The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 !"wii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iMtiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiiiiiitiiiiiiiiMiiiiiif miiiif itfiniif rti in ifiitTitiiiiMiiiiiiiiirt riiunniriiiiif inn nitiriiuir tit iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiuiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii nm iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiig PROSPECTIVE CORPSMEN STOP, LISTEN, LEARN Thursday, March 19, 1964 PHOTO BY DENNIS DeFRAIN ' COME ON GANG The Peace Corps is on campus this week seeking volunteers to participate in the pro gram. Richard Masters (left) heeded their call and took the Peace Corp test. Two nurses, center, listen as Ger trude Schwartz explains the procedure to follow in ap plying for membership in the Peace Corps. Miss Sch wartz and Bob Scheureman (center) are two of the vol unteers appearing on the campus. Scheuerman is an assistant professor of Romance languages at the Uni versity and is a returned Peace Corps volunteer. Miss Schwartz is from Washington u.V. AWS Installs Board; Miss Benda Is Prexy Janie Benda was installed as president of Associated Women's Students (AWS) Tuesday. Other elected offi cers and their positions are: Susie Ayres, program vice president, and Joan Skinner, AWS vice-president. Miss Skinner will also preside at the AWS court which meets every Thursday. The four senior board mem bers and their appointed of fices include Joann Strate mann, recording and corre sponding secretary; Bonnie Knudsen, chairman of the point system and AWS hand book; Nancy Holmquist, chair man of AWS workers and Joan Phipps, who will be in charge of the Ivy Day Sing this year. The seven senior board members and their appointed offices are Jan Whitney, chair man of house of representa tives; Vicki Dowling, Coed Follies chairman; Lynn Irish, notifications chairman; Caro 1 y n Johnsen, notifications chairman; Dianna Kosman, publicity chairman; Marilyn Masters, coed counselor chair man, and Patti Teel, AWS treasurer. The newly-elected sopho more board members are their respective appointed of fices include: Janie Agee, ac tivities mart chairman; Tish Wells and Carol Bischoff, rec ord assistants; Carolyn Baird, coed counselor assistant and AWS workers assistant; Kar en Gepford, notifications as sistant; Peggy Prien, Ag no tifications assistant and count esy chairman; Diane Smith, publicity and program assist ant. An installation dinner was held at the Student Union fol lowing the meeting. ttllliil!M; iify4 n vn-.-A ' ' I 1 .t-w. , . kiJ riff l I i f I PHOTO BY DENNIS DeFRAIN PHOTO BY DENNIS DeFRAIN William Peters Picked YD College Director William Peters has been ap pointed college director for the Young Democrat Clubs of Nebraska. Peters is a senior in the College of Law and is editor of the Nebraska Law Review. Joseph Badami, YD pres ident said, "It is our in tention to organize Young Democrats on every campus in Nebraska in time to partici pate in the 1964 campaign." 17 MGCIBYIQtQI file For Adds EDITORS NOTE: This is the first of a series of stories on candidates running for state offices in Nebraska. Coming are articles on sena torial candidates. Over 175 persons have filed for Nebraska's redistricted legislature election in Novem ber. There are now six more Unicameral seats to be con tested, bringing the total to 49 districts. Three more senators will represent the Omaha area, two more in the Lincoln area and one more in the Norfolk area. The last session's re districting action gave more emphasis to population repre sentation. Incumbants are lacking in fourteen districts while incumbants J. W. Burbach, Richard Marvel, Elvin Adam son and George Gerdes will be running unopposed. One of the prominent legis lators stepping down this year is Hal Bridenbaugh of Dakota City who represented Dixon and Thurston counties. Bridenbaugh was on the rules committee, budget com mittee, intergovernmental co operation committee and committee on committees dur ing the last session. All committee chairmen are returning except William Brandt of Unadilla who heads the Salaries and claims com mittee. District filings: First District Calista Hughes of Humboldt,. Floyd Pohlman of Auburn, Jack Mc Grath of Crab Orchard and Bill Price of Pawnee City. Second District Rick Budd of Nebraska City, Frank Sor rell of Syracuse and Carl Swanson of Waverly. Third District Incumbant Dale Payne from Omaha who served on the salaries and cliams and government and military affairs committees at the last session will oppose Waldo Shallcross of Bellevue. Fourth District Lawrence Shaw, Hen-ry Pedersen, Rich ard Dustin, Milton Soskln, Woodrow Fleming and George Abdouch, all of Omaha. Fifth District Incumbant Eugene Mahoney who served on the banking, commerce and insurance and miscellan eous subjects committees and as chairman of the enrollment and review committee. Sixth District Salvatore Tnurco, Wallace Rankin, Frank Rihu, Harold Kelly, Harry Roach, Harold Moylan and Arthur Hanson all of Omaha. Seventh District Incum bant William Skarda from Omaha who served on the banking, commerce and insur ance committee, committee on committees, intergovern mental cooperation and mis cellaneous subjects commit tees to oppose Archie Wilfong of Omaha. Eighth District James Beveridge, George Grunberg, David Stahmer William Kirk man, Dale Hooker, Alice White, Harry Foster, Edward Lund, Pat Moulton, Robert Daley, H. L. Patterson, Don ald Patterson, Charles Rog ers, Albert Marcil and George Duncan all of Oma ha. Ninth District Incumbant Sam Klaver will have six opponents in November. Nick Pillege, Gerald Mathews, Ed ward Mertz, John McMahon, V. Deutsch Sullivan and E. Tom Gumbert, all of Omaha, have filed. Klaver was chair man of the public health com mittee and served on the committee on committees and the labor and public welfare committee in the last term. Tenth District-Clifton Bat chelder, Cliff Ogden, Allen Pirsch, Art McMahon, Robert Gehringer, Robert Bevins and Thomas Nybbelin, all of Oma ha. Eleventh District Edward Danner seeking re-election, served on the education, la bor and public welfare and public health committees in the last session. Roy White, Hezekiah Stewart, and Ralph Adams will oppose Danner, who is from Omaha. Twelfth District Edwin Rehder and William Briza of Ralston, Richard Proud, Lola Popken and Charles By strek of Omaha, William Cole of Irvington and George Woodward of Valley have filed. Thirteenth District George Syas, a member since 1951, served on the agriculture and com m i 1 1 e e on committees dfx; lection while heading the miscellan eous subjects committee. He will be opposed by M. N. Mitchell also of Omaha. Fourteenth District Otto Bromm of Tekamah, B. F. Lundt of Blair, C. W. Holm quist of Oakland and Paul Christensen of Lyons have filed. TODAY YOUNG REPUBLICANS will hold elections at 7 p.m. in the Union Pan American room. YOUNG DEMOCRATS will be held at 7 p.m. in 235 Union. YWCA World Community Luncheon will be held at the United College Christian Fel lowship at 12:30 p.m. The luncheon will cost 35 cents. STUDENT TRI B U N A L will be held at 5. p.m.' in the Administration building. HOME ECONOMICS CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Food and Nutrition building lounge. TOMORROW JAZZ N' JAVA will be held at 4 p.m. in the Union Crib. "BROTHERS KARAMA ZOV, union movie, will be shown at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the Union small auditor ium. Admission is 25 cents with student identification. "THE LANGUAGE OF HAMLET", an address by Professor Madeleine Doren will be held in University Theatre at 10:30 a.m. MANUFACTURERS CANCEL o Cigarette Ads Causes Problems Cigarettes are threatening to go up in a puff of smoke on college campuses. Columnist Max Schulman, long time writer of columns in college newspapers, is now without a job. sHe wrote col umns for Marlboro Cigarette. Only last April Schulman completed his ninth year of writing this column. His col umn has appeared in the DAILY NEBRASKAN. Pressured by the Federal government, PTA groups and school administrators, the National Association of Cig arette Manufacturers agreed to voluntarily cancel all to bacco advertising in scholas tic media. The Grand Prix and Wins ton quizzes fell prey to the same fate. Free samples are out too. The measure came as a sur prise to some college publi cation business managers. The DAILY NEBRASKAN lost approximately $3,500 in cigarette advertising in the current year, according to John Zeilinger, business man ager. THE DAILY TEXAN cried that the resultant budget cutbacks would prove a se vere financial burden and could cause a reduction in reader services. Most college puulications derive the major share of their income from advertising and the revenue loss in many cases can only be balanced by increasing fees assessed on the student readers. Several universities with salaried news staffs are ex pected to return their news operations to a volunteer basis. The sale of cigarettes has been banned on the Kansas University campus by a re cent decision, of the Board of Regents there, according to the DAILY KANSAN. The order came after a re port by the associate profes sor of surgery at the KU Med ical Center. The sale of cig arettes will be banned in all university buildings, resi dence halls and the union, ac cording to L. C. Woodruff, dean of students. "We have no immediate jurisdiction over the fraternity and soror ity houses," he said. are THE jRRSRS IIHCm PETER. MM 5 7 ' I the most in DRY CLEANING J STILL at 1 I s jLmn ana u (Campus Location) and St. ONE HOUR MARTIN IZING PRICES MEN'S LADIES' i Pant! . , ! 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