Wednesday, May 1, 1963 The Daily Nebraskan Poge 3 Even In Bad Weather Girls Agreeable, Men Captured The rain, thunder and light ning did little to dampen the spirits of campus sweethearts as coeds announced pinnings and engagements Mon day night. PINNINGS Gretchen Van Bloom, Alpha Chi Omega junior in Arts and Sciences from Lincoln to Gene Budig, Sigma Nu graduate student in Teachers from Mc Cook. Jane Barnoske, Alpha Oml cron Pi sophomore in Teach ers from Des Moines, la. to Lloyd Voss, Alpha Tan Omega Junior in Teachers from Mag nolia, Minn. Susan Lynn Parrott from Lincoln to Larry Zach, Corn husker Co-Op junior in Engi neering from Humphrey. Mary Ann Volberding, Kap pa Delta junior in Engineer ing from Chicago,' 111. to Jim Conner, Alpha Gamma Rho junior in Agriculture from Gordon. Judy Nelson, Delta Delta Delta sophomore in Home Economics from Stromsburg to Dick Ratzlaff , Theta Xi jun ior hi Business Administration from Aberdeen, S. Dak. ENGAGEMENTS Kay Stafford, Kappa Kappa Gamma senior in Speech Therapy from North Platte to Mike Thomas, Sigma Phi Ep silon senior in Engineering from OgaEala. Corrine Newton, JVlpha Xi Delta senior in Teachers from Lincoln to Bruce Jones, Zeta Psi alum at Wesleyan from Brady. Susan Swanson, Sigma Kap pa senior in Arts and Sciences from Herman to Keith Mc Burney, Theta Chi alum in Engineering from Chicago, HI. Anita Raben, Alpha C h i Omega senior in Teachers from Crawford to Jim Lem ons, Kappa Sigma junior in Teachers from Cranford. Cherie. Hoon, Towne Club sophomore In Teachers from Lincoln to Chuck Campbell from Tucson, Ariz. Jean Baxter,- Alpha 0 m i cron Pi junior in Business Ad ministration from Omaha to Art Armbrust, Theta Xi alum from Omaha. Sue Isaacson, senior in Arts and Sciences from Norfolk to Paul Vasconcellos, vicar at University Lutheran Chapel from San Francisco, Calif. Jil Kay Chrisman from Mc Cook to Ron Hanthorn, Ag Men junior in Agriculture from Indianola. Dianne Giesselmann f r om Arlington to Ken Cook, Farm- House sophomore in Agricul ture from Arlington. Mary Jo Logan, Zeta Tau Alpha senior in Teachers from Lincoln, to Roger Pat rick, Delta Sigma Phi soph omore in Business Adminis tration from Lincoln. Dee Clason, Zeta Tau Alpha junior in Teachers from Council Bluffs, la. to Bill Webster, Pi Kappa PM senior in Parmacy from Hastings. Campus Calendar TODAY AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS, student section meeting, 7 p.m., 206 Richards Hall.. INSTITUTION OF ELEC TRICAL AND ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS, general meet ing, 7 p.m., 217 Ferguson Hall. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA, pledge test, 6:30 p.m., 232 Student Union. LECTURE, "Businessmen as Pragmatists," Dr. Ralph W. Hidy, 3 p.m., Love Li brary Auditorium. SKY SHOW, ''Fireworks on the Sun," 8 p.m. Ralph Muell er Planetarium, Morrill Hall. TOMORROW WILDLIFE CLUB, meeting, 7:30 p.m:, Ag Union. 880 CLUB, KNUS Radio, 7 to 8 p.m. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Regents Accept Company Bids The University Board of Re gents accepted these bids Monday: $22,552, submitted by J. G. Kretschmer Co. of Omaha, for furnishing and installing two 30-unit language labora tories for Germanic langu ages, one in Burnett Hall and the other in University Hall. $8,096, submitted by Inr ternational Harvester of Lin coln for a garbage packer truck for use on the Lincoln campuses. $9,656, s u b m i 1 1 e d by American Laundry Machinery Industries of Omaha, for laun dry equipment at the College of Medicine in Omaha. $5,650, submitted by J. H. Martig, Inc., of Omaha, for air conditioning the class room-office area of the 1955 Nurses' home on the College of Medicine campus in Omaha. "fiH1 Ive vopmsaAeMfHts coawm cone Eight Faculty Members Get Varied fellowships Eight University faculty members have received re search fellowships for study during the next school year. These recipients were giv en leaves by the Board of Regents Monday morning. Receiving Frank H. Woods Faculty Fellowships and their research projects are: Albin Anderson, professor of history, who will serve from Sept. 1 to Nov. 30 as visiting professor of history at El Colegio de Mexico at Mexico City, and then from Dec. 1 to April 15, 1965, as a Woods Fellow. Myron Roberts, professor of music, who will devote the next school year to complet ing two unfinished composi tions for organ and four pre ludes for Advent, based on scriptural texts. Richard Trickey, assist ant professor of art who will be on leave during the sec ond semester of 1963 64 to do concentrated experiments with color, particularly as It relates to size and scale in painting. He plans to do his research in Mexico. Walter Wright, assistant dean and professor of Eng lish who will spend the next school year in England doing research on Thomas Hardy's epic poem, "The Dynasts," which depicts the Napoleonic Wars. Taking leaves to accept Fulbright Fellowships are: Edward Fry, associate professor of anthropology, ' who will spend the next school year at Hong Kong University as part of an in tensive research program on child growth. James Roberts, assistant professor of English, who will be a Fulbright lecturer on American masterpieces of lit erature during the next school year at the University of Vienna, Austria. Recipients of other fellow ships and grants are: William Bowsky, associ ate professor of history, who has accepted a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Faculty Re search Fellowship from the Social Science Research Council for the next school year to continue his studies of the Italian commune of Siena during the 13th and 14th Centuries. Harold Manter, professor of zoology and physiology, who has accepted a National Science Foundation grant for the next school year to study parasites of fishes of Austra lia at the University of Queensland. Additional leaves of ab sence were granted to: Bernard Harris, associate professor of mathematics, who will be visiting profes sor at Army Mathematics Re search Center at Madison, Wise, during the next school year; and Jonathan R. War ren, counseling psychologist in Junior Division, who will be on the summer staff of school year at the University the National Defense Guid ance and Counseling Institute at Colorado State University. jr' ... 1 - AlVAYS A SOLUTION.. Just as this little man solved his problem with a periscope, you can solve your protection prob lem with foresight. Everyone has different life In surance needs resulting from his own specific situation. To enable you to see security In the future I will be happy to dis cuss an appropriate program In person or send CML's free booklet "How Much and What Kinder . i 3 GEORGE R. WRIGHT Suite 707 Lincoln Building 432-3289 Connecticut Mutual Life INSURANCE COMPANY" ;; mtm. MAW'"! ' M nAfl y u iAl WM (and easy on it) This is quite a car . . . the Rambler American 440-H Hardtop. Clean lines end a sporty flair. Looks that say "go." A power plant that has the message, plus saving ways with a tank of gas. Plenty of people room. Buckets, console, Bnd 138-hp engine standard. Twin-Stick Floor Shift adds lots of action at little cost. Rambler prices are tagged to save you money. And you keep saving after you own one. More service-free. Muffler and tailpipe designed to last at least as many years as the original buyer owns the car. Double-Safety Brakes (self-adjusting, too) and a host of other solid Rambler features. Why not see and drive a Rambler soon at your Rambler dealer. r 3 1 You call the play with Twin-Stick Floor Shift hai Instant Overtaka. f H 1 RAPtflBLER 63 Winner of IHtor Trend Magazine Award: "CAR OF THE YEAR" r ; 'A .,.wwv''.- n i Wiltse Two Students Get Awards From Scrip David Wiltse and Karen Kenney, University seniors, were announced as winners of the Scrip magazine Short Story and Poetry Contests, respec tively. Scrip, the University's magazine, offered prizes I of $25 in each of the two di visions. Wiltse, an English ma jor in the Col lege of Arts and Sciences from Falls City, earned top place with his story "Cross-Fire." He has pre viously had his work appear in Scrip and in Speakeasy maga zines. In 1962, he placed sec ond in the Prairie Schooner Fiction Contest. Miss Kenney is an elemen tary education major in Teach ers College, and her prize winning poem "Sympathy" will appear along with a group oi ner otner poetry in the forthco m i n g Script. A native of Lincoln, she has had her writing printed in the Denver Post, religious pub lications, and the Lincoln Kenney Star, where she is employed as a staff writer. Dr. Robert Narveson, who this semester succeeded Dr. Robert Hough as faculty ad visor to Scrip, said "We are very gratified for the enthu siastic response of the student body to the contest. In view of the excellence of the material received, we will probably try similar contests in the fu ture." Grossman To Give Illustrated Lecture Dr. Betty Grossman, a noted archaeologist of the St. Louis Museum, will present an illustrated lecture on the Art and Archaeology of My cenae at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Love Library Auditorium. Seventy-five years ago the German archaeologist Hein rich Schliemann announced the discovery of the so-called grave of Agamemnon, the mythical leader of the siege against Troy. Schliemann's discovery brought the atten tion of the world to Mycenae (1500-1200 B.C.) as one of the important sources of Greek civilization and as the prob able spring of much of Greek legend. Since 1952 Dr. Grosman has worked with George Mylonas, whose archaeological research has centered about the citadel of Mycenae. Dr. Mylonas' discoveries , in My cenae and the translations of Linear have done much to change parts of the Homeric myth to historic reality. Dr. Grossman will be spon sored by the Departments of Art and Anthropology and the Nebraska Union Talks and Topics Committee. jiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitttiiiiiiiiiinMiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiaiuti REX HATHEWAY IS NOW CUTTING HAIR AT ART UNGEITS HAUCiER SHOP at 119 North 12th St. This shop will be under new management & will be completely remodeled. S 1 Appointments Available i 432-3412 liiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiHiniiiiiiiiiiiiimnmimnmm M .ii ,n:A .. Vf ' L V '1 'I A Jeanne Morriton ... of Gold's Advisory Board: The Quick cover-up for sun, sand or sea is found in the freedom of the short shift, which is found at Gold's Fashion Notes for Juniors FOR THE JUNIOR LOOK . . . GOLD'S IS THE PLACE! The Sunshift jl New Version Of A Classic Fashion Story. Shift locovernp your ftwimsuit. Of cotton Terrycloth. White with red handkerchief n r I n t in pockets, lining. Sizes Small, Medium and Iarge. 6.98 "The Swim Shop" GOLD'S Better Sportswear . . Second Flew DAY AFTER DAY t ... JT a OF NEBRASKA HAS MORE OF IVERYTHINO SHOP MONDAY AND THURSDAY TO 9:00 P.M., OTHER DAYS TO 5:30 P.M. . f- 1 J.J.J JLJ. -A- J JJLrl JLJ hS JL. XmmL J.,JL - I