Thursday, April 1, 1965 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 s, ireek 9 IBIS TIME: Beginning 2 p.m. Friday until Tuesday eve ning. PLACE: Nebraska campus, Pershing Auditorium, Crete, 26 miles between Crete and Lincoln. EVENT: GREEK WEEK 1965 A chariot bath (car wash), a marathon race, a parade, the Greek Games, a ball, din ners, teas, seminars, banquet-All these things mean a hec tic weekend and first of next week for the city of Lincoln and the University during Greek Week which begins Fri day at 2 p.m. when the first marathon runner leaves Crete for Lincoln. Crete's mayor formally will start the chain of events when he lights the torch that will be carried by Greek marathon runners from Crete to Lin coln. F. C. Green, IFC secretary, will run the first mile and then a different fraternity member wearing a Greek toga will run every succeeding mile. The final runner will arrive carrying the torch at the Ne-, Student Continued from Page 1 meeting. Another motion suggested, but tabled, called for setting the price of advertising on the cards for the businesses. John Luckasen, chairman of the Student Welfare Com mittee, suggested that the ad vertising rates for the cards be the same as last year. He said the rates last year were $25 for the first and second line, $10 for the third line and $5 for the fourth line. Student Council decided to table the motion setting the price of advertising until next week so that more exact fig ures could be provided. Bob Kerry announced that applications for Student Sen- CLASSIFIED -ADS WANTED Male roomat to share four room apart ment for summer 1' blocks south of campus. Call 432-0285 evenings. FOR RENT Furnished room for male student near agriculture campus, private or double, kitchen privileges. T.V. telephone. Call 434-3654. FOR SALE Enjoy yourself. In a white 1957 Porsche JftoO, with brown leather interior, ra dio, and new engine. This beauty has never been wrecked a rarity In the sports car world. 434-5833. r rv m fit ?M, fa cxa Co) d i -A did) (o) i mi iHiiHiuito - -' """" nm-mmm iiiTiri, n.,., , n, m.r .m. ,f I. : , .n,..,...-., .H -rrfr -.... - ,-- -- - - - - --fl T"T If 1 I III OUR STARS: Pat Patterson Stan Schlachter Steve Bradford Peg! Bryans Vally Seller Donna Marie Black Steve Westphal Larry Vrba Week TOBYDOOTOV braska football stadium at about 4:30 p.m. At the same time marathon runners are carrying the torch to Lincoln from Crete, Greek Week will also be starting in Lincoln. A parade of chariots will proceed down the middle of 0 Street beginning at 3 p.m. Friday and then will end their procession at the south prac tice field where the Greek Games will begin. The men's Tug of War and the women's twelve-legged race will start at 3:30. At 4:15 is the men's Dvramid race and at 5 p.m. is the women's ob stacle race. The last game will be the chariot race at 5:45 p.m. Friday night there will be numerous house parties and other activities nn camnus pel- ebrating the first day of Greek ween. A chariot bath otherwise known as a car wash will be the bift event Saturday morn ing and afternoon. Over 1,000 fraternity and sorority mem bers will be involved in a gi gantic car wash to make mon- Council ate were available starting to morrow in the Student Affairs Office and that applications must be filed between April 5 and 10. Thursday night there will be a meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Union of all people in terested in filing for Student Council. John Lydick, Student Coun cil president, said that inter views for justices of the Stu dent Court would be Friday afternoon. The general election will be May 5. John Kenagy, chairman of the Senators Committee, said that he was surprised by Sen ator Calista Cooper Hughes' comments about the ineffec tiveness of the Senators Tour on campus. In answer to Senator Hughes' description of the tours as lacking enthusiasm and interest, Kenagy said, "We aren't trying to put on a show with a loaded tour, we only want to show what ac tual conditions are and this is hard to show." He also said that in the fu ture all senators would have a chance to visit a classroom either in Avery Laboratory or Bessy Hall. Senator Hughes made her comments last Thursday night to the Young Republicans. 6 ttt t to't UN presented by U of N Kosmet Klub public invited to attend rv&J) Tickets available at W ey to buy a billboard for the outskirts of Lincoln which will advertise the University. The cars will be washed from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at two locations Nebraska Hall parking lot, 901 No. 17th, and Selleck Quadrangle parking lot, 600 No. 15th. Gary Larsen, IFC Affairs chairman, said that they were hoping to wash at least 500 cars. The Eccentrics will play at the Greek Week Ball wich starts at 9 p.m. Saturday eve ning. The ball will be held at Pershing Auditorium and new Gamma Gamma mem bers, an honorary for out standing fraternity and soror ity members, will be recog nized at the ball. Sunday morning all Greeks are being encouraged to at tend church and at 2:30 Sun day there will be a House mothers' Tea. Ten seminars for fraternity and sorority members will al so be held Sunday afternoon. IFC will have workshops on scholarship, pledge education and rush. Pan Hellenic will hold sem inars on pledge training, scholarship, rush, activities and standards. Joint IFC and Pan Hellenic meetings will be on health and social life. Monday evening all houses on campus will hold exchange dinners. The following hous es will function together: Pi Beta Phi and Alpha Tau Omega; Alpha Delta Pi, Beta Sigma Psi and Sigma Chi; Kappa Delta, Sigma Delta Tau, Alpha Gamma Rho and Sigma Alpha Mu: Gamma Phi Beta, Phi Delta Theta and Chi Phi; Sigma Kappa. Triangle, and Pi Kappa Phi; Alpha Omicron Pi, Delta Sigma Phi and Delta Upsilon ; Kappa Alpha Theta, Sigma Nu and FarmHouse: Alpha Phi and Beta Theta Pi; Alpha Xi Delta, Delta Tau Delta and Acacia; Alpha Chi Omega and Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Zeta Tau Alpha, Theta Chi and Phi Gamma Delta; Delta Del ta Delta and Sigma Phi Ep silon; Kappa Kappa Gamma, Theta Xi and Alpha Gamma Sigma; Delta Gamma and Phi Kappa Psi; and Chi Ome ga and Kappa Sigma. At 7 p.m. Monday, Mrs. George King, past first vice president of Alpha Xi Delta and Alpha Xi Delta's delegate to National Pan Hellenic, will speak on ' Let X equal." Serenades are encouraged for oMnday night at 11 p.m. Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. there will be a recognition dinner for top Greek scholars and the IFC Sophomore Scholarship and Abrahamzon Award will be awarded. T OwsierO try Knn IX' y N LIY the Student $3.00 $2.50 $.150 TODAY INTER VARSITY BUG GROUP, 12:30, 234 Nebraska Union. PLACEMENT OFFICE, 12:30, 241 Nebraska Union. BUILDERS - PUBLICITY, 3:30, 232-Nebraska Union. QUIZ BOWL Committee, 3:30, 322 Nebraska Union. UNION MUSIC Committee, 4:30, North party room, Ne braska Union. A.W.S. Court, 4:30, South conference room. Nebraska Union. UNION CONTEMPORARY Arts Committee, 4:30, 232 Ne braska Union. UNION TRIPS & TOURS Committee, 4:30, 235 Nebras ka Union. Y.W.C.A. Cabinet, 4:30, 332. Nebraska Union. I.F.C. Rush Committee, 6:30, 235 Nebraska Union. A.U.F., 6:30, 334. Nebraska Union. QUIZ BOWL, 7, auditorium, Nebraska Union. KOSMET KLUB Rehearsal, 7. ballroom. Nebraska Union. STUDENT COUNCIL Elec tion Committee, 7:30, North conference room, Nebraska Union. SPANISH CLUB, 7:30, 232 34 Nebraska Union. SELLECK Quadrangle Re hearsal, 9, South party room, Nebraska Union. STUDENT TRIBUNAL 5 p.m., 419 Administration. RADIO CLUB, 7:30 p.m., M and N Building. Legislature Hears Bond Case Today Consideration of the Uni versity's proposed revenue bond plan is scheduled to be gin today in the Legislature. Earlier, a letter from the Justice Department concern ing a ''substantial question" over the validity of the plan, was read by Senator Fern Hubbard Orme of Lincoln. The letter added that the Justice Department cannot declare positively that the pro posed act would be held in valid if it were subjected to a court test. The proposed may not com ply with the state's prohibi tion against state debt in ex cess of $100,000, according to the attorney general. ui: I Scoreboard FarmHouse I 1S5, Pharmacy Col lege 50. Sigma Nu 130, Fairfield 12(1. Erlectici 225, Ag Men 80. Sigma Phi Epsilon 125, Lore Memorial Hall SO. Phi Psi Wizards 275. Kappa Big ma 211. Delta Upsilon 225. Kappa Alpha Theta 145. i O U X Fb ft. I rr n t ,Z3 i jj 1 1 t t Union or from any K.K. Worker Red Cross To Hold Water Safety Schools Instructor and leadership training in water safety, first aid, and small craft will be offered this summer in Amer ican National Red Cross Aquatic and Small Craft Schools in seven midwestern states. With more and more Amer ican families enjoying water recreation each year, the Red Cross Water Safety program now in its 51st year antici pates an ever-increasing need for trained instructors in swimming and boating. The aquatic schools to be held in Illinois, Iowa, Michi gan, Missouri, Oklahoma, Texas, and Wisconsin are designed to train Red Cross Water Safety instructors. The curriculum includes swim ming, lifesaving, basic small craft safety, and first a i d. Leadership training in the or ganization of camp, commu nity, and swimming pool aquatic programs is also pro vided. There will be a special sec tion in the aquatic schools for training Red Cross First Aid instructors. There are no swimming requirements in these courses. Small craft schools offer Red Cross in structor training In boating, canoeing, and sailing. No first aid or swimming courses are offered at small craft schools. Two of the aquatic schools will offer elective courses in handicapped swimming; one, an elective in canoeing for in structor training; and one, an elective in competitive swim ming. Outstanding volunteer aqua tic and safety experts make up the faculty, resulting In no charge for instruction. The students pay only for room meals, and individual sup plies. Enrollment is open to both experienced instructors and prospective instructor candi dates, age 18 or older. Appli cation may be made through local Red Cross chapters or through American National Red Cross. Midwestern Area, 4050 Lindell Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. 63108. Locations and dates for the 1965 schools are: Lone Star MV Camp, Athens, Tex., June 1-11; Lake Murray State Park, Camp No. 2, Ardmore, Okla. June 2-12; Southern - Illinois University Little Grassy Lake Campus, Carbondale, 111., June 9-19; Lutheran Lakeside Camp, Spirit Lake, la., June 13-23; Camp Ohiyesa Holly, Mich., June 16-26; Camp Wah-Kon-Dah, Rocky Mount, Mo., August 24-September 3. Small craft schools are scheduled at Sandstone-Day-; Cho-Lah Camps, Green Lake, , Wisconsin, June 13-23; and in conjunction with the aquatic j school at Rocky Mount, Mo., I August 24-September 3. The proposal may not com-1 Sx - XX.''y;: - K1 Director Lou Ann Hall Set Designer Charles Howard Musical Director Terry Boyes began in 1922. There will be 24 aquatic schools held across the country this year, with a total enrollment of about 3,000. IFC Problem Continued from Page 1 The Ball is not limited to Greeks, he said, but is open to the whole campus. Bill Mowbray, Sigma Nu, suggested to the Council that they re-evaluate the Greek Week program, and make some changes next year, since "there is nothing new" this year over the past. Sam Baird, chairman of the Fraternity Manager's Associa tion, (FMA) Committee told the Council that he had been talking with Larry Price, man ager of Kings of America, about providing food services for the Association. He said that in the future, contracts for food will prob ably be signed between the house and the supplier, in stead of FMA and the sup plier. In this way, the con tracts will be more legally binding on the houses, he said. Skip Soiriff, Sigma Alpha Mu, told the Council that plans are under way to have a so cial hour discussion group with John Kenneth Galbraith, noted economist who will be sp aking on the campus Fri day and Saturday. Plans are only tentative, Soiriff said, since absolute word has not been received from Galbraith. Soiriff said he expected a telegram today with Galbraith's answer. The social hour would be held Saturday afternoon and would be open to all interested students, Soiriff said. Since adequate facilities may not be available at the Union, he said that possibly the meet ing could be held in the living room of one of the fraternity houses. Dan Isman, Delta Tau Del ta, told the Council that Don Ferguson, past president of IFC, will be a guest speak er at the Greek Week seminar to be held Sunday at 2:30 in the Pawnee Room of the Union. John Luckasen. Phi Delta Theta, told the Council that Dr. .Samuel Fuenning, . direc tor ot student Health, will speak to a seminar Sunday afternoon. Luckasen told the delegates that if their houses did not already have a health chairman, they should appoint one to represent the house at the meeting. -WATCH REPAIR campus BOOKSTORE xi; - :'W;; - 'i';:';':'X': !!::! Ill '-' llflll WW '.: it I n College Publishes Business Journal The spring issue of the Ne braska Journal of Economics and Business has just been published by the College of Business Administration at the University. Articles In the spring issue include: "The Corporate Tax Bur den: Fact and Fiction" by F. O. Woodward, assistant pro fessor of economics, Ohio State University. "The Value Bases of Neo classical Capitalism" by R. C. Lindstromberg, associate professor of economics, Ore gon State University. "The Implications of Ex change and Trade Controls for Underdeveloped Coun tries" by Lt. Donald Sherk, assistant professor of social sciences, United States Mili-' tary Academy. The Nebraska Journal of Economics and Business is published as a service for all tlhose interested In economic and business problems, ac cording to Dr. Campbell McConnell, chairman of the editorial board and professor of economics at the University. smog only Olio Form ol ip Pollution by Charles M. Heinen Assistant Chief Engineer, Chemical Engineering Development Chrysler Corporation os angeles smog is as infamoui as Hollywood movies are fa mous. However, unlike the weather, which everyone talks about but no one does anything about, something is being done about smog. Photochemical smog, as the Los .Angeles variety is known techni cally, should not be confused with other varieties of smog. Other areas have other forms of air pollution,' including lesser degrees of photo chemical smog. The Los Angelea variety is caused by the photochemical reaction of a layer of air containing r i hydrocarbons and oxides of nitrogen ! "V. to sunlight. Los Angeles, and a""!1"- aaaaafat C. M. Heinen to some extent all of California, is a victim of its own enjoyable climate.: It is under a persistent high pressure Isystem which blankets the Los lAngeles basin with a thin layer of warm air known as an inversion.; Combined with almost ever-present sunlight, this thin layer of air traps. organic impurities emitted from surface sources, such as factories land automobiles, and the reaction is photochemical smog. ! In the early 1950s, the automo Ibile was cited as a major contributor to Los Angeles smog because at that time the internal combustion 'engine emitted unburned hydrocar bons through its crankcase, tailpipe,' and to a lesser degree from the gat tank and carburetor by evaporation. Engine conditions also forced nitrogen into combination with joxygen to create oxides of nitrogen 'emitted through the exhaust. Automobile companies, working cooperatively through the Auto mobile Manufacturers Association (AMA), and independently, sought means to reduce emissions to the standards established by the Cali fornia Board of Public Health. Antismog Research Chrysler Corporation scientists and engineers have been leaders in this antismog research for many 'years. In 1962 we began a test program of a Cleaner Air Package i(CAP). Chrysler's CAP is a system oil irektively simple and inexpensive ngine modifications which substani itially reduce the emission of hydro carbons when combined with nor mal engine maintenance. Our research convinced us that tie place to burn off undesirable combustible is in the automobile engine itself and not at some other location in the vehicle. Burning it achieved by creating a lean fuel-air mixture, a retarded spark at idle, and an advanced spark during de celeration. Late last year, California ap proved CAP at an exhaust control device, the first device developed by an automotive manufacturer to win such approval, lt will go on all Chrysler-made cars and trucks built or transported into California be ginning with our 1966 models. Applied to Limited Area It should be remembered that this work was aimed directly at rthntnrhemirfll muii. f!AP nr anu other form of auto exhaust control. is not a panacea tor air pollution in problem areas where factors which contribute to smog-like conditions may be entirely different, and un related to auto engines. A tvnical exanttile nf niher vnr of air pollution in which the auto- mooiie piayt a major part are th. London "pea soupers." Here the pri mary comnnnents are inn an1 anU fur dioxide from toft coal imoke. Only after these areas make detailed studies as were done in California can the sources of air pollution be pinpointed and cura tive measures oegun. nupvci cd wa nil - a-ai a CORPORATION