; t: Friday, February 14, 1964 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 in iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.niiiii iiiiiiiliiiiiiii WEEK REVIEW 3 CAMPUS . . . PLANS FOR A PERMAN ENT concrete stadium addi tion enclosing the south end of Memorial Stadium were revealed by the Board of Re gents last Friday. The 12,000 seat addition will be built right up to the end zone and over the cinder track circling the field, according to Uni v e r s i t y business mana ger Carl Donaldson. FRATERNITIES MUST STRIVE to parallel the aims and purposes of the Universi ty if they wish to become a stronger force within their in stitution, and the simplest, most obvious way to accom plish this parallel is through educational goals, according to Ted Roninson, assistant dean and adviser to fraterni ties at Iowa State University. Roninson was an IFC speaker during Pledge Education Week. FOOTBALL TICKETS for reserved seats have been raised from $4 to $5, according to Tippy Dye, athletic direc tor. Student and faculty prices are not affected by the price hike. CITY . . . LANCASTER D I S T R ICT JUDGE Elmer Scheele is ex pected to rule on the constitu tionality of the Sunday clos ing law sometime in March. Testimony in suits brought by Skagway Inc. and Four Star Drug was concluded Tuesday and Scheele gave the plaintiffs 14 days to file fur ther briefs. PUBLIC HEARINGS on Lincoln's beer-liquor policy and requested location trans fer of two downtown licenses to the Gateway Shopping Cen ter are set for Feb. 24 before the City Council. STATE ... LANCASTER COUNTY AS SESSOR Arthur Davis recom mended that the Elks Club, Legionnaire Club and the dormitories at Nebraska VV e s 1 e y a n University and Union College be placed on the tax rolls. University dor mitories, are exempted by the constitution as state property. DRIVERS AND CARS need to be checked periodically to make sure they are in proper working order and Nebraska law' should require it, said Bernard Eiting, State Motor Vehicle Director. Eiting was one of 11 witnesses at the opening session of a two-day hearing on ways to improve the state's traffic laws. IT COST NEBRASKA $444, 139 to carry out its biennial lawmaking duties during 1963. The figure includes both regular and special sessions and is a high for amount of money spent. NATION . . . THE TRIAL OF JACK RU BY, self-appointed execution er of accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald has begun in Dallas. THE HOUSE Monday passed a civil rights bill that would grant the federal gov ernment unprecedented new power to combat racial dis crimination. The roll call vote was 290 to 130. A long, stormy trip through the Sen ate must still be completed, however, before the bill can become a law. FOUR BOYS walking along a Florida East Coast Rail road track Wednesday night discovered 45 sticks of dyna mite hooked to the track and dismantled the wires just minutes before a freight train passed over. Criminal agent Leif Larson reported the dy namite was electrically wired to the track and would have exploded if the engine had contacted the wire. It was the latest incident during a year long strike against the railroad. Tcncsfcwties ooidfldl SOu i Fraternities will have a chance to win $50 in connec tion with the upcoming Miss Lincoln Pageant, according to Ron Hoppes, chairman of the pageant. Fraternities are urged to sponsor a candidate for the pageant, and if their candi date wins, the fraternity will receive $50 from the Jnutor Chamber of Commerce. Hoppes said that this is to help overcome the fact that many girls are reluctant to enter themselves. Preliminary judging will be held in the basement of the Bankers Life Insurance build ing February 25, 26 and 27 beginning at 7 p.m. Girls will be judged in evening gowns and swim suits and on talent in the preliminaries. There also is a possibility that each entry will be asked some general questions. Fifteen girls will be selected to go on to the finals. Judging of the talent finals will take dace March 31 in the basement of the Bankers Life Building. Judging of the swim suit and an evening gown com petition will take place at Pershing Auditorium Anril 2. in connection with the Greater Lincoln Nebraska Home and Sports Show. The winner of the Miss Lin coln Pngeant will receive a $200 check and the right to continue on to the Miss Ne braska Pageant. If she wins the Miss Nebraska title she will be eligible to go to the Miss America Pageant held In Atlantic City. Besides qualifying for the Miss Nebraska pageant and receiving the $200, the winner will receive $100 worth of modeling lessons from Miss Bette Bonne, owner and op erator of a modeling agency in Lincoln. According to Hoppes, this is to help the Lincoln entry toward the state title. Those wishing to enter the Miss Lincoln Pageant should call the Lincoln Junior Cham ber of Commerce, who is sponsoring the pageant, and inform the secretary of the fact. An entry blank will be mailed out which must be re turned by February 25. To qualify for candidancy in the Miss Lincoln Pageant a girl must be single, never married, a high school gradu ate and between the ages of 18 and 28. Toga, Date Dinner Parties Set For Valentine's Night Valentine's Day comes at an appropriate time as NU stu dents take advantage of the first weekend since finals to "live it up." Fourteen events highlight the social calendar as Cupid invades campus. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The Guadalajara Summer School, o fully accredited University of Arizona program, conducted in co operation with profesiori from Stanford University, University of California, and Guadalajara, will offer June 29 to August 8, art, folklore, geography, history, lan guage and literature courses. Tui tion, board and room is $265. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, P. 0. Box 7227, Stanford, Calif. Foundation Gives $50 Music Grant A yearly scholarship of $50 has been established to assist University students in the de partment of music, Herb Pot ter Jr., secretary of the Uni v e r s i t y Foundation, an nounced Thursday. The scholarship was estab lished this week through the Foundation by Miss Margaret McGregor, a piano teacher from Lincoln. Miss MeGregor is a graduate of the Univer sity. Known as the "Margaret McGregor Music Award," the annual scholarship will go to an undergraduate major in music who has demonstrated scholastic ability and is in fi nancial need. According to Profe s s o r Emanuel Wishnow, chairman of the music department, the first such scholarship will be awarded this coming spring. Columns Donated The tradition-laden columns east of Memorial Stadium were donated to the Univer sity. They once supported the front entrance of the Burling ton Station in Omaha before that building was razed. Want Ads WANTIDi Male roommate to hrt cooklnc fidlltiet, utilities' Included. USmonth. 34-4751. 1411 N. 33rd. FOR SALE M61 RCA Victor model 21" TV. Good condition. S90. 477-790. WANTEDS Male roommate, to ahare apt., cooking faclliUea, "ttlitiea included. $2Smontta. 1413 N. ii d. 434-471. TODAY Beta Sigma Psi Date Din ner at Holiday Inn, 7:30 8:30 p.m. Ag Union Winter Dance at Ag Union, 8:30 - 11:30 p.m. Pound Hall Formal at Ne braska Center, 6 p.m. -1 a.m. Theta Xi Toga Party at the Lincoln Hotel, 9 p.m.-12 mid night. Acacia Date Dinner at the Masonic Temple, 7:30 p.m. TOMORROW Alpha Gamma Rho Cos tume Party at the Colonial Inn and AGR house, 7 p.m. to 12 midnight. Sigma Alpha Mu C a c e Man Party, Sigma Alpha Mu house, 9 p.m. - 12 midnight. Ag YMCA Girls Basketball Tournament at the Ag Union, 7 - 9 p.m. Delta Tau Delta Date Din ner at the Delta Tau Delta house, 6-7 p.m.; party 9 p.m. - 12 midnight. Alpha Tau Omega house party at the Alpha Tau Ome ga house, 9 p.m.-12 midnight. Kappa Delta Roaring Twen ties Party at the Kappa Delta house, 9 p.m. - 12 midnight. SUNDAY Chi Omega Date Dinner at the Chi Omega house, 6 p.m. Pi Beta Phi Date Dinner at the Pi Beta Phi house, 6 p.m. Delta Upsilon bowling with Delta Gamma in the Union, 3 p.m. ots She msut also be a resident of Lincoln for six months pri or to May 11 or be a student at one of the institutions of higher learning in Lincoln. The entry must have gradiu ated from high school by La bor Day of 1964. She may be either a professional or ama teur in her talent field. Hoppes noted that a girl does not have to be sponsored by a fraternity to enter, and that there is no entry fee. He also said that each entry would receive aid from the "Mrs. Jaycees," an auxiliary of the Jaycees, during the preliminary judging. C "Ss (Sstairffen TODAY. JAZZ'N JAVA - Challeng ers, an off campus group, 4 p.m. in Union Crib. WEEKEND FILM, GIGI, in Union auditorium at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. TOMORROW FRENCH CLUB in the North Party Room of the Union, 7 p.m. .. GIRLS' BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT at Ag Union, 7 p.m. SKY SHOW, movie "Skies of Winter" at Morrill Hall at 2:45 p.m. SUNDAY WEEKEND FILM, GIGI, in Union auditorium at 7:30 p.m. SKY SHOW, movie "Skies of Winter" at Morrill Hall, 2:30 p.m. and 3:45 p.m. Peace Corps Exams Are Set Next Week Peace Corps placement tests will be administered at the University next week on Monday and Thursday. Those who are interested in enter ing the Peace Corps will be able to take the test in 232 Nebraska Hall, from 9 to 12 a.m. both days. The Corps is an expanding organization which now reaches out to 46 countries in Latin America, Africa, and Asia. There are currently over 7,000 Peace Corps vol unteers, with an additional 5,000 expected to go into train ing this summer. Among those selected will be teachers, liberal arts graduates, engineers, nurses, doctors, sociologists, and rec reation workers. Anyone interested in shar ing his skills in villages and cities, classrooms and hospi tals and on farms throughout the world can begin by taking this on-campus administra tion of the Peace Corps place ment test. The Peace Corps announced that married couples are eli gible, provided that both can serve and have no dependent children. A college degree is not mandatory, as volunteers re ceive training and experience while helping the peoples of emerging nations fight pov erty, disease, ignorance and hunger. James Drew To Edit 'Soil Survey Horizons' Dr. James Drew, soil scien tist in the University Depart ment of Agronomy, has been named editor-in-chief of the professional quarterly publi cation SOIL SURVEY HORI ZONS. The magazine is the offi cial publication of the scien tists cooperating in the 13 state North Central Region under the National Coopera tive Soil Survey program. St. Pcul Methodist Church 12 & M STUDENTS ALWAYS WELCOME Dr. Clorence Forsberg Preaching Services at 9:30 and 11:00 at only $5.00 -! .... ... tiyN. Kit Avr n Tfl fN M, i w j , J I UltL.v'l Netr Jew laW "" I ARROW tamed the collar and let the stripes run wild in this hand some Gordon Dover Club button down. The buttons are whipped precisely into place to make the collar roll over gen: without looking flat and playing dead. The styling is ivy... clean, lean, fully tapered body with back pleat, button and hang loop. 'Stripes and stripes to choose from and solids, too. Applications and further in formation can be acquired through the week in the stu dent council office or the student affairs office. Alternate Cast Equals First 'Butterfly' Show By Mike Keedv Junior Staff Writer "Madame Butterfly's" sec ond night of production yes terday by the alternate cast treated another sellout crowd to a performance equally as dynamic and enchanting as that of Wednesday's opening show. The opera, produced by the University's department of speech in conjunction with the music department, was high lighted by the lyric voice of Gwen Waldo in the title role. Adroit acting was comple mented by a resounding or chestra. Pinkerton, the leading man, was portrayed by Eli jah Powell, whose stunning singing helped create a per formance indicative of the University's musical endeav ors. All tickets have been sold for the remaining two shows. Richard Grace, the Musical director, combined talents with stage director Frank Vy biral, who was aided by Charles Howard, the opera's technical director. Tonight's curtain time for I iftOHOM mil p""eNT I If I "Madame Butterfly" is 8:00 at the University Theater, with Shirley Munns and Rod Gibb returning to the leading roles. Saturday marks the final performance of this year's opera at the University. Pledges Stand Guard Pledges of the Pershing Rifles stood guard at the Women's Residence H a 11 yesterday afternoon from 12:30 to 1:30 as part of their pledge training. How to Boost Your Income As you look forward to many happy years of recrement lei sure, why not consider an an nuity policy with Connecticut Mutual Life? An annuity boosts your annual income considerably while giv ing you the security and peace of mind of a guaranteed retire ment income for life. See us today for figures at your age. L.l WALTER F. 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