1 Wednesday, Nov. 24, 1965 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 !il;T ' 3 -"Vll Photo by Chuck Kurtzman THE FLAMES WILL FLY 'TIL THE SO ONERS DIE . . . Part of a crowd of over 2,000 at the third annual Sigma Alpha Mu Victory Bonfire watches as a Oklahoma effigy forecasts the fate of the Sooners Thursday. SAM Fire H odisScer Enth By Ruth Hagedorn Junior Staff Writer "Go Big Red! Go Big Red! Beat Oklahoma! Beat Okla homa!" chanted an estimated 1,500 to 2,000 students who at tended the Sigma Alpha Mu bonfire Monday night. These chants, interspersed with "Hail to the Team" and other spirit songs accom panied by the pep band, con tinued until Coach Bob De vaney appeared amidst the cheering crowd. Stewart Forbes, SAM presi dent, welcomed the students to the fraternity's third annual victory bonfire and reminded them that "The flames will fly 'til the Sooners diet" Forbes then introduced De vaney who laughingly said, "I hope this year you don't have to keep the fire going as long as you would have last year!" He assured everyone that both he and the team would "help put the fire out at about 3 p.m. Thursday aft ernoon." Co-captains Frank S o 1 i c h and Mike Kennedy were intro duced by Devaney. S o 1 i c h 6aid, "We will certainly try to end the season like we started it with a victory." Kennedy added that he be lieves everyone remembers last year's defeat and, having had a year to think about it, that "nothing like that will happen again." The crowd moved away from the fire pit amidst shouts of "Push e'm back, push 'em back, way back." Kennedy lit the fire as students enthusi astically sang "There Is No Place Like Nebraska" and yelled, "All the way to Mi Miami." The flames leaped higher and higher, destroying the Sooner effigy. Oranges were thrown and a three-man "tower" was raised though it quickly crumbled. The Sigma C h i s used a foam rubber mattress to toss one of their members into the air. At the conclusion of the rally, it was added to fire. Spirit signs displayed by living units bore slogans rang ing from "Gobble up the Sooners" and "Light up to vic tory" to "It's too late for the Sooners" and "A Sooner loss shows who's boss." One and one half hour shifts are being taken by SAM fra ternity members around the clock in order to keep the fire going at a good steady rate. Enough wood for the 66-hour bonfire appeared to be the on ly problem. Led by the yell king, pom Hebraskan Want Ads Ifclt Urn mm met nrnly U B rl dtlH vcrslB( to tko DaHr Nebriiakmt Wrfrl rata I acr wmr4 an mint M ckarra af iOe par etMMe tottr ttn. Parmast far Ana ait am fan fata tmt cmlrfrin: 1I ttt raanlnc Iraa (aaa aa wmk la aaamnlna mnat fea al tar awrara maartna Ji aaa ranalni lt aaa areek wW ka aa!4 weaklr FOR SALE Electric tlnvr. uluAr ok aud targe old trunk. U8-7464. WANTED TICKETS FOR OKLAHOMA ViniM tirketa for children at Stat Hn Bit: for Thanlulvln( Day Game. Ill use tailereatetf Is tfenatint their tirketf to little children call Terry at 432-1375. Experienced SCU B A, diver. Trio to 7 mat Gulf Count Chrtitmat vacation. Jim Wendt 2 -8324. Rwmmate to (hare 4 man apartment. Upper claim an. 434-4608. FOR RENT furnlehed apartment for rent; three room, private bath. S month. Near Souta 17th Street. Bill Una. 4A4-7466. Vary nicely fornlahed room. Foam mat treeaee, enoklnt, T.V University Ap proved. 477-. Small cottage h treef and around for youn married couple. Gai heat, air conditioned, furnished. Reasonable tent. CHI 4M-2284 after :00p.m. If F jr J, ArnP lit ' li ? J? ft? 1 J Is hut I'w pom girls, band, Tassels, Corncobs, and a large gonging bell, a body of about 3,000 stu dents marched last night from the Nebraska Union to t h e parking lot of Nebraska Hall, yelling and singing all the way. A huge bonfire was lit with a torch brought from the SAM fire, and a Sooner effigy was thrown in. Corncob Jim Kin youn introduced George Kelly of the University coaching staff. Kelly said he was happy to represent the best football coach in the country and to be part of the staff coaching the number one team. He said that both the staff and the team are grateful to their supporters and "hope on Itudenfs To Experiment n international Living By Beth Robbins Junior Staff Writer The Experiment of Interna tional Living gives students the opportunity to know a foreign country by living with its people. William Maclay, field rep resentative for the Exper iment, and Miss L e n o r e Buford, French instructor at the University and group spon sor with the program for the past five years, explained the Experiment to Dr. Roberto Eauenazi-Mayo, chairman of the department of romance languages, Monday. The program is based on the idea that people learn to understand other people and their culture by living among them as a member of a family. The Experiment, Maclay explained, consists of a two month stay in one of 45 foreign countries in Africa, Asia, Eur ope, Latin America and the Middle East. "Each participant is an in dividual experimenter at the same time as he is part of a group of ten," Maclay said. TO CHERISH FOREVER APOLLO jrom. raiha t oCargeil f OtJeii Best Seteclic ton Iffeel lite fJroJkeij JJotp OMAHA COUNCIL BLUFFS GRAND ISLAND FREMONT COLUMBUS a to 1 eYiectts ysioson Thursday to see a twelfth man on the field the study body." Sports caster Bob Zenner told the group that the Soon ers don't have many happy memories about coming to Lincoln and said, "So if the crowd and all gets together, we could make Thursday the un'happiest yet." Zenner said that the Univer sity, not having had an unde feated season since 1915, now has a chance to be a part of history. He told the students to "make every bit of the game count. Show the nation we're proud to be Cornhusk ers!" With these words, the band led the cheering students down to O Street and back up to campus on 13th Street. A group of experimenters, usually ten, visits different families in a single com munity, becoming a "brother" or "sister" to them. Many experimenters feel the hardest part of their trip is saying good-by to their new found friends. The ties last many years, even a lifetime, Maclay said. The Experiment is "sort of like the United Nations," Ma clay said. A group gets togeth er, but once they are in a foreign country, the foreign representative takes charge of them. Each country individ ually controls the program within their own borders. Experimenters coming into the United States most often come in August, using the program as an orientation before attending college i n America. The Peace Corps has used the Experiment's facilities for training several of its groups. Maclay encouraged future Peace Corps members to join the program. Anyone interested in joining the program must first sub mit a complete application to tuJent CrJil . . . Wear HblamonJi Varied Agencies Offer Fellowships Nearly 2,500 graduate and postdoctoral fellowships are offered by agencies such as the National Science Founda tion, the Business and profes sional Women's Foundation, the East-West Center and the Harvard Business School. Graduate fellowships will be awarded by the National Science Foundation college seniors, graduate students working toward a degree, post doctoral students and others with equivalent training and experience. Mathematical, physical, medical, biological and engineering sciences; anthro pology, economics, geography, the history and philosophy of science, linguistics, political science, psychology and soci ology are the fields of study open for these fellowships. Applicants are required to take the Graduate Record Examinations Jan. 15. Information may be obtained from the Fellowship Office, National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council, 2101 Constitution Ave. N.W. Washington, D.C. 20418. In order to reduce the short age of Americans who speak Asian languages, the East West Center of the University of Hawaii is offering 100 full expense scholarships to stu dents working to complete their Master's degree. Students study a semester in Asia besides working on fields relating to Asia and an Asian language. Information can be obtained from the Director of Student Selection, East-West Center, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822. The James Thomas Chirurg Advertising Fellowship, spon sored by Chirurg and Cairns, Inc., will be awarded to a stu dent planning to enter the first year of a two-year Harvard Business School program lead ing to a degree of Master in Business Administration and the Experiment headquarters in Putney, Vt. A committee uses these applications, plus references, as a basis for selection. About 2,000 applied last year, and approximately 1,600 were accepted, Maclay said. The Experiment is looking for "flexible" people who can fit themselves into the "con fining experience" of living with and becoming part of another family, Miss Buford said. They must be adventur ous, curious, and adaptable. The resulting groups have "geographical distribution," Maclay said. They come from all parts of the United States to a single group. Attempts are made to expose them to all economic levels of t h e i r host country. Anyone interested in more information about the Exper iment should contact Miss Buford at 307 Burnett, or write to The Experiment in International Living, Putney, Vt. O.K. RECAPS Mud & Snow or Rep. Tread TWICE THE MILEAGE AND SAFETY at Vi the price OK 1 Star Recaps ... $5.95 OK 2 Star Recaps... 7.95 OK 3 Star Recaps . . . 9.95 Single flunKC ice stud list, for Tic each Triple flange ice stud insl. for 10c each. Dirpct from Switzerland lo vim O.K. MAG WHEELS Nation's lines!. One p'uxc, Precision made bv O.K. TIRE tf RUBBER CO. Direct from O.K. lo you BRAKE RELINING OK 1 Star brake job $12.95 OK 2 Star brake job 24.95 OK 3 Star brake job 34.95 Tire Tnieing $1.75 by $3,000 O.K. Tmmalio O.K. SHOCKS 24 moi. or 24,000 miles guarantee Nation Wide HUNTER'S BUY SUZKI TRAIL MOTOR BIKE SALES - RENTAL SERVICE T.O. HAAS, OWNER 50 West "O" 435-3211 arm MriJ..khriM r wit ritfv- intending a career in adver tising. Students can apply for the $1,500 grant by writing to the Harvard Business School, Boston, Massachusetts 02163. Grants up to $2,000 are avail able from the Business and Professional Women's Founda tion. The Lena Lake Forrest graduate Fellowship awards for 19fiG-67 will be given to students within one academic year of their doctor's degrees, persons already holding a doc tor's degree or scholar of demonstrated ability who wish to do research. Applications should be sent to Business and Professional Women's Foundation, 2012 Massachusetts Avenue N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 by February 1, 1966. Alpha Lambda Delta grad uates of 1963, 1964 or 1965 are eligible for the Maria Leonard, the Alice Crocker Lloyd, the Adcle Hagner Stamp and the Kathryn Sisson Phillips Fel lowships of $1,500 each. Application blanks may be obtained from Kathy Costello, president of the University chapter of Alpha Lambda Delta. The Soroptimist Club of Los Angeles is offering Its fifteenth Fellowship to graduate women students. The $1,500 Mary Sinclair Crawford Award of 1966-67 will be awarded to American and foreign women holding a Bachelor's degree or equiv alent. Women working in an unusual field will be given special consideration. Information and application forms can bt obtained from the Soroptimist Foundation of Los Angeles, 111 North Hill Street, Los Angeles, Calif. 90012. Committee To Conduct Mod School Interviews Interviewing committees from the University College of Medicine will be in Bessey Hall on the afternoon and eve ning of Thursday, Dec. 9, and Friday, Dec. 10. Applicants for admission to the University College of Medi cine in the fall of 1966 are ex pected to have interviews at that time. Each candidate should, at his earliest conveni ence, sign up for an appoint ment on the premedical bulle tin board outside of Room 204 Bessey Hall. TODAY RESIDENCE HALLS Direc tor's Meeting, 1:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. "BOOM THE SOONERS NIGHT" Movie "They've Got Me Covered" and North To Alaska", 7:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. Dance Nate Branch Combo, 9 p.m., Ne braska Union. ,--Mll.IW.ll1IUl...l.l.l.i WE NEVER CLOSE '"vV. y-'" i 4 V - . , . '('..Is ti' Lowest Prices in Town DIVIDEND BONDED GAS 16th & P St j. Downtown Lincoln What It's Like To orority njoys By Jan Itklu Junior Staff Writer Being a housemother en tails nothing more than does being a mother in a real home, according to Mrs. Clarence Mahn, house mother for Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. "We simply maintain a home and plan the meals," she continued. "Aside from that, the only other respon s i b i 1 i t y we h a v e is to Administration." Mrs. Mahn, or (Mano) as she is called by her girls, has been with the Kappas for ten years. She explained that Mano was what her nieces and nephews called her and that a niece of hers was in the Kappa house the year she came there. "The girls asked if they could call me Mano too," she said. "Of course I said yes, and they have ever since." In the ten years she has been there, she said, little has changed except that there are more girls and is "more pressure. " "I thoroughly enjoy being a housemother," she said, "because I enjoy being con nected with academic life. It's both stimulating and challenging." Mrs. Mahn is a University graduate. "Students today are possibly more assertive with their ideas than when I was a student," she said. She cited broadened love loses To 'Hysteria1 In mid-November, young men's hearts apparently turned from thoughts of love to Kosmet Klub except in the cases of the four Univer sity coeds who announced pin- nings or engagements. PINNINGS Barbara Pflasterer, Gamma Phi Beta junior in speech therapy from Omaha, to Bob Churchich, Phi Kappa P s i junior in Business Administra tion from Omaha. Peg Gormley, Delta Delta Delta junior in Arts and Sci ence from Lincoln, to Cary McAllaster, Delta Sigma Phi junior in Arts and Science from Lincoln. Nancy Hoffman, Kappa Al pha Theta junior in Teachers from Scottsbluff, to Gary Neibauer, Phi Kappa P s i junior in Business Administra tion from Scottsbluff. ENGAGEMENT Nan Kingman, Alpha Chi Omega junior in Arts and Sci ence from Ft. Leonard, Mo., to Don Hanway, Farmhouse graduate student in Arts and Science from Lincoln. J ' ''1-6 ? ?.. v '- - i m k m Be Housemother a f Acaaemic Lire " x ''"'If'' ' iiniiiUKWimiri iin-winf i '' MRS. CLARENCE MAHN courses, travel and home training towards independ ence as reasons for the as sertivpness. Being a housemother, she said, is always exciting, but "as time goes by, you learn to take excitement as a mat ter of course." A housemother must trust young people and like them, she said. "We want what's best for them and are in terested in their develop ment as students and as citizens in their adult life." Mrs. Mahn chose Hush Week as a housemother's busiest time because of the need to "have things run smoothly." She said that because freshman pledges live in the dorms their first year, it takes until the mid dle of a girl's sophomore year "to know and under stand her." The increasing numbers of students makes it a little harder to become close to the girls, Mrs. Mahn added. "It's partially the product of stepped-up classes and class scheduling" that the girls are not in the house more often. Welcome to THANKSGIVING DAY WORSHIP THURSDAY, 9:30 A.M. UNlViihSlTl LUTHERAN CHAPEL The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod 15th & Que (Just south of State Historical BIdg.) A. J. Korden, Pastor R. W. Lehenbauer, Vicar ! THIS IS ' r'" A BIKINI MAPUIEUIT ,.' pat. no, 36-24-35 : Just push the button and itll G0-G0-GGJ ' -i :.. CRAIG... i Agent 00 he's ' Dr. G0LDF00T... just a fraction ine. ",1U i of instant stupid! J PANAViSiON'AND mttumnifrtjt h i i - ii nnr-iiir in'iii-nWMMaWiTiTiMMiaiiWftiiaiiiiTiiTnMfiirtaT - - -""nnwn 1 1 1 J NOW N0W n 0 i "Sororities can give to their members, what their members give to them," she concluded. "They (soror ities) have the finest of merits." PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS Tuesday, Not. 30 Humble Oil 1 Refining- Company: B.S.. M S -Ch.E , C.E., RE., M.E. Ksso Research and Engineering Com pany: B.S., M.S.-M.E., E.M.i all de grees Ch.E. ; Ph.D. Chem. Internal Revenue Service U.S. Treas ury Department: B.S.-B.A. Bus. Adm., Acctg., Econ. i J.D. Law (6 yr.). Lincoln National Llle Insurance Com pany: Bus. Adm., Lib. Arts. Goodyear Tire Ir Rubber Company! B.S. Bus. Adm.. Mktg Mallinrkrodt Chemical Works: B.S.. M.S. Ch.E., M.E., E E., I.E.; aU de grees Chem. (Analytical. Org.). Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company: Ail degrees and majors. Wednesday, Dee. 1 Humble Oil L Refining Company: At before. Fsso Research and Engineering Com panyAs before. Allied Chemical Corporation: B.S. Chem., I.E., Agron., Ag.E.i B.S., M.S. Ch.E., M E., E E.; Ph.D. Chem. Omaha National Bank: BS., M.S. Mgt. Trg. Dun & Rradstrect, Incorporated: B.S. B.A Bus. Adm., Acctg., Econ, Mktg. FMC Corporation Niagara Chemical Division: M.S., Ph.D. Chemical or Bio logical Fields. Wilson 1 Company. Incorporated: B.S.-B.A., M.S.-M.A. An. Sci, Bos. Adm. Mallinckrodt Chemical Works: As be fore. Thursday, Dec. S Ceco Steel Products Corporations: B.S. Engineers. The Goodyear Tire Ic Rubber Com panyIndustrial Products Division, Lin coln: B.S. M.E., Bus. Adm., Mktg. McDonnell Aircraft Corporation: AU degrees E.E., M.E., C.E., I.E., Math., Physics. Insurance by North America: B.S.-B.A.-Bus. Adm., Lib. Arts, any other interested major. U.S. Air Force: Any degree any ma jor. Trane Company: B.S. Chl.E., C.E., E.E., I.E., Met.E.; B.S., M.S.-M.E. Dale Electronics: B.S. Bus. Adm., E.E., M.E. Friday, Dec. 1 Geigy Chemical Company: B.S.-B.A. Bus. Adm., Arts & Sci., Agr. U.S. Geological Survey Department of Interior: All degrees C.E., Ag.E., GeoL, Chem., Math. . . U.S. Bureau of Ships Department of the Navy: B.S., M.S. E.E.. M.E., Ch.E., C.E. Becton, Dickinson Ic Company at Ne braska: B.S. M.E. Trane Company As before. McDonnell Aircraft Corporation As before. r i mveiilul girls... he's MAD? L' & PMUECOLOR iJ . fa 1 jVf ' II I I