The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 21, 1963, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Thursday, March 21, 1963
The Dally Nebraskan
Page 3
In Hiding
rusadlef Prouf
Fights By Mall
The following telegram was received by the Residence
Association for Men (RAM) yesterday afternoon from the
Society for Indecency to Animals (SINA) in response to
man organizations request tor an appearance of G. Clif-
- A 1 i m . - - .
iora rroui, presiaent ot mjna, at the University.
Gentlemen:
Due to unfavorable and erroneous press, SINA trustee
line eiisnAnrfori all
irv.;o uiilu iiuuier imuce ana win
continue campaign to clothe all animals by mail only.
This prevents travel anywhere. Many regrets. Letter
follows
The chairman of RAM's Prout committee, Bill Dunk
lau, had no comment
. Time and Newsweek magazines both said last week
that Prout is really a one time stand up comedian and
now gag-writer for the Garry Moore Show under the name
of Buck Henry. They reported his real name as Henry
Zuckerman.
New Watershed Study
To Begin This Month
The University and several
other state and federal agen
cies will begin a two-and-one-half
year s t u d y of the Big
Blue and Elkhorn watersheds
this month.
The study includes an in
ventory of soil resources, land
use, flood damage and
drought damage, said Harold
Gilman, University extension
conservationist.
In addition, data will be as
sembled from all sources of
surface and ground-w a t e r
supplies. This data will have
value in determining the use
of water for domestic, muni
cipal, recreational and wild
life use and other purposes.
An advisory committee was
set up under the chairman
ship of C. Dale Jaedicke,
State Conservationist of the
Soil Conservation Service lo
cated in Lincoln. Jaedicke
Alpha Zeta Sponsors
Meeting On U.S. Debt
Alpha Zeta, Ag honorary
fraternity, invites all students
and faculty to a discussion of
"The Meaning of the U.S. Na
tional Debt."
Speaking at the 7:30 p.m.
meeting tonight in the Bio
chem Auditorium will be Dr.
H. W. Ottoson, Dr. C. B.
Thoman, and Dr. Wallace
Pederson.
NEBRASKAN
WANT ADS
ELECTIONS
Von tar "'FioreiloV
3mh at Pershing.
far Mayor Marc
PERSONAL
and Onha-sirt arts presented by Mar
lon Brando at TEAHOl'SE OF Al'G
I'fT MOON and VIVA ZAPATA! Sat.
7 SO. linina Auditorium. Come, lean
and impmt your friends:
FOR RENT
KiH-hm Retired rterk hat cpacmtu km.
n ideal tor tkferly perwn. Muat sot
object to small garde under stve or
my Jirrd sanctuary over ice bos. Free
towels and soap. Brine owa linens and
ekjtoe.
SUGGESTIONS
Give tier a diamond; but take her to
said that "a goal of the study
will be to see that agricultural
projects are coordinated with
projects of other Federal and
State agencies."
Federal agencies participat
ing in the study include the
Forest Service, the Economic
Research Service, the Corps
of Engineers and the Bureau
of Reclamation. State agen
cies participating include the
Department of Water Re
sources, the Conservation and
Survey Division of the Uni
versity, the Department of
Health and the Game, Fores
tation and Parks Commission.
In addition, the NU Agricul
tural Extension Service will
provide informational mater
ial as the planning progress
es, Gilman said.
Results Released
In Intern Program
The Intern Matching Pro
gram results were released
early this week announcing
that 48.1 per cent of the Sen
iors at the College of Medi
cine will intern in ieDrasKa
hospitals. All 83 senior medi
cal students participated in
the program, but. two with
drew.
There are nine hospitals in
the state offering 108 intern
ships for the thirty-nine of the
83 seniors who chose Nebraska.
Ho s p i t a 1 s in California,
Michigan and Washington,
D.C., attracted a number of
medical students.
The organizations cooperat
ing in the Matching Program
plan for internship appoint
ments include: The American
H o s-p i t a 1 Association, the
American Protestant Hospital
Association, the Association
of American Medical Col
leges, the American Medical
Association, Catholic Hospital
Association, the Student
American Medical Associa
tion and the medical services
of the federal agencies offer
ing internships.
State Dentists
Will Discuss
Dental Health
The role of the dental as
sociation in improving dental
health education in Nebraska
schools will be examined to
morrow and Saturday at the
University.
One hundred dentists from
across the state will attend
the annual workshop on
dental health at the Nebraska
Center.
The assembly meets also
to investigate blocks to den
tal health education in the
Nebraska schools and to find
ways in which local dental
societies can help improve
dental health in their com
munities. Perry Sandell of Chicago,
director of the Bureau of Den
tal Health Education of the
American Dental Association,
will speak at 9:15 a.m. tomor
row on "The Role of the
Dental "Society," and on Sat
urday at 11:30 a.m. on "Sum
mary and Evaluation."
Dr. Floyd Miller, commis
sioner of education at the
Nebraska State Department of
Education will speak on
"The Problems of Education
in Nebraska," at 10:30 a.m.
Friday.
Discussion will also be held
on school excuse' slips, audio
visual aids, printed education
al materials and dentist-school
relationships.
VlsbhaAlwuL
(tppLcuuudA.
The new members of Beta
Chapter of Alpha Tau Alpha,
national honorary fraternity
for men maionng in vocation
al education in agriculture:
Donavon Benson, Sidney Bor
cher, L e r o y Cech, Richard
Douglass, Ronald Dyer, Roger
Epp, Keith Gilster, and Fran
cis Jorgensen. Nine others
were initiated as subsidiary
members of Alpha Tau Alpha:
Eugene Cook, Alton Cook,
Stanley Foster, Donal Fried
ricksen. George Hermone,
Fred Krausnick, Francis La
vicky, Edward Stich and Le
roy Tejral.
i I., , ,
Iowa State Guest
To Speak At Ag
Dr. Louis Thompson, asso
ciate dean of agriculture at
Iowa State University, Ames,
la., will discuss "Weather
or Technology the Cause
of Agricultural Surpluses" at
an Ag Campus Convocation.
The Convocation, at 11 a.m.
March 29 in the Ag Activities
Building, will be open to all
NU students, faculty and oth
er interested persons.
Dean Thompson has been
working with the National Cen
ter for Agricultural and Eco
nomic Adjustment at Iowa
State University. He has re
cently published several arti
cles relating weather and
technology to the production
of feed grains in the Mid-'
west.
CHEMISTS -B.S. M.S. & Ph.D.
Expanding utilization research program has ereated challenging career oppor
tunities for basic and applied chemical research and development in diversi
fied fields at
THE NORTHERN REGIONAL RESEARCH LABORATORY
Agricultural Research Service
U. S. Deportment of Agriculture
Peoria, Illinois
ORGANIC - PHYSICAL - BIOCHEMISTS
Organic yntheis of new carbohydrates and lipid derivilive
Structure analyes of natural products
Rheolopical properties of solutions of polysaccharides
and proteins '
Molecular properties of Uircues, proteins, and other
natural polymers 4
Synthesis of new polymers from carbohydales, lipids,
amino acids, or peptides
Rearrangement of glyeerides and separation of specific
fatty acids and glycerol esters
Chemical engineering and pilot-plant development of products
and processes
Sip up for interview with cur representative cn
Tuesday, March 26, 1963
(For more information see our 2-poge od, pages 60-61,
in January 28, 1963, Career Edition of C&E NEWS )
Or write to
Northern Utilization Research end Development Division
1815 N. University
Peoria, Illinois
LITTLE KslsN ON CAMPUS
"IZa " j
PISCOUKSrlNft P&FE?rCT, MS. HAMILTON.
College Is Only One Specialty
Morrison Challenges
Opinions On Teaching
"The idea of looking at
teachers colleges as trade
schools where students learn
the mechanics of teaching is
an antiquated concept," said
Governor Frank Morrison.
"The teacher has to be
trained in a whole uni
versity complex and atmos
phere. Teaching is perhaps
more important than any oth
er profession in this way be
cause they will teach the fu
t u r e citizens, professional
men and 1 e a d e r s of the
state," continued the Gover
nor, r
The chief purpose, other
than economic, is to get away
from the idea that teachers
education should be isolated
from other parts of the Uni
versity, he said. It is only
one speciality in the Univer
sity complex.
Every one of the teachers
colleges is a small univer
sity where some of the finest
instructors ,in fine ' arts and
science 're- found todky;-ie
continued. Every one of them
should grow.
A certain amount of dupli
cation is necessary because
each institution must have
a university atmosphere, the
Governor explained. Some
of the highly specialized ones
would have to remain at the
University, but all of the
schools would have to touch
on the arts and sciences. Cer
tain specialities could be em
phasized in different places,
he continued.
The bill placing the four
teachers colleges and the Uni
versity under one board of
education is a follow-up on
my recommendation uv the
ten-year plan, he added. I
don't think we should go any
further than one board of ed
ucation at the present.
Peace Coras Test
i
To Be Saturday
A Peace Corps Placement
Test will be given Saturday
morning at 8:30 at the Post
Office.
To be eligible to take the
exam, candidates must have
either submitted a question,
naire to the Peace Corps or
must bring the completed
questionnaire to the test site
with them.
Questionnaires mav be ob
tained from campus Peace
Corps liaison officers or from
any post office.
Mr. James Walls, Public In
formation O f f i c e r for the
Peace Corps will visit the Uni
versity on April 4 to meet
with students and faculty
members who are interested
in Peace Corps service.
Walls, who has a B.A. in
philosophy from Reed College,
has just returned from a tour
of Peace Corps projects
throughout Asia and Africa. In
1945-46 he was an advisor to
the Korean Education Minis
try for the , U.S. occupation
forces.
"Nearly 3000 additional vol
unteers Will man 100 new
Peace Corps, projects slated
to begin. training this spring
and summer. We want every
interested person to know
about these projects and the
specific, jobs, .that they could
be.dping,.'. sid Walls.
Anyone .interested in more
information . concerning the
Peace Corps should contact
Dr. Robert Ross, Dean of Stu
dents at the University.
IVJA To Sponsor
Charm Sessions
The Independent Women's
Association (IWA) is sponsor
ing a charm course to be giv
en by Mrs. Nancy Childs. The
course will begin Thursday,
March 28 and will be held for
five consecutive weeks.
The sessions, to be held in
Raymond Ballroom, will begin
at 6:45 p.m., and last for an
hour and a half. Cost for the
course is $2.75 and interested
Read Nebraskan
Want Ads
Campus
Calendar
TODAY
Phi Upsflon Omicron meet
ing, seminar room, Home Eco
nomics buildings, 5 p.m.
880 Club educational pro
gram, KNUS radio, 7.
American Institute of Elec
trical Engineers and Radio
Engineers, 217 Ferguson Hall,
7 p.m.
Young Republican meeting,
334 union, 7:30 p.m.
TOMORROW
PTP party, 232-234 Union,
7:30 p.m.
independent women may sign
up for it with their house rep
resentative or obtain a form
from posters in City or Ag
Unions. Jan Watson or Sharon
Wright may be contacted for
further information..
Mrs. Childs attended the
University and was a member
of Alpha Phi. She graduated
from the Barbizon School of
Fashion Modeling in New
York City, where she was a
fashion model for Lily Dache.
In addition to operating a
school, Mrs. . Childs gives
charm courses in colleges,
nursing schools, sororities,
fraternities and business insti
tutions. She has also done
radio and television work.
NOMINATED FOR 5
ACADEMY AWARDS
,r; l--..
r a 1 1 rw I
Tit.
i
In 36 days, starting with the Monte Carlo Rallye
in January of this year, our products have posted a
series of competition wins that have made perform
ance history. Here's what has happened:
Three V-8 Falcon Sprints were entered in the
Monte Carlo Rallye. This is not a race. It is a trial
of a car's total capabilities. We did it (nervously) for
the experience and with practically no sense of expec
tation, because we had not entered an event like this
before. One Sprint ended the experiment in a snow
bank. But the others finished 1-2 in their class with
such authority that they moved the good, grey Lon
don Times to say: "The Falcons are part of a power
and performance plan that will shake up motoring in
every country in the world." That was Number One.
Number Two was a double win in the Pure Oil
Performance Trials. Fords captured Class 1 and Class
2 (for high performance and large V-8's). Both of
these trials were for over-all points rolled up in
economy, acceleration and braking tests.
Then, at Riverside in California, in America's only
long-distance stock car event that is run on a road
course (as opposed to closed circuit, banked track
such as the track at Daytona), Dan Gurney pushed
a Ford to first place.
The latest news coots north from Daytona. There
in the open test that tears cars apart the Daytona
500 Ford durability conquered the fielu. Fords
swept the first 5 places . . . something no one else had
equaled in the history of the event In a competition
which anyone can enter designed to prove how
well a car hangs together, 9 Fords finished out of 12
entered ... a truly remarkable record considering
that over 50 of all cars entered failed to finish.
Why do we keep such an interested eye on compe
titions such as these? Is speed important to us?
Frankly, no. The speed capabilities of the leading
American cars are now grouped so closely together
that the differences have no real meaning. To as, who
are building cars, success in this kind of competition
means just one thing: the car is strong. This land of
performance capability means that the car is so well
built that it can stand up to normal driving the
kind of day-in, day-out demands you put your own
car through for thousands of miles longer than less
capable cars.
In tests like the Daytona 500 and Riverside, we
find out in an afternoon what might take us 100,000
test-track miles to discover. We learn how to build
superior strength into suspension systems, steering
systems, drive train, body, tires. Anyone can build
a fast car. What we're interested in is the concept of
"total" performance.
We believe in this kind of total performance
because the search for performance made the automo
bile the wonderfully efficient -and pleasurable instru
ment it is today and will make it better toiaorrow.
Amarlott t,viML mo on omnl
FORD
flUCO (AKlAMt KMO tMUMKtWM
5W.