70)fR voh ISZ?hc?hO Vol. 76, No. 91 The Doily Nebraskcr; Wednesday, April 24, 1963 Students Question Masters 1 Broad Training jf Is Emphasized A broad education best pre pares today's student for the future, say Nebraska's Mas ters. "For the first four years in ' college," said Chris Christen sen, "I think that a young ster should get a broad ex posure to subjects like litera ture, economics and political 1 science. If you have a broad , exposure in the liberal arts vou're better equipped for - life." Christensen, speaking at a press conference in the Union yesterday afternoon, said "It's not only knowing your business, but knowing human relationships." In all fields, according to Christensen, stu dents need a broader ap proach, too many students try to specialize too early, he said. "People with a broad edu cation in liberal arts are able to adjust better at some point in their life," said E. H. Dohrmann. "These people will usually be the leaders". A technician or a scientist is concerned solely with his par ticular field, he doesn't have the interest in other people, in why they think the way they do, he continued. "Unbelievable progress has been made in this institu tion," said Persey Spencer. "I think that the student body is much more mature than the group I came down here with." According to Spencer, many of the businessman 'with whom he has come In con tact have business jitters concerning what will happen in five, ten or fifteen years. This is because they have knowlege of the conditions around them. "I've found in this student body that they have an awareness of the things around them, but they don't have the 'jitters' of typical older men. These people who are going to run the world seem to have a pretty steady hand" he said. "Students are smarter ,than when we were in school," said Judge Leslie Welch: "It used to be easier to get by when we were here, there was less competition." Welch added that the young lawyers he meets nowdays seem much better equipped than any of his day. Judge Welch liked the boys' questions better. "To be hon est," he said,"' there were too many girls. I like to converse with one of them, but 30 or 40 of them is too marry, I got a little tongue-tied." "I don't know how much the students will get out of this program," observed Spencer, "but the so-called Masters will get plenty out of it. For me it has been a kind of orientation." "I'll have to take home some clippiiigs of the news paper," added Spencer," so. 1 can prove to my wife that 1 was busy out here." Harrington Wins Journalism Honor Judy Harrington received the annual Nebraska Press Women's scholarship citation Saturday as the outstanding woman senior in journalism at the University. The award was made by Mrs. Richard Ferguson of Friend, chairman of the NtW scholarship selections com "ttee, at a morning session at the Lincoln Hotel. According to Mrs. Fae Montgomery of Morrill, presi dent of the group, the honor consists of a cash grant and a certificate. The winner's name is also incribed on a plaque displayed in the J School office. Miss Harrington ranked seventh nationally in William Randolph Hearst Foundation competition last year and is currently the leading scorer in 1962-63 competition. j -1 ' in STUDENT SERVICE CENTER? Vicki Elliott serves canned drinking water from the supply in the basement of Burnett Hall. Over vacation a two weeks supply of survival rations were installed for 9,000 University stu dents, faculty and employees in campus buildings desig nated as civil defense fallout shelters. Survival Rations Go To Fallout Shelters Enough survival rations for 9,000 University students, fac ulty and employees for 14 days were stored last week in the buildings designated as civil defense fallout shelters on the city and Ag campus. According to George Drake, deputy civil defense director of Lincoln and Lancaster county, the University shel ter areas of Avery lab, Burn ett Hall, Love Library, Mor rill HaE, Nebraska Hall, the Nebraska Union, the Nebras ka Center, Piper Hall, Rich ards Hall arid the Sheldon Art Gallery, were filled with survival rations and supplies. The supplies included food, in the form of survival bis cuits similar to the much pub licized Nebraskit,' "water, medicines, sanitary kits, and radiation detecting equip ment. The total amount of the shelter stock in the ten Uni versity buildings is in excess of $20,000, according to Drake. Corps Slates Shorter Test On Saturday A new, shorter Peace Corns ! Placement Test will be ad ministered for the first time Saturday in more than 800 communities across the na tion. It will be given at the main Post Office in Lincoln. The new test, to be given on an experimental basis, consists of half-hour sections on general aptitude and mod ern language aptitude. All applicants who have any knowledge of French or Span ish must remain to take the appropriate language achieve ment test of one hour's dura tion. The Peace Corps now re quires transcripts from every candidate language The need for the , aptitude and j achievement tests has in creased, Dr. Henry said. The new test will be given at 8:30 a.m. To be eligible to take the exam, candidates must have submitted a questionnaire to the test site with them. The supplies ,i were purchased i , at the J?s and delivered of the federal government. The shelters at the Univer sity are part of a national survey conducted by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers which was intended to place fallout shelters in existing buildings throughout the country. Engineers' Open ISBwOItS An estimated 10,000 visitors are expected to attend the 68th annual Engineers' Open House tomorrow from 2-10 p.m. at the University. In 1894, E-Week was origi nated as a one night open house, and in 1913 the faculty set aside a full week for the event. This year E-Week includes a convocation on "Creative Thinking in Engineering," a field day at Pioneer Park, and a banquet and dance at the Lincoln Hotel on Friday. E-Week has -progressed to where it has achieved a rep- reseniauon oi sum nu roup eration among the students. Visitors to the open house will see principles of engineer ing transferred into exhibits. The public is invited to at tend, and there is no admis sion charge. Louis Lamberty, a senior majoring in chemical engi neering, and Joe Wills, an architecture major and Uni versity of Michigan graduate, are the co-chairmen of the student-sponsored program. The purpose of the O p e h House is to give engineering students a chance to convey to the public what engineer- ing is, said the chairmen. The students have constructed equipment, set up displays and perfected demonstrations which exemplify basic engi neering principles as well as complicated industrial proces ses Hn an endeavor to fulfill this purpose. f V ?V :d 4"" i 1 Cash To Be Given To Essay Winners Winners of the Latin Ameri can Essay Contest will be an nounced tonight at a public presentation at 7:30 in 234 Student Union. First prize for the best es say on ''What Should Be Done To Strengthen Democracy in Latin America is $75 pre- t iu t ;iv, v,,. sented Jytte : Lincoln chapter 0trl,?JJ awarded $25 by Dr Kooerto Esquenazi-M a y o, associate professor of Romance lan guages. The award presentation will include musical selections in strumental and vocal by the (Music Department. House The department of architec ture will display recent de signs of schools, hospitals, and churches, using fundamental principles of good designs with contemporary application at Architectural Hall. Displays on computers, bio medical electronics and com plete power systems will be showed by the electrical engi neering department at Fergu son Hall. At Stout Hall, the civil engi neering department will show Will ' ' Finfa fyr -JTjs rr 'cilnrW GUIDED TOUR Visitors to the University 'E-Week' sponsored by the College of Engineering ano Arcmtecrure wm begin their tour of the dlsplavs at Architectural Hall (A). The tour will continue to Ferguson Hall, Richards Hall, Stout Hall and Avery Lab. They will then view Agricultural Engineering displays located at positions F and G. The tour will culminate at Bancroft HalL AA U Inloycih Dvy Day i Dr. Robert Hough, associate : professor of English, has been I selected Master of Ceremonies I to preside over the tradition al Ivy Day festivities. Hough, a cum laude gradu ate of Pomona College, Cal., received six college letters and served as captain of both the baseball and basket ball teams. He received his masters degree from Colum bia University and his Ph. D. in English from Stanford Uni versity. I Hough was honored as "out standing Xcbraskan" last se jmester by the Daily Nebras kan. He is serving as faculty adviser to Student Council and I Scrip literary magazine, and is a faculty member of Pub lications Board. He has aided in the development of t h e English Honors Program, and has written several magazine articles. Senior soloist for Ivy Day is Gail GaUoway. She was (selected by Mortar Board on the basis of service to the University, the school of mu sic, and her ability. She will sing the traditional song, "Here we plant the Ivy" while the presidents of Mortar Board and Innocents plant the ivy vine. Miss Galloway is president of Mu Phi Epsilon music so rority, president of Music In tersorority Council, and cor responding secretary of Pi Beta Phi sorority. She has had leads in the Yankees," "Oklahoma," and "Carousel." She has also ap peared in the University The- NU Faculty Member Receives Fellowship A University staff member, Barnett McClendon, is one of 30 language instructors in the nation beiecteu tu icravc a fdowsni under FngM. Hays pro'gram for six weeks of program study abroad this summer. McClendon, a staff member at the University since 1957, is completing work for his Ph.D. degree and will study this summer at Burgos, Snain. The fellowship pro- 'vides tuition and travel. subdivisions of structures, soils and foundations, trans portation, sanitation, hydraul ics, missile launching pads and control stations. The chemical engineering department will have displays centered around industrial and chemical processes, such as the manufacture of paper and casting of plastic souvenirs at Avery Laboratory. At Bancroft Hall, the de partment of engineering me chanics will demonstrate the structural strength of eggs Stud qui f oiuDoyimcG qIB ater Productions, Vosi Tutti," and "Street Scene. The Ivy and Daisy Chains have been selected to carry the traditional chains in the ! Ivy Day ceremonies on May 4. The members are chosen on the basis of service and contributions to the University and to their living units. The Senior members of the Ivy Cham are: Judith Polenz and Karen Sapert, in dependent women; Judith Mellor and Pat Mullen, Kappa Alpha Theta; Mary Jo Eager and Sue Oberle, Kappa Delta: Ann Zeilincer and Julie Westarhoff, Alpha Om irron Pi ; Sara Brewster and Jane Tidrick, Pi Beta Phi. Snsie Mall and Jaa Kojir, Alpha Xi ta; Judy WUhlte and Dlaae Loot. ta Taa Alpha; Linda Jensen and Marilyn Blnm, Kappa Kappa Ciimnij Jean Olsea and Jane Prlre, Pedde HaU; Jeanette Brra and Loa Ana Harvey. Burr East Hall. Carol DeGroot and Kay Anderson, Lowe Memorial Hall: Virginia St alder and Becky Schneider, Chi Omeira; Gay Ro mans and Maria Fortkamp, Alpha Chi Omeea; Barb MoCamley, Terraoe Hall; Gwnn Showalter and Sharon Maclay, Del ta Gamma; Carol Kramer and Cynthia Weaver, Alpha Phi. Marilyn Vvood and Katherine Ollenbers. Towne Club; Sharon Binfield and Viola Sisel. Siema Kappa; Sara Wagoner and Sandra Carter, Women's Residence Asso ciation; Julie Porter and Sally Copple. Gamma Phi Beta; Judy Doud Pickard and Mary Sellentin, Delta Delta Delta. Jnniors hi the 1963 Daisy Chain are: Carol Klein, independent; Marilyn Gib son. Kappa Alpha Theta; Carol Williams. Kappa Delta ; Donna MrFarlin. Alpha Del ta PI; Susie Una, Alpha Omicroa PI; Seventeen Voluntarily Resign Pi Xis Uncovered At Iowa State U Seventeen members of Pi Xi, a national sub rosa fra ternity, have voluntarily submitted formal resignations from the group at Iowa State, according to Millard Krat ochviL Director of Student Affairs. They have handed over fraternity paraphernalia. The resignations and agreement to refrain from any similar activity7 in the future came as a result of confer ences and meetings held since the recess of the Iowa Inter fraternity Council (IFC) April 8. The court was hearing the case of one student who was reportedly on trial for the delivery of the '"'Pixie Press". He was reportedly caught near the Tau Kappa Epsilon house March 31. Though in the past, affiliation with a sub-rosa frater nity meant suspension from the University if caught, it was felt by administration that in this case eliminating the whole organization was preferable to suspending one or two members, according to Kratochvil. "Pi Xi is now dissolved and the fraternity system and Iowa State will not be further blighted by its publications or by other activities inimical to an institution of higher learning," said Kratochvil. Pi Xi had been on the Iowa State campus since April, 1956. Similar action as was taken at Iowa State was taken here and students have been suspended for affiliation with Pi Xi at the University of Missouri. mm m mm m kiimmti and pop bottles as they stand up under high forces, along with the explosion of concrete cylinders under pressure. Showing a mock-up of a new type of intense combus tion engine, a working model of a thermal electric gener ator, a ground-effects machine wrhich rides on a "cushion of air," and a sub-critical atom ic reactor at Richards HaU will be the department of me chanical engineering. In cooperation with seven downtown department stores, Einnicee E-ta Tm Alpha. Cindy Tinan. Kappa Kappa Gamma; Rm Bnlmbre. Fwlde Hall; So Eurh anra, Burr Eaa Hall; Kathy Schurr, Memorial HaU; ar Walter, Cm Ometra; Marpe nderson, Alpha Chi Omepa : Oafl Bocholr, Delta Gamma; and Patty Brown field. Alpha Phi. Sl;ri Coltan. I'niroms; Pat Staska, Trrane Onb; Joan Granirs, Siema Kappa: rvw-tt Mueller, 'RA; Connie Haj-s, Gam ma Phi Beta; and Pat Gell, Delta Delta Delta. Sophomores are: Imti alue Sampan, In dependent; Susan Andersm. Kappa Alpha Theta; Pat Thayer. Kappa TkeHai Unda Bnkareli. Alpha DeKa PI; Cheryl Tmnur. Alpha Omleroa PI: Karira Knper, Pi Beta Phi; Marib-a Peterson, Alpha Ki Oeltai and 9ndy Reeder, Keta Tan Alpha. Sally Wilson. Kappa Kappa Gamma: Helen Howe, Pedde Hall; Mary Booth, Burr East Hall; Bh Snobereer. Lnv Memorial Hall; Janit Pitach, Chi Omen; Both Hayes. Alpha Chi Omen: Sharo Knhlmeinr, Terrace Hall. Patricia Srhmsnrtte. Delta Gamma: Jekti Tihnan Unicorns; Jeanne Lnkas Town Clnb; as&n K-utter, Surma Kappa; Linda Liwier, Gamma Phi Beta: Harrt ette Hensto.-. Delta Delta Delta. Freshmea art-- Janet Rprinaer. Independ ent Women i Jane Crahill. Kappa Alpha Theta: Karen Bnppe. Alpha Delta Pit Pan, Nardia, Oanuna Phi Beta ; Linda Cleveland, Alpha Ki Delta; Janet Ens, Beta Tan Alpha; Molly Dow, Kappa Kap pa Gamma; Myrna Teetmeier. Peddet Jndeen WeUman, Burr; Virbr dine, Lovet Kathy Elindncer, Chi Omera; Tranda Schultc. Alpha Chi Omera. Janette Stuticeit. Terraoe; Jean Holm fluist. Delta Ganima; Carol Van Stein- bere. Alpha Phi; narbro Rnsh, t,'meoms: Carolyn Saracino, Towne Club; Elizabeth Ryan, Siema Kappa; Jamalee George. Heppner; Eddie Munn, Gus: Harriet Hun ger, Raymond; Susie Se prist. Love; Linda Mufi, Gamma Phi Beta; Milta Kay Mc Cartney, Delta Delta Delta; Lii Heeox. Kappa Delta; Karlyn Eoppe, Alpha Oral cron Pi. OfIS the students of each depart ment will present a preview in the window displays of what is to come at the Open House. Displays will be seen at the following business establish ments: National Bank of Com merce, Hardy's, Gold's, Ma gee's. Ben Simon's, Miller and Paine, and Sear's. Donna McFarlin, Alpha Del ta Pi junior, will reign over the activities as Miss E-Week of 1963.