The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 09, 1964, Page Page 3, Image 3

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Monday, March 9, 1964
The Dally Nebraskan
Page S
Ony 70 Of 720 Accepted
or Ffl Dental Hygiene
More than 120 inquiries
have been received about the
new dental hygiene curricu
lum which will be offered at
the University College of Den
tistry this fall but only 10 stu
dents can be admitted the
first year.
The program has been
made possible by a $100,000
grant from the Kellogg Foun
dation. Nebraska dentists
have supported development
of the program.
Dean Ralph Ireland an
nounced that the 1964 class Is
being selected now. The pro
gram, he said, will be expand
ed to accommodate 32 stu
dents per year in the future.
A dental health clinic is be
ing established in the Student
Health Service temporarily
due to lack of space and fa
cilities in Andrews Hall
which houses the College of
Dentistry. In the future, the
program will be housed in
the new dental college facil
ity now being planned. Ten
chairs and 10 units will be in
stalled for clinical experience.
The University will offer
both 2-and 4-year curricu
lums. The two-year program
will lead to a certificate in
dental hygiene and qualifies
the candidate for examina
tion by the National Board of
Dental Examiners and the
various state boards of dental
examiners.
The four-year curriculum
will lead to a degree of bach
elor of science in Dental Hy
giene. This curriculum is de
signed for the student who
plans to teach dental hygiene,
enter the field of public health
or participate in a school
health program.
Candidates are required to
take the dental hygiene apti
tude test which is adminis
tered by the American Den
tal Hygienists Association.
This test is given in Novem
ber and February each year.
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SKIRTING OTHER CAMPUSES-
Students See Stars, My na Birds
DESIGN WINS $200
REYNOLDS ALUMINUM PRIZE Sam Condit was
named local winner of the 1964 Reynolds Aluminum Prize
at the University this weekend. Condit received $200 for
his design of an aluminum arched building component
which can be. used for a variety of structures, from park
pavilions to grain storage facilities. The design won seventh
place in the national competition. Condit, a junior, has
been chosen to participate in the Innocents Society Protege
Program.
Beach Party Theme
'Hula Madness' Is Top Booth
Love Memorial Hall's
booth entry of "Hula Mad
ness" won in the annual
Estes Carnival contest at
the Ag Union Saturday
night.
An estimated 650 students
browsed through the booths,
centered around a "beach
party" theme. The booths
were judged on appropriate
ness to the theme, orgin
ality, and audience appead.
The Ag YMCA-YWCA af
fair alsio included a cake
Valk and a "surfers stomp"
dance contest. Proceeds of
$135 are going to a Midwest
"Y" Conference fund.
Living units with booths
included Alpha Gamma Sig
ma, Alpha Gamma Rho, Ag
Men Co-Op, Burr East, Burr
West, Fedde Hall, Farm
House and Love Memorial
Hall.
Club groups with booths
were Agronomy Club, Ro
deo Club, Home Economics
Club, Ag Union and 4-H
Club.
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SAVIN' SUNKEN SURFERS Beachcombers Rich Jorgenson and Ernest Unger try
their luck at the 4-H Club display at the Estes Carnival Saturday.
AWS
Cont'd from Page 2
But for now, I can simply
thank Miss Tenhulzen for
taking a lead in increased
liberalization by leading the
fight for later hours and
abolishing, in effect, the
archaic and unnecessarily
limiting point system. (She
presented both motions.) It
is through leadership such
as hers that an awakening
among college coeds at Ne
braska may arise.
SITTING ON TOP
OF THE WOULD
This young lady is on top of the
world. With the savings she's
accumulated through her Con
fiecticut Mutual Life policy,
she's been able to open a small
business of her own.
Ufa Insurance offers many ad
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who wants to get ahead finan.
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IN5UEANCB CQMEANT
JOHN MORRIS, editors ARNIE (.ARSON, manaKlnK editor! SUSAN SMITH
BFRC.KR news editor: FRANK PARTSCH, MICK ROOD, senior staff writers;
JKRRI O'NEILL, MIKE KEEDY, AL BRANDT, KAY ROOD, Junior sUff writers;
RICHARD HALRKKT, DALE HAJKK, CAY LEITSCIIIICK, copy editors;
DENNIS DeFRAIN, photographer; CHUCK, SALEM i sports editor; PEGGY
SFEECE, assistant sport editor, PRESTON LOVE, circulation manager; JIM
DICK, subscription manaeer; JOHN ZEILINGER, business manaxer; BILL
GLMICKS, BOB CUNNINGHAM. PETE LAGE, business assistants.
Subscription rates $.1 per semester or SS per year.
Entered as second class mstter at the post office In Lincoln, Nebraska,
under the act of August 4. 1812.
The Daily Nebraskan is published at room SI, Student Union, on Monday,
Wednesday, Thursday, Friday by University of Nebraska students under
the Jurisdiction of the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications. Pub
delations shall be free from censorship by the Subcommittee or any
person outside the University. Members of the Nebraskan are responsible
for what they cause to be printed
TODAY
PHI BETA KAPPA will
meet' at 7 p.m. in the Union
Pan American room. Morns
Biship, noted author, poet,
humorist and scholar will
speak on "Pascal and the
Creative Mind."
TOMORROW
PEOPLE TO PEOPLE hos
pitality committee will me.t
at 4 p m. in the Union south
conference room.
NU MED will meet at 7:30
p.m. in 230 Veterinary Sci
ence. Election of officers will
be held.
Oboist Will Perform
With Symphonic Band
Ray Still, principal oboist of
the Chicago Symphony Or
chestra, will appear in con
cert at the University March
15 at the mid-winter Sym
phonic Band performance.
Emanuel Wishnow, chair
mna of the department of mu
sic, said Still will hold a spe
cial clinic on double reed in
struments open to all Nebras
ka high school band directors
and their interested students.
The concert will be held at
4 p.m. in the Union ball- .
room, to be followed by the
clinic in the Union small au
ditorium at 5 p.m.
The band concert will fea
ture two concerts by Still and
numbers by Hoist, Schoen
berg and Clifton Williams.
The appearance of Still is
being sponsored by the music
committee of the Nebraska
Union and the department of
music.
CHEMISTS? B.S. M.S. & Ph.D.
To specialize in a chosen field and to build scientific status for your
self
To grow professionally through your work and study, stimulating
seminars, and advanced lecture courses by visiting professors and other
leading scientists
To advance vertically in the same line of work as fast and far as
your ability will take you
To present papers before national and international scientific meet
ings
To enjoy the advantages of freedom to publish.
IF THESE ARE YOUR GOALS' THEN JOIN US AND ADVANCE YOUR
CAREER IN challenging basic and applied research on the derivatives, re
actions, structure, and general physical and chemical properties of organic
chemical raw materials.
Sign up for an interview with our representative on
March 10, 1964
At Your Placement Office
Or write to
NORTHERN REGIONAL RESEARCH LABORATORY
1815 North University Street
Peoria, Illinois 61604
U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service
THE DAILY TEXAN of the
University of Texas notes
that "It was recently report
ed that British teen-agers
have employed a system of
wearing stars to denote just
how far they will go in their
sex life.
"A one-star youth will not
engage in kissing. A five-star
wearer will reportedly stop at
nothing.
"According to' a social work
er, most of the students sport
from two to four stars. None
have the timidity to wear one
nor the audacity to wear five.
"As one University profes
sor put it, this is "a far cry
from the days when the Bri
tish used just to muddle
through."
Women in sororities and
residence halls at the Univer
sity of Washington will soon
be allowed to stay out until
midnight on weeknights. Those
over 21, seniors, graduate stu
dents and junior "honor
women" will regulate their
own hours.
Hunger strikes are on at
Syracuse University. Students
last week protested "horrible
food" by boycotting Watson,
Sims, and Graham dining
halls.
THE SYRACUSE DAILY
ORANGE reported picketing
of the dining halls. At one
hall, which usually serves
900 meal-ticket holders, only
"The primary reason . for
our stand is our understanding
of the nature of group pray-
Tabor-
Cont'd from Page 2
would be considerable Un
rest and no short transition
period, both of which the
Viet Congs would make has
ty use of.
The relationship between
heads of the departments
of government in the U.S.
and baseball stadiums or
movie theaters blowing up
in Viet Nam is probably
remote; no doubt there will
be some connection in the
future.
Most important for right
now may be the ability to
take another look at the
problem at hand and reas
sess our stand and method.
Or it may be to remove the
aura of blame hovering over
certain people in the U.S.
government and, hence, the
departments they represent.
In either case the resudt
is beneficial. The question
is whether the result will
be a solution to the war
fare in Viet Nam.
er, trie ministers saia in a
statement to the O'COLLEGI-
AN. "Such prayer is an act of
worship by the community
gathered for the purpose of
corporate worship
The Oklahoma State Univer
sity Men's Residence Hall re
cently passed a resolution to
end prayer before football
games, according to the
O 'COLLEGIAN, stutient news
paper. The resolution stated that
prayers before football games
are not appropriate to the oc
casion, that a game sponsored
by a state institution should
not prescribe a prayer and
that prayers before football
games are not suitable for the
many different faifhs repre
sented in the audiences.
"This is the concensus of the
representative group, the
executive- council, and not
necessarily the views of the
respective halls," said Rich
ard Grauel, dorm president.
The ministers on the Okla
homa State agreed with the
resolution, one the basis that
prayer is a sacred moment
within the life of an individual
to be encountered in either
AF Ball Slated Friday
The annual Air Force Ball
will be held Friday at the
Lincoln Air Force Base Of
ficers Club. It will open with
a formal dinner at 7 p.m. A
welcoming program at 8:30
p.m. and a dance at 9 p.m.
will follow.
Dancing will be under the
direction of the Bill AJbers
Band. Attire will be formal;
ladies may wear long and
short formals or cocktail
dresses. Cadets will wear Air
Force dress uniforms or tuxedos.
private or corporate gather
ings.
Among the University's my
riad of research projects,
there isn't a cussing myna
bird ... at Hofstra University
there is.
One of thirty myna birds,
purchased by Dr. Robert Gos
sette for use in speech exper
iments, received some extra
education during the birds'
Hofstra stay. A bored night
worker at Gossette's labora
tory spent nis spare time add
ing salty phrases to the bird's
vocabulary.
When a group of distin
guished educators visited
Gossette's laboratory, the bird
demonstrated his newly ac
quired vocabulary of four
letter words.
After his "obscenity-studded"
display, the mislead
bird was sent home for "in
tensive retraining" with a
Hofstra student assistant.
Barry
Cont'd from Page Z
also intellectual button
pushers. If there is a difference be
tween them it is that when
the liberal wants to push a
button he thinks it will au
matically close something.
Perhaps there is a better
and more accurate imagery
to help explain what I am so
awkwardly trying to ex
plain. It might be found in
the words of Sir Harold
Nicolson, most reflective of
British diplomats, who sug
gested that the statesman
is not an architect creating
on a blank page, but a gard
ener cultivating "forces of
nature" toward a desired
end.
LEARN MORE ABOUT
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ATTEND THIS FREE LECTURE BY:
JAMES WATT, C.S.
OF WASHINGTON, D.C.
Member of The Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The
First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts.
ENTITLED!
"Christian Science: What ft Teaches And What It Dees"
TIME: Wednesday Afternoon, March 11, 1964
at 4:00 P.M.
PLACE: Chapel of The Cotner. School of Religion,
1237 "R" Street.
Sponsored by the University of Nebraska
Christian Science Organization
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