i. Thursday, May 9, 1963 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 Student Program Gets AFB Award For Documentary A University documentary radio program has won the Bing Crosby Award in the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) national radio and television contest. Produced by radio students at the University, "The Stan and Berit Yank Story" dram atizes the lives of a young Omaha married couple, both blind. According to tbe producer director, William Cooper, a senior speech major, the half-hour program shows how people can live normal lives even though they cannot tee it. The National Award was announced at the American Foundation for the Blind in New York City. Arthur Olson, Regional Representative for the AFB presented the $100 cash award. Cooper started the project last October and completed it in early April prior to the deadline. Cooper became interested b the project due to bis an cle being a totally blind medical doctor. Dr. XL Scheffel Pierce, as sistant professor of radio and RWImBffHnP MMMMMMMMMBMntMMtltf r - RADIO SHOW AWARD As Gov. Morrison receives a 30-minute tape recording of the show, Arthur Olson, Regional Representative for the American Foundation for the Blind, presents Bill Cooper with a SIM cash award. Applications For Study In The application deadline fors the exchange program be tween the University and El Colegio de Mexico has been extended until Monday, ac cording to Prof. Roberto Es-quenazi-Mayo. The students selected will receive full credit at the Uni versity for toe courses tak en. They will leave Lincoln in June and spend an entire academic year there. Tbe competitive scholar ships will include air jet transportation round trip from Lincoln te Mexico City, tuition and living allowances up to fl.2WI for nine months and accident and sickness in surance for the entire year.; Students will be selected on j the basis of their proven abil-; ity to do work in Spanish, in-! teres! and enthusiasm for the program and background in i American history so that, they may represent tbe Unit ed State's point of view ad-i vantageously. LITTLE MAN pun a t-rrae gAeuee mettim f 1 wrz twjs tiws television at the University, said the program will be dis tributed to more than 2,000 radio stations throughout the nation. Gov. Morrison said, "Bill Cooper did a remarkable job of presenting the program for the blind as a public serv ice. As Governor, I would like to thank the participat ing agencies and individuals for the work which they are doing for the visually im pared. Our educational pro gram today must embrace training of all of our people to realize the maximum po tential from two standpoints personal and humanitarian. This involves the moral principle of development and the individual person. The public must become involved, insisting that every man con tribute to public good. This concept of special education is a vital part of today's cul tural progress." Marion Clark, Director of the Services for the Visual ly Impaired, said, "The im pact of the message contained in Bill Cooper's radio show, will be of benefit to the blind of Nebraska and the nation now and for years to come." ifteiiii f ) 1 1 Extended Mexico Names of the winners wiD! be rev ealed next week. j l Tbe stodents will live with: Mexican families approved by U Colegio and tbe Uni-j vershy. Prof. Albin Anderson of the history department win j be tbe University faculty member accompanying tfaei grwp. i i Two students from Mexico will attend the University and ; study in tbe fields of Ameri-; can history, literature and po- litical science. El Colegio de Mexico is lo- cated in downtown Mexico: City and consists of the'j school of history, the school i of linguistics and the school, of international affairs. We believe that this is a very good opportunity to work in one of the finest education al institutions in America,'" said Prof. Roberto Esquenazi Mayo. chairman of the Selec tion Committee for the Mex ican Program. Applications may be ob tained in 315 Burnett Hall. ON CAMPUS X f University Bands Honor Members For Past Service The University bands last night honored five of their members and a University staff member, Edward Hirsch, for outstanding serv ice during the past year. Hirsch, University assistant director of public relations, served the bands as publicist and adviser, and assists in the planning of their concert tours. The bands presented him with a special key award. Students who received band keys are Robert Force, James Herbert, John Mills, Peter Salter and Robert Person. Also announced at the an nual band banquet were new band officers: Gary Winkelbauer, presi dent; Don Thomsen, vice president; Doug Kriefels, secretary-treasurer; Keith Mc Creight, publicity; Clark Ed wards, Lincoln properties and Joyce Baumann, ladies' spon sor. Announced as new officers of Gamma Lambda, band fra ternity, were: James Wick less, president; Winkelbauer, vice-president; Roger Hud son, secretary and William Carlson, treasurer. Accountants Meet For Discussions Of Federal Taxes Attorneys and accountants from throughout the Midwest will gather in Lincoln today for the three-day Great Plains Federal Tax Institute. ' About 150 are expected to attend the session, to be held at the Nebraska Center. The purpose of the meeting is to increase the specialized know ledge of federal tax laws. The program will include seminars and panel discus sions, as well as lectures, by university law professors, cer tified public accountants and attorneys. At the opening session on Wednesday, Prof. John North of Creighton University will review tax highlights of the year. Evening seminars will be conducted by Omaha attor ney Keith Miller, Chicago CPA Nicholas DeLeoleos and Lincoln attorney Warren K. Dal ton. Speeches will be given Thursday bv Wallace Jensen. New York City CPA: Daniel Stubbs of Alliance; Merle Miller, Indianapolis attorney; L. O. Eames, St. Louis CPA; and Robert Adams, Omaha attorney. Friday's schedule will in clude a lecture by Willard Pedrick. professor of law at Northwestern University, Chi cago, followed by a panel dis cussion led by Professor Ped rick, assisted by Lincoln at torney John Mason and Omaha CPA Irving Olsen. Concluding tbe institute, Da vid Dow, dean of the Univer sity College of Law, will mod erate a clinic on valuation of interests in closely held busi nesses. Foreign Students Will Need Homes umcers of ine feopie 10 People PTP program at the University announced that American Student f a m ilies will have an opportunity to host a foreign student for three or four days this sum mer. Students from all over Eur ope will be touring the United States throughout the sum mer. Lincoln and Omaha are included in the list of cities to be visited. Anyone who may be inter ested can obtain iniormation folders in the FTP office. When only the best will do.... fcMptek ugagmmr ritig. Ontf pfimct diamond cm rtrfWct 4ull bwutf mn4 ferillienc. 1 U w: W iar nam feepuifc n ring mni th T 1 Brodkev OM4IU WLACIL BLLTI-'S CB4D ISLAND tnEMO1 COLtMBLS Hi. OMAHA 8 GREAT STORES TO SERVE YOU 4 & f v xj 1 , 1 DAIRY PRINCESS FINALISTS Six University coeds will compete for the title of Dairy Princess at the Varsity Dairy Club dance and the Dairy Royal this weekend. They are: Priscilla Patterson, Judy Nelson Jeanie Langford, Joan Skinner, Kathy Swanson, and Rosella Lange. 'N' Club Initiation Set For Sunday The 'N Club will hold its initiation Sunday at 1:20 p.m. in front of the columns. The initiation is informal and dress will be casual. All mem bers of the 'N' Club and all prospective initiates are asked to be present. The Club will hold its for mal initiation and banquet at the Lincoln Hotel on Thurs day, May 16, a 6:20 p.m. The election of officers for the coming year will be held at that time. Honor To Engineer Gordon Smith, senior in civ il engineering, has been se lected to receive the Ideal Cement Fellowship. He will receive a stipend of $1,800 plus $264 for tuition and fees which he will use toward a Master's degree with a ma jor in civil engineering next year. Smith ranks in the upper three per cent of his Senior class at the University, is president of the student chap ber of the American Society for Testing Materials and Sig ma XL ber of American Society for Testing Materials ana bigma Xi. He attended Graceland Col lege at Lamoni, la. before transferring to the University and has worked for the past two summers as a draftsman at Be hi en Manufacturing Company at Columbus. Shakespeare Play To Be Presented At Howell Theater Shakespeare's "Much Ado' About Nothing" will be pre sented May 15 through 18 at Howell Memorial Theater. The i University Theater production ' is under the direction of Dr. William Morgan, assistant pro fessor of Speech and Dramatic SArt The cast includes, as Bene dick, Fred Gaines: Beatrice, -Maureen Frazier; Don Pedro, itbe Prince of Arragon, Jim affico; Count Cladio. Jim 'Hamsa: Don John. Leo Caito; Hero, Marilyn Longo; Leona 'to, Frank Vybiral; Antonio, . Lee Nelson; Dogberry, Delwin ' Epp; Margaret, Helen Glenn; Ursula, Sharon Binfield. Messenger, Curtiss Greene; 'Borachio, Ray Stanek; Con- rade, Friedeman Bender; Bal ithasar, Elijah Powell; Verges, ,Don Cruise; Sexton, Jim i Welch; Innogen, Jody Reeder; ; Friar Francis, John Turner; and the Watch, "The Village Idiots. Bruce Brandt, vur tiss Greene, John Stohlman and Charles Armstrong. Read Nebraskan Want Ads VISTA $250.00 AUo $100 to 2475 Wedding Ring $12J9 ffC- LmJ 1.1. f.lnp a&uxari to alio - Edwards - K .. .awv.v. v.-..-.. ., '' .;" ..,v w. -n'Mii Grant Presented Saranne Ray, University senior, has been awarded a Leta Stetter Hollingworth Fel lowship for graduate study at Columbia University. The grant covers tuition and fees, plus an $1,800 stipend. It is made to selected gradu ates of the University who wish to study at Columbia. Who says s : mmicf jm iftrwi look better la . ', I" &J -1 -ARROW- Mi jf Your Exclusive Keepsake Dealer In Lincoln KAUFMAN'S Jewelers 1332 O Street A complete selection In every price range 1 iiK f MM THE ENGAGEMENT RING WITH THE PERFECT CENTER DIAMOND True artistry is expressed in the brilliant fashion styling cf every Keepsake diamond engagement ring. Each setting is a masterpiece of design, reflecting the fu!! bri!li2nc9 .u.iuhK . mI1o or tivt mellia, lw. e To Senior Coed Miss Ray is majoring in philosophy. She is a 1957 grad uate of Lincoln High School. She has also studied at the University of Maryland branch in Munich, Germany; the Wharton School of Fi nance at the University of Pennsylvania; and Earlham College. Oxford cloth has to beauty of the center diamond ... a perfect gem cf flawless clarity, fine color and meticulous modern cut Authorized Ketpsai Jewe'erg ma be listed In the Yello Pases. Visit one in your area end choose from man beautiful tatri vnth the name "Keepsake" in the ring and on the lap. 0 TO ftil TOM EI6A6EMEIT AID WEDDII6 ind r.e to&l.lt, "How to Pi Your Eingg. mrrf nd WnJding" nd "Choot'irHf Your V'twnonS Sings.'" bon for only 10c. Alto end tpc'J r cf ,i7.. . 1 Ca rrtf tJ1''itiinr S Campus Calendar TODAY AGRONOMY CLUB, meet ing and speech contest, 7 p.m., Keim Hall. 880 CLUB, 7 to 8 p.m., KNUS Radio. ART LENDING LIBRARY, return, 9 a.m. to 4 p.... Small Auditorium, Student Union. BLOCK AND BRIDLE, election of officers, 7 15 p.m., Ag Union. TOMORROW SPEAKER, Tad Szulc, 3 p.m., Love Library Audito rium. CARIBBEAN CRUISE, pre sentation of dairy princess, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m., Ag Union. be heavy? t i i I i. I I