The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 08, 1962, Page Page 3, Image 3
Thursday, November 8, 1962 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 ' NSF Gives Its Awards tvt . mr i ite first ckWivm ton? e wsr MfDETAfJT ISSUE WAS PUTTIU6 A STOP TO WTRM RETREAT IU M C01V (OAR. Most imkrtaut issue w -wtwmx MiO ttTLvl) AAA II VT Dtw.lA iwe first cmom tut? mp 1m rtmnw HEMW THAT mim AT CBMMWJIST SUBVPRSOU. Dig secow o&mm tolo hs that w lm tx maw (X cud om ttsmmiims w tup STUDENT AND FACULTY nexi iuarcn THf FISSTCAUPPATE TOiP H6 106 W 10 axnm wcteAR. resting w w BACHfl? A FOOL PROOf A5(?f CMf MT. Ke$&wt cwome idlv mz ue hap to ussfss our aums bvv6exte iws 1 Foundation Offers Grad Fellowships Approximately 3,000 gradu ate fellowships and 165 Dost doctoral fellowships will be awarded by the National Sci ence Foundation (NSF) next March. The fellowships will be awarded to college seniors graduate and post-doctoral students and others with equivalent training or exper ience in the fields of mathe matical, physical, medical. biological and engineering sci ences; also in anthropology, psychology, geography, eco nomics, sociology and the his tory and philosophy of sci ence. All applicants must be citi zens of the United States and will be judged solely on abll ity. Candidates for the gradu ate awards will be required to take the Graduate Record Ex aminations designed to test scientific aptitude which will be given Jan. 19, 1963. Stipends for graduate Fel lows are $1,800 for first level, $200 for intermediate level, and $2,200 for terminal level Annual stipend for post-doo toral Fellows is $5,000. Lim ited allowances will be given for tuition, laboratory fees, and travel. . The national Academy of Sciences - National Research Council will advise NSF in the selection of candidates. Com mittees of outstanding scien tists will evaluate all applica tions. Final selections will be announced Mar. 15, 1963. Students may write to Fel lowship Office, National Acad emy of Sciences-National Re search Council, 2101 Constitu tion Avenue, N. W., Washing ton 25, D.C. for further infor mation and application mater ials. Deadline for applications is Dec. 17 for post-doctoral fel lowships and Jan. 4 for gradu ate fellowships. . 3 Ife Its' B0ih owwuw& tap He that a t PAR-W 667EH AMS THP KWWS CP A venocMM mo no mattr which ONEOFTrKM I A6RPPP WITH IT WA$ I A COIN). ITS vm TO PROTKT I iVSF Gives iVU 3-Year Grant The University is receiving a three year grant of $24,900 from the National Science Foundation for research in the study of parasites of fish. Professor Harold W. Man ter and Research Associate Mary H. Pritchard, both of the department of zoology and physiology, will use the grant to study trematodes of fish, particularly in the areas of South Africa and Australia. The project will involve basic research in classifying the parasites and learning their general geographic dis tribution. Students Help Zoo Members of the Delta Sig ma Pi pledge class will con duct a work project Saturday at the Children s Zoo. They will assist Zoo officials in laying a miniature railroad system that will be in opera tion this spring. We all I Imnrma JTO make mitlaket . . , ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND Typing errors never show on Corrasable. The special sur face of this paper makes it possible to erase without a trace with just an ordinary pencil eraser. Results: clean looking, perfectly typed papers. Next time you sit down at the keyboard, make no mistake type on Corrasable ! Your choice of Corrasable in light, medium, heayy weights and Onion Skin. In bandy 100 sheet packets and 500-sheet boxes. Only Eaton makes Corrasable. A Berkshire Typewriter Paper EATON FAKE COPOATIOPI (E) MTWIELD, BASS. Panhell Discusses Sneaks Panhellenic set up a com-! been referred to a committee mittee Monday night to study the present rules of pledge sneaks and bring them up to date. At Panhellenic Week work shops the possibility of out-of-town sneaks was discussed. At the Panhellenic meeting, Helen Snyder, Dean of Wom en said that sororities should consider the time element, expense, and the problem of all pledge classes going to other universities. It was decided at the work shops that sorority-fraternity "steals" should be retained with a one, or two a year limit. This subject has also 1 iVcbccm "N I jj I THINKING... ftiHV COULDN'T I RUN OFF A FORM LETTER ON A STENCIL, AND SEND THE SAME LETTER TO THE'6RAT RMPfClN'SANTA CLAU5ANP wit EASTER BfNNV? I CXW'T THINK THEVO EVER, KNOW THE DIFFERENCE.... I M SURE THE '&! AT PUMPKIN" itdOOPNt... HE'S VRY NAIVE... I OJlSH VOJ HADN T TOLD M THAT... I'M DISILLUSIONED... ffl 9- . . . J great diamond values from Zale's! 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Engineers Meet Monday in Union Students in the College of Engineering are invited to meet with their three Student Council representatives at 5 p.m. Monday in the Council office in the Student Union. Bob Seidell, Jim Hanson and Dale Redman will dis cuss problems or issues the students would like to see brought up before Student Council. Redman said that if sufficient interest is shown there will be regularly sched uled meetings. Course Applications Reach Record Total During July, August and September, enrollment for high school correspondence courses from the University totalled 4,821, as compared to 4,002 during the same period last year. The sale of syllabi pamph lets explaining courses, in creased from 7,055 during this period in 1961 to an estimated 7,400 this year. Campus Calendar TODAY AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY meeting, Avery Laboratory. Dr. Warren Brandt will speak on "Charge Transfer Transitions." PHI MU ALPHA Sinfonia concert, 7:30 p.m., Student Union Ballroom. No admis sion charge. YWCA meeting, 7 p.m. 234 Student Union. Student dele gates to the National Student Assembly will be elected. DISCUSSION, 3 p.m. Stu dent Union Ballroom. Dean G. Robert Ross and Dr. Mike Shgrue will discuss university policy in student affairs. LECTURE, 7:30 p.m. Ne braska Center Auditorium. Fred Steininger, national wel fare authority will speak on "Public Assistance in the Limelight and Darkness." Design Contest Offers Prizes Kingsberry Homes Corpora tion of Chamblee, Ga. is spon soring a design contest for architectural and engineering students throughout the coun try. A total of $1900 in prizes is offered with a first prize of $1,000. The contest will run until March 15, 1963. Application forms may be obtained by writing to Kings berry Home Design Competi tion, 5096 Peachtree Road, Chamblee, Georgia. AF Men To Explain Coed Officer School Air Force recruiters will be at the Student Union next week to explain the Air Force Officer Training School. Located at Lackland AFB in San Antonio, Texas, the coed school is available to college graduates who did not participate in the advanced ROTC program. 6.70-15 or 7.50-14 Chain Bar OK Mud & Snow Recap Blaokwall $8.95 6 hour Custom Capping: all 4 tires includinr ALL COMPACTS Regular Tread or Mud & Snow Wheel balancing, $1.25 per wheel-weights Included Brake Relining, Ford, Chevrolet, all 4 wheels $14.95 Wheel Alignment $ 6.95 All Tire Micei n plus sound carcass a Tax T. 0. HAAS 435-3211 500 West "0" Read the Daily Nebraskan Classified Ads I Romano's Pizza j I "College Nite" j I Pizza I I Price J I $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, I I $2.50, $3.00 I J Phone 432-5961 I 226 No. 10 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii nil liiiiiiiiii EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS PROUDLY ANNOUNCES A DACRON'COTTON OXFORD THAT WILL NOT PILL! OH, given time a short-necked man with a heavy beard could pill any oxford cloth, they're that soft. But until just recently even Little Lord Fauntleroy could have pilled a DACRONcotton oxford cloth shirt with one curl tied behind him. Which is why we didn't put out any of them. Sure you know what pilled means; it's when the fabric gets roughed up into little pills. Well, Du Pont has a brand new type Dacron that resists pilling. It came out about a year ago, but we waited until Greenwood Mills, the weavers who make our cotton oxfords produced a DACRONcotton oxford they were proud of; a really luxuriant lofted oxford. And that brings us up to now. We are making Eagle Shirts of this new material in both a Tabsnapcollar and a button-down collar. At about $8.50. 6J ,,. ,y , ; : I , jik ft,, .,ssA6A H Tabsnaps, you may recall, are Eagle tab collars that need no collar buttons. Our button-down collars also have a property highly prized by the toney cognoscenti: a sort of sloppy bulge. We used to call this "flare" until we ooticed everybody else was too. Besides, it really isn't a flare, it's a sloppy bulge, but it's ours and we like it. So if you want a drip-dry oxford shirt that won't pill perhaps you'd better drop a note to Miss Afflerbach (she says forget the footnote) and ask her where in your town you can find Eagle Shirts. This is because many fine stores prefer to put their own labels in our shirts; very flattering, but tough on Eagle eyed shoppers. Write her care of Eagle Shirtmakers, Quakertown, Pa. Du Pont's trademark for its polyester fiber. That wouldn't be a bad name for an Italian fashion consultant. Say, do yoa suppose we could get Miss Affierbach to change her name to Toni Cognoscenti and C 192 EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS, QUAKERTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA