The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 01, 1963, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    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 -
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Just as this little man solved his
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can solve your protection prob
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Everyone has different life In
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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''.-
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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.
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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
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