adult moving to 'Lincoln since March (including new faculty members) may buy a mem bership for $7.50. Iowa Governor to Address Fund Dinner Oct. 15 Governor Herschell Love less of Iowa, prominent Dem ocratic leader, is expected in Lincoln Oct. 15, according to Don Ferguson, president of the Young Democrats. He will appear that night to address a special fund rais ing dinner at Cotner Terrace for Frank B. Morrison, Dem ocratic candidate for gov ernor. f Ferguson said that any stu dent wishing to attend the dinner may buy their $3 tick ets at the Tuesday night YD meeting. "Depending upon his ar rival in Lincoln, Loveless may spend the morning on campus and then attend the Nebraska Army football game in the afternoon," Ferguson said. KVON-TV Presents - Marriage Program The pressures and tensions of marriage will be discussed in a new weekly TV series sponsored by KUON, channel 12. The program on "Your Mar riage" begins Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. Faculty Discusses 'Modern Temper' "The Wrong Turn: An At tack on the Modern Temper in Literature and Life," will be the subject for discussion at the first Faculty Round Table meeting of the season. The paper, to be presented by English professor Ross Garner, will be open for dis cussion by all faculty memo bers who wish to attend. The meeting will be in rooms 232-5 of the Student Union tonight at 7:30. History Department Uses New Depth Problem Book STAR GAZERS ALERT! Sky's Seven Wonders Now At Planetarium Star gazers and heaven searchers will have a treat in store when they attend the "Seven Wonders of the Uni verse" sky show in the Muel ler Planetarium between Oct. I and Nov. 24. The sky show will be shown publicly at 8 p.m. Wednes days, 2:45 p.m. Saturdays (except during home football games) and 2:30 and 3:45 p.m. Sundays. The sky show will feature seven wonders of the sky. The first wonder is the moon which has been man's most recent goal. The tele scope win point out many ways in which the moon is unique. Saturn Unique The second wonder is Sat urn. This wonder will be the typical example of a planet, even though its ring makes it unique. ine sky snow focuses on two fuzzy stars which are really not stars at all. One is the great gas cloud Orion which contains enough gas to make 10,000 suns. The second is really the Andromeda gal axy, a great pinwheel of 100 billion stars slowly turning in space. The show will enable its viewers to locate the impor tant parts of our universe Marching Band Album Set The national record distrib utor, Fidelity Sound Record ing of California, will release a record album this week fea turing the University of Ne braska Marching Band, ac cording to Donald Lentz, band director. The album includes record tags of "Dear Old Nebraska U," "Hail Nebraska," "Hail Varsity," "March of the Cornhuskers," and the "Ne braska Chant" sung by the Varsity Glee Club. John Philip Sousa's tribute to the University, "Universi ty of Nebraska," is also in cluded. Director Lentz said that the album will be available in sterophonic recordings as well as monoaural. Pictures of the Marching Band and Director Lentz are featured on the colored album jacket It was in 1951 that the Comhusker band wasJast re corded, said the band director. and see them in their pattern in the sky. In this space age, every one is becoming interested in the sky. The sky calendar and the planet charts will tell sky searchers when and where to find the various wonders. . Sky Calendar Tuesdar, 4: Pull moon. Harvest moon. Tuesday. 11: The moon and Mars oc cupy the same portion of the sky. Wednesday, 12; The moon is at apogee point in its orbit farthest from the earth at a distance of 251,200 miles and is in last quarter. Saturday, IS: Mercury is at Ks ireatest elongation and will be 25 degrees above the horizon at sunset. Thursday, 20: The Orionid meteor shower will reach a maximum of 25 meteors per hour radiating from a point above and to the east of Orion in the early morning sky. The moon is new. Fiday, 21: Mercury and the moon oc cupy the same portion of the sky. Saturday, 22: Venus and the moon oc cupy the same portion of the sky. Monday, 24: The moon is at perigree (point in its orbit closest to the earth) at distance of 229.000 miles. Jupiter and the moon occupy the same portion of the sky. Tuesday, 25: Saturn and the moon oc cupy the same portion of the sky. Thursday, Tt: The moon is in first quarter. The Planets Mercury is at its greatest elongation on tne latn ana so tor a tew evenings time it may be seen very low in the southwest just after sunset. It will be very difficult to see. however. Venus is an evening star which may he seen low in the southwest for about an hour after sunset, Msrs is in Genini. It rises in the late evening and is prominently seen the rest of the night. Jupiter is in Sagittarius, it is well past the meridian at sunset and set about three hours laur. Saturn is in Sagittarius, east of Jupiter, it is about on the meridian at sunset and sets before midnight. Uranus is in Leo, Nepuine is in Libra and Pluto is in Leo, but all require a telescope for good observation. A new dimension has been added to history courses at the University. According to American his: tory professor, David E. Cro nin, added depth is being ac complished by an unique problem book which exposes the student to the "raw ma terials of history." "Students tend to believe the events of history were in evitable. By studying the orig inal source materials in this problem book, they come to realize a number of alterna tives existed, and are exposed to the a r g u m e n t s of the group who lost," Cronin said The purpose of the book is not to give definte answers to the problems of history, but to enable the student to view the complexities and under lying forces involved, Cronin emphasized. Same Debates "This enables the student to realize preceding genera tions went through many of the same debates we are dis cussing now, such as the issue of how much govern ment control is in agreement with the principle of local and individual freedom, he ex plained. The program is designed to supercede "outside reading assignments" which were often not integrated with reg ular course material, and Elementary Ed Sets Open House Freshmen and new stu dent elementary education majors will be entertained at a special open house Tues day from 7 to 8 p.m. in Teachers College Room 200. Sponsored by the Associa tion o Childhood Education, the reception will give stu dents an opportunity to meet officers and members as well as the faculty of Teachers College. Cooper . . . (Continued from Page 1) its personnel. Any business man realizes that you obtain and keep competent and highly trained personnel only when compensation is com mensurate with their ability and training. The University of Nebraska should be in position to offer salaries which are equal to those of fered by the other large Uni versities in the Great Lakes and Plains Region. Right now we are about average and this is not good enough. Above and beyond these things is America's need for the results of higher educa tion. Our position among the nations of the world depends directly upon our institutions of higher learning and what they are doing right now today. If I am elected Governor, the University and the Col leges, and all other segments of our educational system will receive the complete support oi my btate Administration. Main Feature Clock Stite: "Night Fighters," 1.32 3:32, 5:32, 7:32, 9:32. Varsity: "Ocean's 11," 1:40 4:12, 6:44, 9:16. Nebraska: "The Nuns Slorv.1' 1:25, 6:10. "The Miracle," 4:00, b:4D. Lincoln: "The Angel Wore Red," 1:25 ,3:25, 5:25, 7:25, 9:25 Stua rt: "High Time," 1:15, 3:15, 5:15, 7:20, 9:Z0. Ifllfl-CEfiO-Effi (DSHrOS n ..,i.l.iilnn,,Mi !,,,. ,;" -"i 0 TTCHNCOtXt UAVlSMOW RICHARD (MI-CESAR ROMERO -PATRICE WVMORE-JOEY BISHOP frequently regarded as a "chore." Difficulties of the project include trying to cover one problem in a single quiz ses sion, and familiarizing stu dents with the new type of instructionn. "Too many people regard the study of history as mere ly memorizing a number of dates and occurrences from one point of time to another," Cronin observed. Yale Project Developed by the history department at Yale Univer sity while Cronin was teach ing there, the project proved so successful that the original mimeographed sheets were published in booklet form un der the title, "Nationalism and Sectionalism in America, 1775-1877." The booklets are being used at Nebraska for the first time this year as a complement to the regular text for History 9. A series on the growth of government in the economy, development by the NU his tory department, will be "used for History 10. If successful, the project will be extended to cover ad ditional history courses. 1 UNION CATERING DEPARTMENT needs waiters! Applicants should have noon hours available, 11-1, 12-2 preferable. See Mr. Stockton . Union Business Office p 'f fabulous' j wwy "suNfiD;i'p?9I I W 8:00 P.M. 1 )rf -"i " University coeds may jet I s- th $ .,!,!,;:.,(, special permission to at- 8 Per tickets, call GR 7-7536, GR 7-7442 er Linda Kavick HE 2-670 Presented by Don Romeo Agency & Koop Production. I'M : f "'""wwmniswii I,,,,! I ... II ;A H ' j P &: 0 --' -rrtmimimmiu- .v ; I 111 ' ' st "-CSSS: TffrV-j 111 ' : I yri "zf!r zrrp ill i : -' - ; V-A W : srsSi-jR f As W- ' tL & ' v I "e I ' ..1 f S-iPv; Jk'" - 1 . ''. lrtS.l--WCT)inii,i aim llillnMirM, r n i imin, mi JSk . .JiJa.-?.'. ... asssssssssassilin r.,,,. . "'jj Wes Roberts can tell you: "THERE'S NO CEILING FOR A SELF-STARTER THE TELEPHONE BUSINESS" When Wes Roberts was nearing the end of his senior year at San Jose State College, he was looking for a job with a wide open future. He found it when he joined Tacific Telephone in San Francisco. Here's how Wes tells it: "I remember one of my first jobs. The boss said, 'Wes, I want you to work out a plan showing where we'll need new field operating centers to keep up with Northern California's growth over the next 10 . years.' I didn't know whether I was more happy or scared.", Wes didn't tell us (but his boss did) that he handled the report like a pro. And today, as a division supervisor, he's holding down a key telephone job. Wes Roberts' story is not unique in the Bell Telephone Companies. The telephone business is growing fast and men are needed who can grow just as fast. Wes can tell you: "We get good training. But no one nurses you along. We hire managers not errand boys. So far as I can see, there's no ceiling for a self-starter in this business." If you're a guy like Wes Roberts if you lik$ to bite off more than you can chew and then chew it you'll want to visit your Placement Office for literature and additional information. ' Our number one aim it to have in all management jobt the most vital, intelli gent, positive and imaginative men we can possibly find." Frederick R. Kafpel, Pretidmt American Telephone A Telegraph Co. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES I UK 6IRLST I I I I I If ,,.-s-r 1 I c; jP,