The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 08, 1965, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Monday, Nov. 8, 1965
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 3
Antnoiogy I
Schooner' St
The University's literary ,
quarterly magazine, "Prairie i
Schooner," has received lit-1
crary acclaim for short stor-i
ios published last year. '
Three stories originally
published in the "Schooner"
have been reprinted in "The
uesi rtmeiH.au ohui i Clones i
1965," an annual anthology by
Martha Foley, published by
Houghton Mifflin Co.
Only the
ninjt Post,'
"Saturday E v e
with five re-
piimra swnr in mc MMimie, ;
was represented more often. !
The "Schooner" tied the j
"Hudson Review" with three j
each. j
S
In addition, another yearly j
volume of similar selections
entitled "Prize Stories 1965:
The 0. Henry Awards," in
cluded one of the "Schooner
Stories."
Outstanding Quality
Miss Foley, generally re
garded as the dean of short
story anthologists in Ameri
ca, said some idea of the
outstanding quality of the
"Prairie Schooner" can be
gained by realizing that it
does not pay its authors and
vet this year published more
reprint-able short story ma-!
terial than many well-paying1
magazines. ;
Some of the magazines with
a smaller number of short;
Dr. Stycos To Present
Lecture On Population
An internationally known
scientist will present a public
lecture on population prob
lems in Latin America Thurs
day at the University.
Dr. J. Mayone Stycos. pro
fessor of sociology at Cornell
University in New York, will
present the lecture at 8 p.m.
Thursday in Love Library
Auditorium. The lecture is
made possible by a grant
from the Sperry and Hutch
inson Foundation.
The author of numerous ar
ticles on population problems
in Latin America, Dr. Stycos
has served as director of the
Latin American Program and
as director of the Internation
al Population Program at Cor
nell University. He has also
served as project co-director
of the Social Science Re-,
search Center, University oi l
puerto Rico. !
A 1947 graduate of Prince--ton
University, he received
his Doctors Degree from Col-,
umbia University in 1952 and ,
served as project director for
studies on human fertility in
Jamaica. Haiti and Peru. He
was a Population Counil Fel-!
low at the University of North
Carolina in 1954-55.
Since 1964 Stycos has
Nebraskan
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Excellent condition. Charles Arnold. Call
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9th ft L STREET LOCKERS
Freezer-meat locker available. Eat bet
ter, cheaper, brlns it from home; or we
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CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS
New Mink & Fox Collars: M5. Hell 1
Howell Auto-Loud H mm movli- rainera
und projeetori new mill In box; hoth Inr
9m. 47&-U7V. I
the an
Atlantic Review.
Yorker
ll is also significant that
most of these magazines pub-
iisn manv morn short
stories
in one year than the "Schoon
er," which published only
nine such stories last year,
Miss Foley said.
Commenting on the "Prair
ie Schooner's" Quality. Miss
r oicy saia mat "a summer
never goes by but what I do
not encourage mv writing
class at Columbia University
to submit their work to the
University of Nebraska's
magazine."
"The 'Schooner's' reputa
tion is really quite remark
able and extends far beyond
the borders of the state." she
said. "I know of no other non
paying literary quarterly with
a 40-year record of continuous
publication."
Asked how the "Schooner"
could compete in the face of
such odds, its editor, Profes
sor Bernice Slote of the uni
versity's department of Eng-
lish. said there were several
reasons for the success:
Portfolio Issues
"Beginning and even ex
perienced writers want their
work to appear in magazines
DR. STYCOS ... to speak
on Latin America.
served as trustee of the Pop
ulation Reference Bureau. He
is currently serving as assis
tant editor of Demography, a
consultant for the National
Institutes of Health, and is a
member of the Latin Ameri
can Science Board and the
National Academy of science. !
Scrip Editor Criticiies
'Resounding Silence'
The fourth weekly Hyde
Park Forum filled the Ne
braska Union lounge with
some 200 interested students,
slightly less than previous
sessions.
Vict Nam was the major
discussion issue, witih both
pro and con views given for
United States action in that
country.
Steve Abbott, editor of
Scrip, the University's month
ly literary magazine, criti
cized the "resounding silence"
of the students on issues that
affect them at the University.
He said that the political
parties on campus in particu
lar should give the students a
platform not only on the na
tional scene but also with
campus improvement in mind.
Pizza & Dark or
stories appealing in
thology include the
Monthly. Kenyon
Mademoiselle. Xcw
and Harper's.
:
i '
y pi
r i
f Ir iiVn. imltrii Bmm : &
ARE NOW FEATURED AT THE
Little Bohemia Tavern
2630 Cornhusker Hy.
In Addition
"LIVE MUSIC"
Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
nciiicies
ones
with reputations tor distinc
tive material. We have tried
to do this lately with special
portfolio issues containing
very important source infor
mation, including letters,
memoirs and out-of-print or
forgotten articles and short
stories."
"Much of the 'Schooner's'
success is the result of the
work of Virginia Faulkner,
Lee Lemon, and Fred Chris-
tensen. our associate editors
who help to read and select
short stories to be published,"
Miss Slote said.
The short stories reprinted
in "Best American Short Stor
ies 1965 are: "The Return
ing," by Daniel De Paola, a
new writer from New York
(Spring 1964); "The First
Views of the Enemy," by
Joyce Carol Oates, a new
writer from Detroit, Mich.
(Spring 1964); "The Visit,"
by Elizabeth Spencer, a well
known Canadian writer. Sum
mer 1964).
The Oates short storv was
also published by "Prize Stor
ics 1965: The O
awards."
Henry;
!
said that the:
Miss Slote
Oates and De Paola stories
appeared in the "Schooner's"
Great Plains edition which
has already become a collec
tor's item.
Sadie Hawkins
Finalists Named
Seven Miss
Sadie Hawkins I
candidates and four Little Ab-
ner finalists have "been select-
ed for the Sadie Hawkins
dance Nov. 19.
The Miss Sadie Hawkins
finalists are: Chris Young,
Chi Omega: Max Matousek.
Alpha Chi Omega: Shirley
Brown, Burr East Hall: Betty
Swoboda, Alpha Delta Pi;
Susan Wiles, Love Memorial
Hall: Sherry Wieckhorst, Al
pha Xi Delta; and Shari Muel
ler, Sigma Kappa. j
The Little Abner finalists i
are: Ivan Bartling, Farm'
House: Ted Wehrbein. Alpha i
Gamma Rho; Dan Scholc,
Alpha Gamma Sigma; Jim !
Leising. Ag Men.
The '"girl ask boy" dance '
is sponsored by East Union 1
and the Sadie Hawkins royal
ty will be voted on at the j
dance.
Dental College
Picks 3 Graduates;
Three Nebraska dentists. :
all from the same family and
graduates of the University
College of Dentistry, have;
been elected fellows of the!
International College of Den
tists. They are: Dr. J. La Verne
Seberg of Fullerton, class of
'36; Dr. J. Herbert Seberg of
Hastings, class of '44; and
Dr. John Raymond Seberg of
Hastings, class of '44.
Dr. Ralph Ireland, dean of.
the College of Dentistry, said
that election to the Interna
tional College is a distinct
honor. Selection is based on
contributions to local and na-',
tional dental organizations,
and local community services
activities.
They will be initiated in
ceremonies Sunday at a meet-
ing of the International Col--;
lege of Dentists at Las Vegas
Light Beverages
' Begin
m., '2:12 No- r
TODAY
PHI Ml', 8:31) a
braska Union.
DEPARTMENT OF EDU
CATIONAL PSVCHOLOliY,
10:3() a.m.. 332 Nebraska
Union.
INTER AKMii, u:ju appearance of ghosts, goblins,
p.m., 235 Nebraska Union. anc) ottlP). supernatural crea-
PLACEMEN'T LUNCHEON, hires, and with the anticipa
12:30 p.m., 241 Nebraska tion of that jolly fat man
Union. decked in red dropping
IHNHELLENIC 4 p.m., 332 e umsily down 111 - nation's
Nebraska Union. chimneys, a period of un-
I'vuw SPFflVL EVENTS
4:30 p.m.. Auditorium. Ne
braska Union.
PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
PUBLICITY, 4:30 p.m.. North
Conference Room, Nebraska
Union.
YWCA JUNIOR CABINET,
4:30 p.m.. South Conference
Room, Nebraska Union.
TASSELS, 4:30 p.m., 232
Nebraska Union.
UNION FILM COMMIT
TEE, 4:30 p.m.. 235 Nebras
ka Union.
UNION TALKS AND TOP
ICS COMMITTEE. 4:30 p.m..
235 Nebraska Union.
V .,.., ' - - - -
j PHI MU. 5:45 p.m.. 240 Xe-jb-aska
Union.
I DELTA KAPPA GAMMA,
6 p.m.. Pan American Room,
Nebraska union.
TOWNE CLUB. 6 p.m.,
Paw-nee Room. Nebraska I'n-
ion.
PI
KAPPA ALPHA, 6:30
p.m., 232 Nebraska Union.
PHI MU, 6:45 p.m., 232 Ne
braska Union.
UNICORNS MEMBERSHIP
COMMITTEE, 7 p.m.. Audi
torium. Nebraska Union.
AWS STANDARDS WEEK
program. 7 p.m.. Ban-
iroom, Nebraska Union.
I TUT l.-lT trixiiAv
"
4 p.m., tHtt. llvT i-fl -X VIUVII.
KNITTING LESSON, 7 p.m.,
'p.m.. 334 Nebraska Union.
TOWNE CLUB, 7 p.m.. 241
Nebraska Union.
UNICORNS SOCIAL COM
MITTEE, 7:30 p.m.. North
Conference Room. Nebraska
Union.
UNICORNS PUBLIC RELA
TIONS, 7:30 p.m.. South Con
ference Room. Nebraska Un
ion. MATH COUNSELOR PKO
GRAM. 7:30 p.m.. 349 Ne
braska Union.
TOMORROW
YWCA LOVE AND MAR
RIAGE COMMITTEE, 4:30
p.m.. Chi Omega.
GRADUATE STUDENT
VOCAL RECITAL. 7:30
p.m. Auditorium. Sheldon Art
Gallery.
McConnell To Speak
About US Economy
Campbell McConnell,
fessor of economkts.
pro
will seak on the government's
role in the exDandine econ
omy Wednesday at the Young since his iveorasKa reure-DemcK-Hts
meeting in the Ne- ment. He is continuing with
braska Union. the University of Alabama on
in kn nek a part-time basis while serv-
on ms t0 tne svet Union
I and teB of his experiences
there.
"McConnell is the only man
j t - . Tt 7
on campus to Jog more i v
time than Dr. Robert Man
ley." Mark Plattner, Young
Democrat member, said. He
explained that McConnell is
most widely known for his
economics 11 and 12 television
series at the University.
O.K. RECAPS
Mud & Snow or Reg. Tread
TWICE THE MILEAGE
AND SAFETY
ct Vi the price
OK 1 Star Recup . .S.5
OK 2 Star Recap
OK 3 Star Recups . 9-5
Single fiance "'c ,uc'
iiwt. for (ic each
Triple fliirme Ue tilud
iiwt. fr J 0c each.
Direct trmn wilcihiiid I" yu
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Nation't, fiiir-Kt. (hie pinc-c,
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HtATimuTi
Ok' 1 Stur foruke job $12.95
OK 2 Stur brake job 24.95
OK 3 Stur brake job 34.95
Tire Trueinn
hv M.OOO O K
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24 miw. or 24,000 tulles jiimraiiti
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suzki trail
motor bike
SALF.fi - HIXTAL - SI iHVICK
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turf s-.esi!b
T.O. HAAS, OWNER
50 West "O" 435-3211
'S
lly Ruin Hagdeorn
Junior Staff Writer
Actives j.'a el a well
known fact that with the dis-
cenaimy now prevails.
This period is caused by a
class of university students
known as Greek fraternity and
sorority pledges and is viewed
rather disdainfully by their
active brothers or sisters,
whichever the case may be.
The reason for all this frustra-
tion lies in the fact that this
is the season for pledge class
sneaks.
Plotting Details
While pledges are secretly
conspiring plotting every
move down to the most minute
detail actives are busy trying
to discover the date of execu
tion of this master plan. It's
a battle of minds pledges
pitted against actives to see
who can withstand the most
I pressure, for the slightest slip
; of e. pledge's tongue can mean
; that a plot is revealed.
! Stan Miller, vice president
of Interfraternity Council,
stated that many fraternity
pledge classes have already
taken sneaks, traveling to
such places as Colorado. Kan
sas City, St. Louis, and Colum
bia. ! He said that pledges cannot
go outside a 500 mile radius,
must register their sneak
with IFC before leaving and
i must submit a report to IFC
i within one week of their re
1 turn.
' Fraternity pledge classes
usually take one big out-of!
state sneas. at leasi one wees
end sneak somewhere in the
Lincoln vicinity, and several
small two of three hour,
sneaks, according to Miller. I
Broady To Serve
At Negro College
Dr. Knute Broady who re
tired from the University fac
ulty in 1964 after 36 years of
service, has been named act
ing president of StiUman Col
lege, a predominately Negro
liberal arts institution oper
ated by the Presbyterian
: church in Tuscaloosa. Ala.
Well-known throughout Nc
I braska educational circles and
! a former director of the Uni
versity's Extension Division,
Broady has served as a pro
fessor of education and con
sultant in adult education f t
! the University of Alabama
; ing as president of Stillman.
' '
AO IV OPA
COSITIC STUDIO
WE'LL GIVE YOU BACK
A NEW YOU!
How? "With a free Hour of
BnBUty.Ynu'11 learn beauty
secrets of generations of
Involy women. You'll see a
radiant, clnwinp Bkin ar,
our fi Steps to Beauty it
applied byu trained eKpert.
You'll hear nothing but
compliments when a fabu
Iouk, subtle make-up, de
niprned for you, brings out
idiuntifi vou didn't Unow you
had.
"Wonderinp why we do it?
Because we've found onee
vou've Been yourself in
Merle Norman CoHtnetict
(real princesB stuff at
Cinderella prices) you're
pretty apt to be old on
them from that day on.
Which is what we want
for beauty ii our business.
118 No. 14th C32-4225
HOURS: 9-5:30 weekdoyt
9-9 Thun. & Sat
Homf ol ttif Fre Hour of RMirtv
Ml
igH give us one hour uj
ledge Classes
neak' Season
V
i ,
' t V J I
'3.f it I r
! e t J v bri
Kmi i . " - . . . . -
... . .. .....
nioto by Tom Rubin
ON THE MOVE AGAIN . . . Zeta Tau Alpha pledges
take their sneak but not without a little opposition from
the actives.
Until this year Panhellenic j
had ruled a 60 mile limit for
sorority pledge class sneaks.
but a change was made e
cently which sets no milage
limit! but places a 30 hour re- j
strietion on activities. j
The reason (or this change,
according to Dianne Michel, j
president of Panhellenic, was !
to allow more freedom since
the size of pledge classes and
I OS. I
5ETTIN6 A BLANKET IN THt MAIL?
AS tKVs )
liti imk
ll iims tW$m
U m0 mm-
; ; nTTTi I mTlWiTrrrrfl I
The claBBic styling uf the Button-down shirt, hai
bouome more deniable now thHt It ii woven in
liBHvy -weight 'herringbone and oxford weaves. The
xihoice of color in varied, the clarity of pattern un
usual. The proprietor suggests a collection of them
for country or town -wear. j (Jg
Others 6.98.
I IT
i
hi wMm Ulalh
1
, i. . .... s
t
finance would act as sell -restricting
factors. However,
sorority pledge classes cannot
take any actives other than
their pledge trainers outside
the city.
Both Miss Michel and Miller
agreed that the purpose of
these sneaks is "to promote
pledge class unity" through,
group planning and executing
of events."
kRLiTMiS iS A NICE ONE...
I JOIME THE
-OF-THt-,0KTH Oi'S
t ;''
f 'i