Pogt 4 The Daily Nebraskan Tuesday, October 17, 1961 Ag YMCA Founder, Counselor Leaves Post After Forty Years A University staff member whose name has been synonymous with the Agricultural College branch of the YMCA (Ag-Y) for almost 40 years is almost retiring from active association with the group but not quite. Dr. Carl E. Rosenquist, who organized the Ag-Y in 1923 and helped hold it together through some difficult early years, is relinquishing his longtime post as Ag-Y advisor. But his name is still connected with the student group as honorary chairman of the 1961-62 membership drive which opens with a kick-off dinner Wednesday. After laying the foundation of Ag-Y In 1923, Dr. Rosen quist left Nebraska to teach at the University of Illinois for tw years. When he returned to the state, he found he fledgling rganizaion struggling for survival. He Immedi ately began to rebuild it. "We instigated a program designed to help freshmen," he recalled. "I spent many evenings in the Ag-Y room in Agricultural Hall helping freshmen with their courses." Emphasis on "how to study" aimed primarily at freshmen was continued for many years. A sister "Y" organization on the city campus grew, shriveled and "died on the vine," Dr. Rosenquist noted, but the Ag-Y has been continuously active through the years, and members are looking forward to its 40th an niversary in the spring of 1962. Discussion about religion and student problems were very common in earlier meetings of Ag-Y, as is true today, the longtime botany professor observed. "In the early days, many freshmen in college were away from home for the first time. They needed help and understanding. They needed the company of other boys who had the same ideals and problems. They also needed to work out and embrace a philosophy of life wiUi God as the focal point," he concliHed. Richard Bringelson, ApY president, said it is hoped that current membership o. 25 can be doubled during the impending membership drive. Ag-Y membership chair man Elray Nieman has named Jay Graf as "head boss of the drive. j Graf will work with "section bosses" Ray Preston and Jesse Felker who in turn are supervising six "freshmen" and 24 "riders." The total membership team of S3 men Ag students will call on 165 prospects, with the drive slated to end October 26. Spanish Club Elects Officers for New Year The Spanish Club has elect ed its officers for the coming year. The new officers and their posts are Christy Froschheus er, president; Don Squire, vice-president; and Jose Rodriguez, secretary-t teas urer. Dr. Robert Esquenazi of the romance language de partment is the new faculty advisor. The first Spanish Club event will be the dance Wednesday featuring Latin American mu sic and some dancing demon strations. Ag YMCA Begins Membership Drive The Ag YMCA'i annual membership drive will begin with a "Kick-Off" party Wed nesday at 6 P.M. in the Ag Un ion. The party includes all YMCA workers and leaders. A membership retreat for all the new and old members will be held October 27 at the end of the drive. DAILY NEBRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS wlicy Classified ads for the Daily Nebraska must be entered two days In advance and must be paid for in advance. Correction will be made if error are brought to our attention within 48 hours. WANTED ttoOnH wtoM Join UnJvaraltr at Na bnKka Damn Club Rmw) our floor in wcanaailay'f DAILY NEBRASKA. Tm mora In formation, call Don. CR74M r 4Mb mtm. LOST AND FOUND tout: Black rlmmixt (Immw. tiny, HE m, Nlttit Pit-nil. Jwry Klti. Vitlt: Oirl'i W rlmiwaa Diiw. Call 4M-tM4 r MMtn. APARTMENTS Metropolitan, Vn RouUi lMh 8t. LMn room, Murshnr bd, Wtchra, drawtnf etaast, bath. $ month, HIC2-17&7. FOR SALE 1M Triumph Ttl-J, wltb arlra hwls n avar artva. tl79S. CaU 47717a aftar . Far aula. Altar . Vm't tm. 434-172S. Mack. -Lon. PERSONAL blck. Monty, you 'n a Drnm. Of pouraa. I want to ana JOHNNY MATH IS t tna Awlrtortom an Taeadair nWht lit a m. It'a a date! HELP WANTED ctatertttar-DbiDatchar. AH with bablw t to I. Thaa alt with nw from . Flnafhr, slapatna trwka from to lriKlnlht. pratar matar alrl with oomph, a eommaadtaf valoa, and n-9-rUrr with tha dmibla dutch. My lfa dm not know about thia ad. TaaSSl 9 3 rmri imal a r tin 4ikaW 4aM M asttaaV 3 Meeting There will be an Ag Union mass meeting Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in the Ag Union. Dinner will be served. - The Ag-Y meeting Tuesday at 7:15 p.m. will be held at Cotner School on Ag and will feature Prof. Roberto Esqua naza speaking on "'Crisis in Latin America." The University of Nebraska Amateur Radio Club will hold a transmitter hunt in conjunc tion with its regular Wednes day night meeting. A portable or transistor radio for stand ard broadcast band will be needed to participate in the hunt. The Spanish Club will hold a dance Wednesday from 7-9 p.m. in the Student Union party room. Pollmann Wins KNUS Contest Dewayne Pollmann of Sel leck Quadrangle, won a light er in the KNUS football con test on Saturday's Nebraska Syracuse game. PoUmann's guess of the composite score was 33 com pared to the actual score of 34. KNUS is sponsoring the contest for every home foot ball game. Entries are to be addressed to KNUS, Temple building. The earliest post marked card with the closest guess to the actual composite score is declared the winner. Partv Features Halloween Idea Kn "Ole Fashion Halloweer Party" is the theme for 'the International Student Party set for Oct. 22 7-10 p.m. ir the Pan American room of the Union. Entertainment in the Hallo ween fashion, as well as danc ing and refreshments have been planned for the party by the Union Hospitality com mittee. Coeds from both Al pha Lambda Delta and Red Cross will also be on hand to act as hostesses. The public is invited to at tend this party. t f 4 l k, Mm-i i. , -ifr- Na Itilfi tvanl rho If you sometime! find studying soporific (and who doesn't?), the word to remember is NoDoz NoDre perks you up in minutes, with the same safe awalcener found in coffee or tea. Yet NoDox 0p is faster, liandier, more reliable. Absolutely 0', non-liabit-forming, NoDoz is sold feS-l everywhere without prescription. So, C" ...Jf, to keep perspicacious during study and 0'"i exams and while driving, too ' always keep NoDot in proximity. v. Tka aa stay awaka laMat aYallaSH naryokan. Saaawf aa aiaaaat at Sim Uaaiatortam, si m srs mm r--: T H&tfr .. f iff i ftwftwwWMwMWra .mumwiinrciiiiMiMw - a ":r AG YMCA Jay Graf and Dr. Carl Rosenquist talk over member ship plans in front of the building which serves as Ag-Y headquarters. The Ag-Y uses rooms in the building which also houses the Ag College branch of the Cotner School f Religion. Morrisoii Plans to Study German School System Gov. Frank Morrison will spend some time studying the German education system when he makes a trip to Ger many Nov. 11-24 as a guest of the West German govern ment. Morrison said his itinerary will be mapped out by the German government, but that he plans to visit Heidelberg University and to view such problems as finance, curricu lum and teacher require- Sigma Tau Offers Slide Rule Class Classes in slide rule con ducted by Sigma Tau, na tional engineering honorary society, have begun. Application forms are avail able in any of the engineering buildings. Classes are not limited to engineering stu dents. Eight sections in both beginning and advanced slide rule are conducted at 5 and 7 p.m., Monday through Thurs day. The classes will meet once a week for three weeks. Fundamentals of slide rule ooeration will be covered m that length of time. Last .year's classes had the largest enrollment with 140 students. TONIGHT OCT. 17th DOORS OPEN AT 7:00 tM. johnny ft ITlMiiiS IN MHKON TBI NATION'S SINGINO SENSATION I 4 )IMMV COOK AND HIS OtCHESTI j TIcWi O ot Mu6mm Union Canijilala Today Till tM. MX SEATS RESERVED $2.00. $2.50.(3.00 TAX INCLUDED SOX OFFICE OPENS AT A.M. J1 s Thltt paraplaMlawa . . . harpl NTba Inapt yaw M 1!Ws!8SNsj j ft AG. STUDENT CHAPEL AG. YMCA.- Y.W.CA FOUNDER ments in the German primary and secondary schools. The invitation, be said, re sulted from an article In Reader's Digest magazine which complimented Nebras ka on its leadership in cultural-economic exchanges with West Germany. A group of young German people visited Nebraska for three weeks last summer as part of the program. The German Consul General at Chicago invited Morrison to visit his country to ''fur ther promote understanding between the American and German people," Morrison said. "In view of the fact that the international situation is what it is, and our own eco nomic structure is entwined with the whole world. I de cided to take advantage of the offer," Morrison said. LUCKY STRIKE presents: uu yuu in inn. the coach would get f maa ii wo pumea on first down?" CHANGE TO y "There seems I I fS ' I L' to be some dissension 9 ; " V t - on the squad " , - ' ; , f w'w 1 "' ' k 111 Q I ' J 'iS'? It vv I J ' I "OOOPH!y '"" n ,; 7i ' a" afc. Blue Print Covers Win Frist Place The Nebraska Blue Print won first place for best covers for the 1960-61 school year and second place for the April cover at the convention for Engineering College Maga zines Associated held at the University of Michigan. Delegates from the Univer sity were Mike Hewlett, man aging editor of the Blue Print, Lynn Corcoran, article editor, and Professor Thomas Smith faculty advisor. Hewlett said that Toshiro Isa,' art director, "received many, many compliments from other schools there on the beautiful Job he's done on drawing covers." Toshiro Isa uses one of the articles in die magazine for the idea and makes a symbolic cover. The ideas presented at the convention were based on the fact that engineering publica tions are designed to give engineering students an op portunity to write on techni cal subjects. Industries stressed the importance of engineers not only knowing the technical material, but al so being able to express their thought on it The convention consisted of the annual business meeting, committee meetings, and clin ics on article writing, layout practices, cover design and others giving advice to maga zines in different aspects of the field. The keynote address was given at the Awards Ban quet by Dr. Ralph Snyder, Dean of School of Graduate Studies and Vice-president for Research at the University of Michigan. Michigan Technic, the Michigan University engineer ing magazine, sponsored the convention. They planned trips to the Dearborn plant and Phoenix Project, a pool nu clear reactor. The Nebraskan Blue Print will go on sale later this month. Members of Engineer ing Society will sell them. Engineering students inter ested in working on the Blue Print can contact Hewlett or Dick Meyers, editor, at the Theta Xi fraternity house. READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS ? jjyi I L - t WW OMY 11 KDi ON A FOOTBALL TEAM? Because an the other students are just too busy. Yes, busy doing research, studying, smoking Luckies, playing bongos, smoking Luckies, dating, partying, praising professors and smoking Luckies much too busy for footbaiL Why so many "smoking Luckies"? Simply this: We try to give an honest representation of college life; and coHcgt students smoke more Luckies than any other regular cigarette so smoke Luckies. 1 LUCKIES and troduet of t Post Card Incident Brings Corps Criticism Students in the small Afri can country of Nigeria have demanded the ouster of the entire Pace Corps team in that country. The demands have come after an announcement by the director of the Peace Corps, Sargent Shriver, that a new Peace Corps project has been proposed for the Federation of Malaya. A post card written and mailed by Peace Corpswomen Margery Michelmore, 23, of Foxboro, Mass., went astray and. was found by students near the Ibadan University campus. The Ibadan Students' Union called Miss Michel more's remarks "damaging to our country" and demanded her and other members of the Peace Corps in Nigeria taken out of the country. The postcard was copied and circulated among some 1,500 Negro students at the University. The postcard read as follows: "Dear Bobbo: Dont be furious at get ting a postcard. I promise a letter next time. I want you to see the incredible and fascinating city we were in. With aQ the training we had we were really not prepared for the squalor and abso lutely primitive living con ditions rampant both in the cities and the bush. "We had no idea about what 'underdeveloped' meaqs. It really is a rev elation and once we got over the initial shock, it is a very rewarding experi ence. Everyone except us lives ia the streets, cooks in the streets and even goes to the bathrooms in the streets . . After this incident Miss Mi chelmore wrote a letter of apology to the University of Ibadan in which she said she had offered her resipation from the Peace Corps. Sent Apology She also sent a letter of apology to the president of the university hall where she was staying. In effect she said she was sorry for hav ing written the thoughtless postcard and would like to stay in Nigeria. The Students' Union Presi dent Dapo Falase said the Peace Corps intention was first to spread what he called American imperialist propa "So that's why they call him Crazy Legs!" get some taste dmvutw $&m-Ceyay. ganda in Africa and second "to spy on what you are do ing." A little before this incident broke out in Nigeria, the di rector of the Peace Corps made his announcement con cerning the new program for the Federation of Malaya. ' There is no report as of yet as to whether the Nigerian ouster will alter any or all of the Corps program. Health, Education The new project provides for volunteers to begin work ing in Malaya early next year in the fields of health, educa tion and ruraldevelopment Some forty candidates for the assignment began an eight-week training program Monday at Northern Illinois University. The University is especially competent in Ma layan studies. Shriver emphasized that it was developed in response to a request for a Peace Corps program from the Federation of Malaya. The request was submitted to Shriver last May during a visit to the Malayan capital. "In the four months since that 1 1 m e." Shriver said, "representatives of the Peace Corps and the Malayn govern ment have energetically worked out the program and reached the point where training can begin." Nurses, Technicians About 25 of the Volunteers will be nurses and laboratory technicians who will work in understaffed district hospitals under the general supervision of the Malayan Ministry of Health and Social Welfare. Remaining members will serve as teachers of physics, chemistry, biology, and math ematics, as apprenticeship in structors in a variety of tech nical trades and as rural de velopment workers, helping to survey and build roads and to analyze soils. ATTENTION ! ! ! STUDENTS WIVES mre rnriinUr inritrj f mtlend a STYLE SHOW preimtfJ hr THE UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA DAMES on Thursday Oct. 19-7:30 FM. af ikm University High School Auditorium FOOTBALL TEAM" 1 4 . for a change U our middle nam