Thursday, April 12, 1962 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 ilfl 'W- "-'W ' """" "" ' ... " in Ji II imiLUI II 1 1 , MUM II I feiliiSl 111 f5li?5-- :MfM" - :V COUfOt YRAIKIXQ V.''' lister stlST -rim imiV .r..T-..v .L.,..?M,..SJiiLs...l,'J ,..yf mym-,mmimmm -, , Examining their snark hibtt to illustrate the necessity of college training for Nebraska high school FFA FFA Holds Convention; Unusual By ANDA ANDERSON "Will you be the foul plug?" This question is raised in an exhibit in Ag Union for some 2,300 Future Farmers of America (FFA) Nebraska high school boys to confront and think about. The FFA is holding it's 45th annual vocational agri culture convention and judg ing contest on Ag Campus and at the Nebraska Center today through Saturday. The exhibit represents over 60 hours of labor by Univer sity vocational education sen Zilemund, Harold Hughes iors Fred Bauermeister, Dale Bob Mason, Richard Green halgh, Leon Janovy, Stan Lahm, Steve Equall, and Lyle Hermance. Eight Areas The theme for the exhibit: FFA members plus college training equals the leaders of tomorrow in eight areas business and industry, science and research, education, Win your letters in style! Sharpen up in an airweight H-l-S SUMMER SUIT The 3-button jacket feels like a breeze on your shoulders. Nar row Post-Grad trousers are tapered 'n terrific. You'll look like the money but the whole deal costs you peanuts. In wash able Du Pont Dacron'po'yester, blended with Cotton, Mohair, or Worsted. Also in 100 Cotton. At stores that know the score ...$19.95 to $49.95. S (I i Jmjts tWt imt Nil Ideas 'Plugged' dIiis idea ex communications, production, recreation, services and con servation. Nebraska Map Each area is represented by a spark plug which leads into a distributor. The dis tributor is set on a map of Nebraska. "It takes all of them to make a team," said Bauer meister, "and team effort is Display Entry Blanks Ready For Miss Lincoln The Miss Lincoln Contest will be held May. 11 in the Service Club at Lincoln Air Force Base. Entry blanks for the con test may be obtained at the Jaycee's office, -208 N. 11th St. or by calling HE 2-7511. The winner of the Miss Lincoln Pageant, in addition to receiving a scholarship to the college of her choice, will qualify for, participation in the Miss Nebraska Contest which will be held in June at Beatrice. NEBRASKAN WANT ADS POLICY Classified ads for the Daily Nebraskan muf; be entered two days in a-dvbrce and must be paid for in . i 'anee. Cor rections will be n.aJe if errors are brougnt to our attention within 48 hours. WANTED Three passengers round trip to central Florida spring vacation. Five hours quicker than the airlines and Sot the cost of a railway coach scat. IN 4-9756. Furnished arartment for summer school. Contact: Mr. It Mrs. Richard GoeUsch, 1013 Cedar. Webster City, Iowa. JOB OPPORTUNITIES Cairp staff now beinr hired for VMCA Camp Sheldon at Columbus, Nebraska. Permanent staff would be for 10-11 weeks and counseling staff would be for six weeks. Salary available upon request. Send all inquiries to Jim Knight. 1703 Harney, Omaha, Ne braska. CAR WASH Newman Club car wash, Saturday, April 14, . Ivan's Standard Service at 17th and Q and at Steinhouer Servic at 14th and Q. tl.25. FOR SALE 19BS Renault Dauphlne. Radio, heater, low mileage. Daytime HE 2-4O07. NichU time and Sunday 4WI-(iW)3. ii0 Bed MCA lfiMRoadster, wire wheels and white side walls. Call HE 5-4134 between e p.m. and 8 p.m. PERSONAL Attend PORTRAITS IN JAZZ IV by Phi Mu Alphs Slnioiila. Big band arrange ments done In the modern idiom. Fea turing music of Kenton. Basle. Brown and others. Also Jerry Coleman lurni tet. Original compositions. Nil's finest musicians. Jazz vocalist audition win ner. Friday, April 13, 7:30 p m. In Union Ballroom. Tickets on sale in Union Lobby or Music Office. BahTsit in horns in vicinity Wth it Mo hawk. 4HD-4417. Outside play area. Three riders looking for round trip to New York. Will share expenses. Call 477-7857. DANCE BANDS Big band dance styllngs have finally come to the campus! JIM HERBERT BIS ORCHESTRA for the tops in the modern sound. Twelve of NU'S finest musicians. Can 42308211. TYPINQ Typing, electric typewriter. Mrs. Swanda. 434-4743. SAVE THIS AD Thesis, report, man script typing. Machine transcrlptioa JV s-2305. Ths neiT catrage by A the WOflllV 00011 members attending a convention here are (from left) Dale Zielmund and Fred Bauer-meister. Built the only way to make pro gress." "It takes training mastery in all these areas plus farm ing to promote progress in the state," added Zielmund. In addition to the regular awards, the boys will have a chance to display their proficiency in parliamentary procedures and compete in 14 different events. The girl crowned Miss Ne braska will receive a $1,000 scholarship and compete in Atlantic City for the Miss America 1963 crown and the $10,000 first prize scholar ship. Members of the entries committee will interview each young lady suggested for a place among the group of Miss Lincoln contestants, and the ten selected will appear in- the- finalsr Guy rrolliday, chairman of the entries com mittee, said. To be eligible for the Miss America Pageant, a contest ant mast be between the ages of 18 'and 28 on September 3. She must be a high school graduate by September 3; and must never have been married. She must also possess tal ent, either trained or poten tial, which may include play ing a musical instrument, dramatics, dress designing, singing or any of the fine arts. Languages? (Continued from page 2) Why. not put all this study time into English laboratories and polish English? But alas, we cannot do that because the Univer sity discourages even the study of English composi tion. Note that only one uppcrclass composition course (three hours) is allowed for major credit, and the language depart ment absorbs eighteen of our precious elective hours, and beaucoup de l'heures of study time, in order that no one can object to this stupidity in telligently in any langu age. coarse I kin here all redy the screems & crys a the kmgerege kept & the Universilee so 1 guess mabe there rite s'jest ferget erything Ive ben a saying. I give up like erybody els. It don't mater nohow. Sined: an english majar Arts & Sience. Je n'ai qu'un desir, etudier me francais. Verl Hatch the Kfi and OUT bays try Robert Benton and Harvey Schmidt An invaluable guide to the coTrect'wry to worry, with special attention to which wor ries are BASIC and which are BAROQUE. With basic tUustrationt, ONLY $1.95 VIKING At bookstores, probably Jcunpiu jakndah ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA meeting for pledges and offi cers will be held today at 4 in the Student Union. STUDENT COUNCIL can didates orientation will be held this evening at 8 in the Student Union. All candidates or a representatives must be there. Student Council elec tion rules will be surveyed. YOUNG REPUBLICANS will meet tonight at 7 in the south party rooms of the Student Union. There will be election of officers. Republi can candidates for the state house will speak. VARSITY DAIRY CLUB will meet 7 p.m. in the Ag Union. EPSILON CIHTAU is to meet 7:30 tonight in the Ag Union. AG UNION GENERAL EN TERTAINMENT and public relations committees are scheduled to meet 5 tonight. RESIDENCE AS S O C I A TION FOR MEN (RAM) will hold one of its "Coeducational Lecture Series '62" tonight at 7 p.m. in the Raymond Hall ballroom of the Women's Residence Halls. Professor Albin T. Ander son, an expert in Russian his tory, will speak on some phase of Russian life and his tory. PHALANX MILITARY SO CIETY is sponsoring a drill competition tonight at 7:30 in the Student Union ball room. KISVS to Broadcast Special Programs KNUS, the campus radio station, will broadcast two special programs tonight at 7:15 and 8 p.m. The 7:15 broadcast will be "The Flight-of the Friendship Seven," documentary pro gram on John Glenn's space flight. This will be followed by "War of the Worlds." lively Maralyn Prosser, Poviona 64 -Z t i;- iO V" Tit 1W! i t x. . - 1 II 1 wiy'''"' I if f'r;. Ill mi - I l yuL - ,.,. If A Vv '"- ; ' I ' ' -X - VA if If , I J1''. ' ' ., : lives it up with this lively One ftoi fon)f62: the New Qalaxie 500XL! This blonde, blue-eyed Lively One counts tennis, shrimp, curry, and the sizzling new Ford Galaxie 500XL among her pet likes. The built-for-action XL features a tasty new interior with cushy bucket seats and a Thunderbird-type console ... sheer tive-it-up luxury) And there's go with a capital "gee" Cummmmmimvm ihihiiw"'ii mmmmm mmmmMMrmwmr'amt tmmmmmimm'im' '""' mK mimmisan.iu unii 11.1 nu J - .... piaasM nr rioi). wmmujujjj.- rZ'Zl. 'Wn-jriltaB'- y , . - - : - ' ' - aaMv r I IfcaMMtMliisiiisia iinMiniiMiiSrnn ' ill ! i'linnim a n ini 1 11 1 ninnnmminni inn n " 1 ' Decisions (Continued from Page 1) cheated in their education and it is a waste of tax mon ey." ' Another, a mother who voted against taking the school out but now says she is satisfied with the condi tions, says, "There haven't been nearly as many prob lems as I had thought there would be. "The children have had no trouble getting back and forth to school. I think they are getting a good educa tion, but I think they could have gotten that in Water bury if they had tried." Another Waterbury resi dent, who would very much like to see the school brought back, explains her reasons: "Without the school we will have no town in a few years and I don't like the idea of the kids' riding buses morn ing and night." Board Disagrees Olson of the State Board of Education disagrees with the idea about keeping the school to save the town. "That is a poor reason for operating a school where the children are not getting an adequate education," he says. Others who oppose the idea of a school's being main tained to keep the town alive point to census figures which show Waterbury dropped from 141 in 1950 to 80 in 1960. "This shows the town did a lot of dying in those ten years and we still had a school," they explain. But voting the school out was only one of many deci sions that had to be made during the summer. Parents received letters and personal visits from personnel at four schools Emerson Public, Ponca Public, Allen Public and Emerson Sacred Heart, a parochial school. The summer had other in teresting occurrences. Expense Effort In an effort to help defray expenses the Catholic Church at Waterbury tried to collect $100 from each family in the iiv4y Onas: Maralyn Prosssr, Sophomorr Homaoeming ar)ncss 1 wnons CollaBS, Clsrsfunt, CalHontia, snd h fww Calaitlc tWXL tuntMsr Made in parish,, but when some fami lies balked, the idea was dropped. Two brothers who had helped each other for years with their farming stopped speaking to one another be cause they took opposing views on the school situation. One of the brothers thus had to buy hundreds of dollars worth of equipment that he had previously borrowed from his brother. Grand Central Station People became angry when one newspaper mentioned that Waterbury would look like Grand Central Station with four high school buses from other towns, plus three buses carrying grade school chil dren to Waterbury, coming into town morning- and night. Even after school had started things weren't com pletely settled Two boys who had started to school at Emerson Sacred Heart de cided to change schools after the first few days. They had to go to Emerson Public in the afternoons to take a vocational agriculture course and while over there SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS BETTER QUALITY DIAMONDS WATCHES JEWELRY GIFTS CHARGE ACCOUMTS WELCOME EXPERT WATCH - JEWELRY REPAIRS KAUFMAN JEWELERS 1332 "O" ST. SAVi THIS COUPON one suit or one dress. mi7i this ! ROYAL until April 21 SAVE THIS COUPON 352 N. from i fiery Thunderbird 405-hp 4-spced stick shift. Choose tup ut LUC aujrauarui whvciuuic an ihc y.- Lively Ones at your Ford Dealer's ... the liveliest (Cfcni place in town. Summer one afternoon, the two asked the Emerson superintendent if they could change schools. He said they could and after persuading two angry moth ers and the priest that it was the best for them, the change was made. A sister of the one student continues to attend Sacred Heart. This means that each morning she gets on one bus, while her brother climbs aboard another to attend school in the same town 14 miles away. There are many problems connected with losing a high school from a town as citi zens from any such town will tell you. But when con sidering these problems, one must weigh various factors including the education of the' youngsters, transportation fa cilities and money needed to run the school. A great deal depends on the decision that the State Supreme Court will make in the Walton suit but regard less of the outcome each community will have its own problems in making the de cision regarding its school. OPEN MON..THURS. KITES SAVE THIS COUPON coupon at CLEANERS 27th SAVE THIS COUPON V-8, linked to a quick-acting the gleaming hard- motor oamm .00 .ILlL!Stj SaPKDKld O Downtown Lincoln Latest Fashions Contests Prizes