Monday, February 17, 1964 The Daily Nebraskan Pago 3 oyirteem) Vying At Id CO I. w Ideally Cornfed utstarodiiig' (Foiiios JunOOIT ' v ;0;fe. ; 1 .xW8fe,i . I ; ;: V..!.. .4 v F' :Z&&&?MT &:'.W 1 7r xrT . i fft if ) 1 " niiinnmniiiiiiiiiiiin in iiirmi Tin in n in i u iii.iimw. .in.iwnn- inn 11 it ltimrrri mi iii.il. "r i r -i-n rri IDEAL NEBRASKA COED FINALISTS to be elected at the AWS Coed Folles Feb. 28 are (back) Nancy Holmqulst, Joan Skinner, (front) Barbara Pandzik, Karen Benting, Su san Ayres, Jean Probasco, and Joanne Stratmen. BMOCs W w f FINALISTS FOR IDEAL COLLEGIATE MAN are (back) Mike Barton, Gary John Lydick, John Lonnquist, (front) Tom Kort, Glenn Korff and Tom Schwenke. Fick, Itinerary Set For Columbian Students Twelve visiting Columbian student leaders will meet with student groups, tour dormi tories, fraternities and soror ities and attend classes dur ing their four-day tour of the University. The students are at the University at the invi tation of the U.S. Department of State. Their itinerary for the four days is i Monday 9:00 a.m. Take Inter-campus bus from Nebraska Cen ter to Nebraska Union. 9:30 a.m. Meet at Union with People-to-People repre sentatives. Welcoming Speech by Dean Ross. 10:30 a.m. To Student Un ion Ball Room to hear speech by Sen. Douglas (Balcony). Noon Lunch in Union with Sen. Douglas and Build ers representatives. 1:00 p.m. Tour of campus. 4:00 p.m. Meet with Un ion Board. 5:00 p.m. Meet' in Union Lounge with members of RAM, WRA. Dinner in Resi dence Halls. Visit meeting of RAM Council. Tuesday 8:30 a.m. Bus to Capitol for tour Visit Court Room. 11:30 a.m. Meet with Gov ernor Morrison. 12:00 noon Lunch at Gold's cafeteria. 1:30 p.m. Farm tour. 5:00 p.m. Met at Union by fraternity and sorority repre sentatives Dinner at greek houses. 8:00 p.m. Round table dis cussion with Student Council, 234-235 Student Union. Wednesday 9:00 a.m. Bus to city cam pus to meet at Union with NIA Representatives. 9:30-11:30 a.m. Visit class es. 11:15 a.m. Leave Union. 11:30 a.m. Lunch at Lin coln High School. 12:30-2:00 p.m. Tour of vo cational trade facilities, Lin coln High School. 2:00 p.m. Leave Lincoln High School. 2:15-4:15 p.m. T our of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co., Lincoln plant. 4:30 p.m. Student Council meeting Dinner at Union with Student Council mem bers. 7:30 p.m. Visit IFC, Build ers, Quiz Bowl. 9:00 p.m. Back to Center for informal coffee hour with Student Council members, Hastings Room. Thursday Morning Free. Noon Union luncheon Ban quet at Pan American Room. After Lunch Take bus back to Center. 5:00 p.m. Leave Muni cipal Airport Frontier Flight 195. Loans Available Student loans under he Na tional Defense Education Act can amount to $1,000 per year. Interest at 3 per cent begins one year after the student leaves the Univer sity; no interest is charged while the student is in school. Finalists for the 1964 Ideal Nebraska Coed and Outstand ing Collegiate Man competi tion were announced yester day. Winners will be selected from these fourteen junior men and women students and announced at the annual per formance of Coed Follies on February 28. The finalists, selected on the basis of scholarship, poise, !ersonality, activities and eadership are: Susan Ayres, has a 6.3 grade average and is a speech major. She is also a mem ber of Alpha Phi sorority, serves on the Student Council, AWS Junior Board and Or chesis Executive Board. Karen Benting has a 7.2 grade average and is an Eng lish major. She is a Regents scholar, the president of Builders, a member of S t u dent ' Council, a Panhellenic delegate, and a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority. Nancy Holmquist has a 1 9 rtyaAa a'tra tra anil Ifi ma. Noring in English. A Regents scholar, she is vice-president of Builders, and is on the ex ecutive council of her sorori ty, Delta Gamma. Barbara Ann Pandzik, an art and English major, has a 7.9 grade average. She is a Regents scholar, scholarship chairman of her sorority, Gamma Phi Beta, and a member of Alpha Lamboda Delta honorary society. 4 Jean Probasco, is a polit ical science major and a Re gents schoar with a 8.2 grade average. She is a vice presi dent of Builders, a member of Student Council, as well as Alpha Xi Delta sorority. Joanie Skinner Is a Re gents scholar, is majoring in home economics and holds a 7.5 grade average. She is a council member , of the Na tional College Home Econom ics Association and a member of Alpha Chi Omega. JoAnn Strateman, has an 8.6 grade average and is ma joring in German and French, A National Merit Scholar, she is a member of Delta P hi Alpha honorary and Kappa Alpha Theta sororities. Finalists for the Outstand- r ' ml' Texas Instruments announces FEBRUARY 21 Tl's family of professionals at oft degree levels works at 89 different specialties in , , . GnGLrjGGQSHG AND THE PHYSICAL SCIENCES Tl h a muHidiviitonol company with the follow tug two divisions conducting campus Interviewsi 'k APPARATUS DIVISION (Aerospace, electronic, mechanical, and instrumentation systems) SEMICONDUCTOR-COMPONENTS DIVISION (Transistors, Integrated circuits and other electronic components) ' . yor College" PJocwwit Officer to arrange Interview during Tl's visit or to examine Tt's "Career Oppor CuHTAuT lunlty Guide" which details the many professional career VVtiinwiiu possibilities awaiting you at Texas Instruments. If incon venient to arrange campus interview during dates noted above, send resume or request for further information lo Mr. T.H.Dudley, Dept. C-35... Texas Instruments INCORPORATED P O. BOX 347 DALUAS 22, TEXAS H PUWfcUlipCeiWTRIES OFFICES IN 75 PRINCIPAL CWS Of THC WORI& ing Collegiate Man title are: Thomas G. Schwenke, has a 6.0, average and is a pre law major. He is the presi dent of Kappa Sigma frater nity, the president of Region 11 Association of College Unions, and has been named an outstanding Union worker. Michael U Barton is a Regents scholar with a 6.9 grade average and is a sociol ogy major. He is a member of Student Counil, the Governor's Council of Youth, and Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. ohn H. Lonnquist Jr. is an English major and a Re gents scholar with a 7.4 grade average. He is on the Inter fraternity Council President of All-University Fund com mittee, and i s a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Tom Kort is an IFC and Regents scholarship winner with a 7.8 grade average, and is majoring in pre-law. He is on the Student Council Execu tive Board, and is a member of Beta Sigma Psi fraternity. Gary Fick is a Regents scholar with a 8.6 grade aver-, age and has been awarded a National Science Foundation research grant as an under graduate. He is an agronomy major and a member of Burr Hall. Glenn Korff holds a 17.2 grade average as a pre-medi-cal student. He is a member of Kosmet Klub, president of his fraternity, Sigma Phi Ep silon, and a delegate to the Big-8 Student Council Conven tion. John E. Lydick has a 6.3 grade average as an engineer ing major. He is a Regents scholar, a member of Student Council, and scholarship chairman of Delta Tau Pelta. NU Debaters Win Trophey At Tourney Ten members of the inter collegiate debate squad, under the direction of Dr. Donald Olson and Dr. John Petelle, participated last week in the Twentieth Annual Speech and Debate Tournament at Wis consin State College in Edu Claire, Wise. Of the five categories of in dividual speech events, Bill Harding placed first in after dinner speaking, bringing home a trophy for the Ne braska team. In senior division debate, the Nebraska teams of Bud Kim-ball-Donn Rojeski and Lynn Griffin-Bill Harding each had two wins and three losses. In junior division debate, the Nebraska teams had the fol lowing records. Bill Wood and Byron Lee, four wins and one loss; Terry Schaff and Roger Doerr, three wins and two losses; Susie Segrist and Kathy Shatuck, one win and four losses. Nebraska was one of 35 schools from eight states who participated in the tournament. Douglas Has 10:30 Forum Senator Paul Douglas of linois will participate in a news forum this morning at 10:30 in the Nebraska Union ballroom. Douglas will be accompanied by three Washington corre spondents for the forum spon sored by the Union talks and topics committee, The corre spondents include: Neal Stan ford, CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR; Lucian Warren, BUFFALO COURIER - EX PRESS and John Metcalfe, syndicated news columnist. McConnell Paper Discusses USSR C. R. McConnell, Professor of Economics, will present a paper, "Whither Soviet Growth?", Thursday, at 7;80 in 235 Student Union. The paper will examine past and present Soviet eco nomic growth and develop ment and will emphasize fac tors that are likely to be im portant in the future perform ance of that economy. Interested facult -, graduate and other advanced students are welcome. Coffee and group discussion' will follow presentation of the paper. TODAY UNICORNS meeting, 7 p.m., 235 Student Union. TOMORROW STUDENT COUNCIL AS SOCIATES meeting 7 p.m., 234 Student Union. NEBRASKA UNION SILVER ANNIVERSARY February Special CAMPUS PAC 25c-$1.50 COMING FEBRUARY 24-28 ExciTingThings Happen at Ford Motor Company ! ' .. , i. rill ni Tinimi mi fn 1 ftU. v lt f r Good news for aficionados of medium-cubed V-89s who prefer to remain shifdess! Four-on-the-floor is fine but not everyone's cup of tea. If you're an automatic devotee, we think you'll be cheered by 11 what Ford Motor Company transmission engineers have designed in the way of exciting goodies to go with our new hotter V-8 mills in the medium-displacement class. It's a spanking new 3-speed automatic drive that adds more hustle without extra muscle in Comet, Fairlane and Ford models for '64. Among its many virtues: less avoirdupois . . . fewer parts , smoother takeiQffs . t . up to 35 more go in Low . , . extra braking In downhill work . . . whisper-quiet in Neutral , . , quarterback-style passing performance! The men at Ford who design such intricacies as transmis-' sions are not just walking slide rules ot talking computers. Jhey're.menwho get excitedjtbqut cars and the fun of driving them. They enjoy meeting challenges like "Peslgti' a new automatic drive with 4-speed stick-shift perform ance built right in." Frankly, they are among the mpst avid car buffs around and it shows in their workl More proof of the exciting things that happen at Ford" Motor Company to bring brighter ideas and bettr-built cars to the American Road. MOTOR COMPANY Th Amtrlcsn Roid, Daarborn, Michigan WHIRI BNOIHKKRINO LBADRSHI ItlNOS yOU TTBnlllkT CARS 'I j I f. : p, i pit t wv. , 1 V he. H : ; m V. 'I I' C ' 'i . V r ( '