The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 12, 1962, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Thursday, April 12, 1962
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 3
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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
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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"
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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
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April 21
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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
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