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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 20, 1962)
Thursday, September 20, 1962 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 Angels Take Flight First Instructions Given Residences The Angel Flight soared skyward Tuesday night as representatives from each or ganized women's residence met in the Student Union for initial briefing. A relatively new national collegiate organization, Angel Flight is already successfully established on 69 campuses throughout the United States. Affiliated with the United States Air Force, and partic ularly with Arnold Air Soci ety, Angel Flight on the NU campus will be mainly a so cial organization, concentrat ing on aid in the preparation and planning of various mili- Dr. Gallaher Joins Staff Dr. Art Gallaher, Jr., a social anthropologist, joined the University's staff this year. The associate professor will teach community and social anthropology. The 37-year-old native Ok lahoman, a member of the University of Houston facul ty since 1956, has had con siderable research experi ence. In 1950 and 1951, he as sisted with an ethnological survey of the Seminole Freed men in Oklahoma, with spe cial emphasis on resistance to ethnic assimilation and identification. Dr. Gallaher was a field assistant for an Ethnic Health Survey Project to the Pima and Apache Reserva tions in Arizona in 1953. He also studied the role of personal corftact in the de velopment of ethnic attitudes by an ex-Illinois resident liv ing in Tucson, Arizona, in 1954. In 1957 he studied the cultural and social changes in a rural village in the Ozarks. Last year, he was a co ordinator for the Southern Regional Council, Inc., a proj ect surveying occupational op portunities for Negroes in four Southern communities. NEBRASKAN WANT ADS POLICY Classified ads for the Daily Nebraskan must be entered two days in advance and must be paid for in advance. Cor rections will be made if errors are brought to our attention within 48 hours. RIDES WANTED Omaha-Lincoln MWF for o'clock, re turn noon. Or MW p.m. Omaha 980-2317. ROOMER WANTED Man wanted to share 2 bedroom apart ment In College View. Phone 484-0224 after 6:00 p.m. ROOMERS NEEDED Itentnf a complete house. Need two more roommates. Call 42341049 or vijit 2201 South St. DANCE BANDS When yoa book a dance band, why not hook the beat? N.U.'a own Jim Herbert Orrhentra i back again (or another awinnn' year Call early to gel the date you want. Call 4.15-2831. LOST tack full of booki miaplared In back of blue car. Reward. Call HE 2-2084. Black, horn-rimmed, prescription un flaanea. (.oat in adminiatralion s2M) Wrdneaday afternoon. I need 'em: Re ward. Call 4.12-763 !, ext. 4102. LITTLE kAN SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNT WELCOME BACK TO SCHOOL MAKE Kaufman's Jewelers 1332 O . Your headquarters for better quality Aulhorted Keeptahe Diamond; LonglneiHulova Watehet tary events, serving other campus activities, and in tak ing part in tours and confer ences held throughout the United States. The first group of Nebras ka's flight will be selected next week on the basis of two short interviews. One inter view will be with the charter members of the Flight: Ruthie Reed, Judi Zadina, Leah Smith and Sally Dale. The final interview will be with a board of Arnold Air Society members. Each in terviewing board will also in clude an advisor to the organ ization. All women's residences will be allowed three applications for membership and mem bers will be chosen on their interest, personality, personal appearance, and their knowl edge of current world affairs. Each applicant must be car rying 12 credit hours, and an overall grade average of 6.0 must be held by sophomores, and 5.5 by juniors and seniors. Freshmen will not be eligible for membrship. However, they will be able to serve as work ers on the various flight activ ities. Applications must be turned into the Alpha Omicron Pi or to the Beta Phi house by 9 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 25. Houses will be notified as to the interviewing dates, and the Daily Nebraskan will car ry the individual interviewing times. Campus Calendar TODAY DOCUMENTARY FILM presentation, Student Union Auditorium, 4:30 p.m. ALL UNIVERSITY FUND board meeting, Student Uni on, 7 p.m. FRIDAY CORN COB football rally, Carillon Tower, 6:30 p.m. KNUS Dance Party, Pan Am room, Student Union, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY FOOTBALL. Nebraska vs. the University of South Da kota. Memorial Stadium, 2 p.m. SKY SHOW, "A trip to Ve nus," Ralph Mueler Plane tarium, Morrill Hall, 2:45 p.m. CERES, transparent wom an, University Health Galler ies, Morrill Hall basement 10:30 a.m. and 3:45 p.m. Chatfield Will Change Freshmen Schedules Freshman students who find themselves registered for too few hours than they intended should get in touch with Lee Chatfield, director of the Jun ior Division, Administration 205. In extending this invitation, Chatfield explained that the! rush of undergraduate regis- j tration is now over ana some adjustments may now be pos sible for Junior Division stu dents whose programs are un balanced. ON jMPUS 7 NU Theater Begins Sale For Season Dramas, comedies, operas and musicals are in store for University theater goers this season. Season tickets are on sale in the business office of Uni versity Theater for $5. Five plays are on tap beginning Oct. 24. The plays include: "The Three Penny Opera," by Bertolt Brecht, which is his version of Gay's "T h e Beggars Opera." The depart ment of music will join forces with the theater for this production. "The Visit," by Fredrich Duerrenmatt is a satirical ap proach to social life. Richard Watts Jr, of the New York PoSt says, "The Visit is an absorbingly sardonic contem plation of, a community's ad vance, and it is surely one of the most savage drama tic studies of greed ..." "Street Scene," an opera by Kirt Weill has been called "a perfect marriage of the ater, music and poetry." "Squirk," by William Wal den won the University's Bal lard Playwriting Contest last year. The play is centered around a young advertizing executive who is plunged into situations where black is white, nothing has sharp edges and his basic beliefs are shaken. The theater's annual Shakespeare play is "Much Ado About Nothing" a comedy of wit and manners which gave the world one of its most famous love duels. Theater officials also re mind students, as well as Lin coln residents, of the Labora tory and experimental the ater programs which are free. These plays are di rected by speech majors at the University. E. F. Ross Heads Hospitals, Clinics Edwin F. Ross is the new administrator of the Univer sity Hospital and Clinics. Since 1953 he has served as assistant director of the University Hospitals of Cleve land, Ohio, an eight-unit med ical center affiliated with the Western Reserve University School of Medicine. From 1949-53 he was administrator of the Doctors Hospital in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. The author of a number of articles in the field of hospital administration, Ross has served as committee chair man for both the Cleveland Hospital Council and the Ohio Hospital Association. oome Things tojjave Qiround fig A Utility Ball Pen, The n m If BM A good practical pen for everyone.. Everybody like the LINDY. It writes nice. Lots of students buy two or three at a time. Maybe because only 39. Maybe because there are twelve brilliant Ink colors. Or maybe they just like to have two or threw or twelve around. Also Hire to have around: uxvrwrumD at um m tin.. f t TtMO-FEN 4r u- r.i.t. tmm MM ' The Mcntary crlary. VtHTCffi's MM t' 49 jt Fine for (It fl(WM) jrgp auditors. UMLCOmKN f letractsM. periMMfit ImprtMle. tmut sjf $1-50 9.1- ItotractaMt. tmootti partormer . Pointing and Viewing (Continued from Page 2) doubts were allayed by the adoption of the 15th Amend ment to the Constitution. It provides: "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude." So far, the American Negro mostly likely the de scended of those very slaves freed nearly 100 years ago is still not a first-class citizen. He can vote in some places, to be sure. He can eat at any lunch counter and sit where he pleases on buses, trains and airplanes in some places. He is even able to go to formerly all-white schools in some places, both North and South. He is on iiis way toward full equality, but it is still a long ways away. Part of that way is blocked by housing discrimination. You scoff? Look around you. Lincoln has (in practice, if not theory) at least two distinct Negro ghettoes. To break the pattern, through the legal and moral force of the federal government, Kennedy promised to use his pen. So far he has not. Roy Wilkins wishes the President would take pen in hand. The executive secretary of the NAACP concedes, according to Newsweek, that the administration "has proceeded well so far in virtually every other area of civil rights, but he added: 'He (the President) has got himself into a jam on this one (discrimination in housing). He made a clear-cut statement during the campaign; he said the President should and could extend equal op portunity to federally aided housing by the stroke of a pen. His failure to act stands out like a sore thumb. The natural is: Where the hell is the pen? " Wilkins has a point. This Saturday will bear watch ing. The President may end his procrastination and ad vance equality one more step. North Platte Annual Fall The 33rd annual Fall Feed ers Day, hosted by the Uni versity's North Platte Exper iment Station, will he held here Sept. 27. The program will begin at 10:30 a.m. with a tour of cat tle being used in various studies, according to Supt. James C. Adams. The afternoon program be gins at 1:15 with a report of results in dairy cattle studies by Dr. Mogens M. Plum, member of the De partment of Dairy Husban dry at the University. Dr. John VaUentine, new University Extension Range management specialist at the Get it with a U1BMISEE&JHERe I I LAST VEAR H(S BiRTHOW I I NEXT VEAR HIS BlRTHDAV I I ( B0t, TALK AB0IT A 5 BEETHOVEN' CAME ON A SATURDAY... COMES ON A MONDAY... ' - yjWEJfcD GW! J l , . EJRTriDAVCO'AES ,K , , , .,,,. m wmmn mm, , ... i , in. ... . .wrj,. ' ' "',' ' ; , " " ' I T '"; - o ' x ' ' , i "J' Z'' , 4 ''' ' """ ' ' ' ' I " ' ' , , ' ' ,V . ;,, ' ', - ' - 'I ' ,.'. I srFf , ''','"'4 . ".f'"' , , , '. - I Station Hosts Feeders Day station, will discuss "Range Management and Its Rela tionship to the Livestock In dustry. Dr. Robert Koch, chair man of the Department of Animal Husbandry will out line "Nebraska's Livestock Future." The program will conclude with a talk by Dr. Marvel Baker, who just returned from a two-year assignment with the University's Turkish program. His topic will be: "The Tools of Progress and Their Use." There also will be a question and answer period at the end of the program. The most talked about book on campus FIRST NATIONAL BANK and TRUST COMPANY PAYC CHECKING ACCOUNT Any amount opens your account No minimum balance required 20 checks for only $2.00 Each check personalized with your name and code number Regular statements of account at no charge A First National Bank PAYC checking account will help keep your persohal finances in order give you an accurate record of your college expenses provide proof of bills you've paid. Don't wait . . . open your account today at Lincoln's Full Service Bank FIRST NATIONAL BANK v & TRUST COMPANY OF LINCOLN pti Downtown at 12th & N Drive-In at 13th & L Member: FDXC. Emerson College Opens With Emphasis on Man England, today will witness the opening of a two-year graduate school named Em erson College. The aim of the college is to bring to mature students, who have already specialized in diverse fields, a unifying concept and experience of man. Located in Worchestershire, the college was founded by nine Englishmen but named after American thinker Ralph Waldo Emerson. The found ers propose to counterbalance one-sided specialization by Emerson College in studies focused on man, in the be lief that in man alone all diversities of human knowl edge find their common cen ter and source. In the first year the cur riculum includes basic stud ies on the nature of thinking, on history as an expression of evolving consciousness, and on man as the determin ing factor in evolution. Practice in the arts is fun damental to the curriculum. For the benefit of students who can spend only one year at Emerson College, the first-year course is planned as a self-contained unit. After having gained a new approach to the human being both in his totality and mani foldness, the student who continues at Emerson Col lege will have an opportunity to do practical work in a branch of study or field of activity in which he seeks training. The college has four schools: formal programs in education, the science and art of color, nutrition, and crafts. If a student has interests beyond the scope of the schools, the college will ar range for him a program of study at other training cen ters in England. At the conclusion of the two-year course, Emerson Handnome wallet-size checkbook cover No activity or special charges Spoiled checks replaced free Easy way to pay bills . . . maintain a budget Free Bank-By-Mail forms College will assist students in finding employment in 17 countries of the western world. A catalogue of Emerson College may be obtained from the Corresponding Sec retary for North American, F. Blanche Rosse, 320 West 56th Street, Apt. 3A, New York 19, New York. Activities Meeting A meeting of activity chairmen from all women's living units will be held to night at 7 p.m. in 348 Stu dent Union. Sponsored by the Innocents and Mortar Boards, the meeting will feature a discussion of plans for an activities orien tation for freshmen women. If chairmen cannot attend, their assistants are urged to come. Religious Activities WESLEY FOUNDATION fUm "The Prisoner" at 6:15 p.m. Sunday. Pot luck supper at 5 p.m. and vespers at 6 p.m. UNITED CAMPUS CHRIS TIAN FELLOWSHIP supper Sunday at 5:30 p.m. with a forum at 6:30 p.m. LUTHERAN MISSOURI SYNOD CHAPEL picnic at 5:30 p.m. Friday for members of Gamma Delta (Lutheran Student Organization). LUTHERAN STUDENT HOUSE open house after the football game Saturday. Be ginning this fall a discussion group will be held after Sun day morning services at 11:30 a.m. Lutheran Student Associ ation supper Sunday at 5:30 p.m. NEWMAN CLUB Sunday night supper at 5:30 p.m. itam cvtvaa em, mwwi -