The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 16, 1966, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    Page 4
Agriculture Society
48 At Scholarship
Forty-eight University stu-
dents were honored for high
scholarship Tuesday night by
the Nebraska Chapter ot Gam-
ma Sigma Delta, the Honor
Society of Agriculture.
The honored grojp onsists
of 21 juniors and 27 sopho-
mores majoring in agricul-
ture. They were introduced at
the annual Gaw- Sigma
Delta scholarship recognition
dinner by Phillip S. Sutton,
chapter president.
Frederick Leistritz received
tl,e chapter's annual award
for having been the top schol-
ar among sophomores in the
College of Agriculture and
Home Economics for the
1S64-65 school year.
Leistritz, now a junior,'
LITTLE MAN
THS IFTTER 15 TO NOTIFY CU TWTMft
J3P
REPCWTEP ClASS ASSEHCS FOK TOU AS OF PTfe nWLH AUM u-AlSATlCAU-f
PLACES DU OH PKfcATIOS. APPITlCTsAU tU WILL MOST
seriously jkkwize tue stamps iwfss you ta jmmeiwe spsid-
Applications
For Degrees
Due March 1
All students who expect to
receive bachelors or advanced
degrees or certificates at the
close of second semester must
make application by Mar. 1 if
they have not done so.
Applications may be made
at the Registrar's Office,
room 208, window 2, Adminis
tration Building from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Monday through Fri
day, or 8 am. to 12 noon on
Saturday!
WEDNESDAY
UAAD, 12 noon, Nebraska
Union.
PLACEMENT OFFICE
Luncheon, 12:30 p.m., Nebras
ka Union.
RESIDENT HALLS Direct
or's Meeting, 1 p.m., Nebras
ka Union.
UNION Trips and Tours
Committee, 2:30 p.m., Ne
braska Union.
ASUN Associates Coke
Party, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
ASUN Student Senate, 4
p.m., Nebraska Union.
YWCA Tutorial Project,
4:30 p.m.. Nebraska Union.
PEOPLE TO PEOPLE
Student-To-Student, 4:30 p.m.,
Nebraska Union.
RED CROSS, 4:30 p.m., Ne
braska Union.
BUILDERS Tours, 4:30
p.m., Nebraska Union.
UNION Public Relations
Committee, 4:30 p.m., Nebras
ka Union.
YWCA Girls Club, 4:30
p.m., Nebraska Union.
TOASTMASTER'S Club,
5:30 p.m., Nebraska Union.
AWS Rehearsal, 6:30 p.m.,
Nebraska Union.
WOMEN'S P.E. Club, 7
p.m.. Nebraska Union.
BUILDERS Board, 7 p.m.,
Nebraska Union.
GAMMA ALPHA CHI, 7
p.m., Nebraska Union.
A L P H A PHI OMEGA, 7
p.m.. Nebraska Union.
IFC, 7 p.m., Nebraska Un
ion. TAU KAPPA EPSILON
Smoker, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
NEBRASKA Career Schol
ars, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Un
ion. 3IATT1 Counselor Program,
7:30 p.m.. Nebraska Union.
PARKING Appeals Board,
7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union.
INTER CO-OP COUNCIL
Nancy Child's Lecture, 9
p.m., Nebraska Union.
GAMMA T11ETA UPSILON
"The Socialist City," 7:30
p.m., 105 Geography Building.
RODEO CLUB, 7:30 p.m.,
East Union.
compiled a grade average of
8.652 on the 9.0 scale,
Students honored by Uam-
ma Sigma Delta were:
Juniors: Kenneth Beck
strom. Kenneth Beebe. Laur-
en Boeckenhauer. Dwayne
Burmocd. Stanley Daberkow,
Vaughn Domeirr. Thomas
Gilroy, Victor Lechtenberg.
Frederick Leistritz, Wesley
Musser, Richard Preston, and
Ronald Prior,
Thomas Reimers, Brian
Riddel, Ronald Shaficr, Da-
,id shoemaker, James Specht,
. ' ... '
Burton Thomsen Gary Vieth,
Ga,7 Wahlgren, and Gene
Wehrbein.
Sophomores: Bamidele Ab-
ogunrin. Jerry Andersen, Ro
ON CAMPUS
OFRC? HAS VK&NZO ANCWf !.
Paiihellenic
Discusses
Program
The Faculty Fellows Pro
gram, is it concerns the so
rority living units, was dis
cussed by Mrs. Jean Regester
at the Monday meeting of
Panhellenic.
Mrs. Regester, student ac
tivities adviser, explained to
the sorority delegates that the
program would probably be
different in each house, de
pending on the faculty mem
ber the house selected. SJe
stated further that the pro
gram should be on a strictly
voluntary basis. The program
could include field trips with
the faculty member and in
viting the member to the in
dividual sorority meetings.
Erma Winterer, future pres
ident of Panhellenic, an
nounced that she and the fu
ture vice president and sec
retary will attend the Big
Eight Inter-Fraternity Con
ference to be held this Friday
in Stillwater, Okla. The con
ference is mainly a discus
sion of common problems en
countered in Panhellenic and
Inter-fraternity groups.
A representative from Del
ta Zeta sorority stated that 22
girls had been pledged to the
sorority after the Delta Zeta
tea on Feb. 7.
For teacher! who want more mooer, more congenial
location or special atfietance meeting a
particular fituatioo. contact:
THE DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE
Our lervioe coven the entire United State.
501 Stuart Btllldmc I inoln. Vhr.cL. Phnnr aHftSi
f or chargei until you have
QUENTIN'S
1229 R St.
WntE
U.N.C.LE.
UNEQUALLED, NEAT CLOTHES,
LIKE EXCELLENT.
OUT OF CURIOSITY
COME IN AND LOOK fOf NEW SPRING
AND SUMMER SUITS .DRESSES AND
SPORTSWEAR.
Honors
Dinner
bert Burton, Robert Bovee,
Terrance Cacek, Bruce Carl
son, Marvin Carlson, James
Fairchild, Wayne Gever. Mar
vin Hughes. Dwight Humph
rey Duane Jewell. Charles
Juricek, and Robert Kumm.
Verlvn Lnebbe, William Ln
eek, Michael Nenirf. Robert
Paddleford, Marvin Paulsen,
Lloyd Reeder, Richard Ron
penkamn. RonaW Sanders,
Bernhard Schole, lames Sto
ppers, Kelly Stickel Gordon
Vavricek, and Kenneth Volk
er, Humboldt.
The address, "Importance
of Excellence and Scholar
ship in Agr'i ulture." was giv
en by Dr Dale W. Bohniont,
international president of
Gamma J: "ma Delta.
Czech Fund
Donations
Total $40,0
The Czech Pioneer Memori
al Student Fund, one of the
most active loan funds admin
istered by the University Foun
dation, has reached the $40.
000 mark in contributions.
Ed Kopac of Hardin, Mon.
gave the Foundation a contri
bution of securities, valued at
$21,000, in memory of his three
brothers. Anton, Joseph, and
Frank, who were natives of
Colfax County.
Val Kuska, vice chairman
of the Fund, said more than
100 donors of Czech descent
have contributed to the Fund,
which has today assisted more
than 200 University students.
The fund assists University
students regardless of race
creed, or color, and not being
an outright gift, the loans
must be repaid after the stu
dent leaves school, Kuska
said.
Many of the gifts are made
in the name of an individual
Czech pioneer or family and
are accompanied by biograph
ical notes. These records are
being entered in a special
Czech section in the Nebraska
Historical Society.
Kuska said the nature of as
sistance provided by the Uni
versity Fund is fully in keep
ing with the creed of the
Czech pioneers themselves. It
is provided in good spirit, hut.
not for free." It is the kind
of help which encourages per
sonal responsibility, he aid.
if C LO Consider
Proposed Budget
A $24,440 proposed budget j
will be considered and voted
on" at the Wednesday night '
meeting of the Interfratemity !
Council (IFC).
An IFC rush committee '
chairman and an IFC public !
relations committee chairman ;
will be elected, according to
Gary Larsen, president.
Mrs. Jean Regester from
the Student Activities office !
will speak to IFC members !
on the Faculty Fellows pro-1
gram.
Larsen also said that inter
views will be held Feb. 20 for
IFC affains committee. Ap
plications may be picked up
at the TFC office.
TKE ToIIold
Rush Smoker
Tau Kappa Epsilon frater
nity will hold a rush smoker
Wednesday evening at 7:30
p.m. in room 235 of the Ne
braska Union.
The fraternity will show a
film on fraternity life followed
by a question and answer
period.
received acceptable ervic.
432-3645
FROM
The Daily
illlllllllilllllllllllllil1 Illllllllillilllllllillllll'.llllllllllllllllhlllllUI iillllllllilllMtlillllllll-llillilllillH
'Beat' Poet On
Campus Monday
The "father" of the beat
generation, Allen Ginsberg,
will appear at the Nebraska
Union at 1:30 p.m., Friday.
Ginsberg, who will present
a program of his original poe
try, will be here by arrange
ment of Scrip, the campus lit
erary magazine.
Ginsberg first rame to na
tional attention when he pub
lished his book "Howls ind
Other Poems" in 1956. The
book's publisher was involved
in a long court brittle over
the alleged obscenity of this
book.
The opening lines of
"Howls read. I saw the
best minds of my generation
destroyed by nakedness, starv
ing hysterical madness."
Steve Abbott, editor of
Scrip, said that Ginsberg is
"probably one of the most
controversial poets in the
world."
Ginsberg became the lead
er of a group of "beat" peo
ple living in San Francisco in
the late 1950's who dubbed
themselves Beatniks.
Beatniks were known as
"worshippers of booze, dope,
sex and despair," as one na
tional magazine put it.
Ginsberg is presently trav
eling around the country, as
he has for the past few years,
Abbott said. He spoke at the
regional Stidents for a Demo
cratic Society (SDSl meeting
in Lawrence, Kan., last week
end. Abbott said he feels Gins
berg has "a very rational and
perceptive approach to the
Viet Nam situation," the sub
ject of his talk at the regional !
meeting.
"Why can't we just cool it
and then we can figure out
what's going on" in the war,
Ginsberg said.
He contends. Abbott ex
plained, that the pro and con
debates about the war only
escalate emotions and add
iYU Enrollment
To Top 20.000
University officials have
predicted that student popula
tion, now at 15.179. will sur
pass the 20.000 mark in 1938
or 1969 and that another dorm
itory complex comparable to
the 1,900-student men's dorm
itory now in the planning
stage will be needed.
Based on an unofficial analy
sis of current enrollment
coupled with projected enroll
ment strtifinnal hnilcintr unll
needed for some 300
women and nearly 500 men
next year.
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
Align fronl-end; correct caster, timb
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BRAKES RELINE SPECIALS
Guaranteed 10.000 miles or
Guaranteed 20,000 miles or
GENERAL TIRE
SERVICE
333 South 11th
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Special Discount for Students with IDs.
Bring This Coupon for Discount
V DIAMOND RINGS
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CHATELAINE FROM $1BO
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;L:'
Nebraskan
nothing to rational considera
tions. Abbott said Ginsberg is
particularly interested in talk
ing with university students.
"Beat society used to repu
diate society, at the present
time they seem to agree with
the new student movements,"
Abbott said.
He said Ginsberg is pres
ently on nis way to New York
and is traveling with a group
of friends.
Alums Celebrate
Charter Day
The University was 97 years
old Tuesday and alumni
throughout the nation will cel
ebrate the milestone with a
series of charter-day pro
grams during the next two
months.
There were no special ob
servances at the University
which was chartered by the
Nebraska Legislation on Feb.
15. 1869.
Two and a half years later,
on Sept. 7. 1871, the University
opened its doors to 20 col
legiate students and 110 pupils
enrolled in the Latin School.
Last fall the University re
corded a new enrollment
record of 15.179 students.
Students Asked
To Return
Questionnaires
A letter has been sent to all
living units asking them to
encourage their members to
finish filling out the ASUN
faculty evaluation question
naires and return them be
fore Friday.
Ladd Lonnquist, chairman
of the faculty evaluation com
mittee, signed the letter.
The letter states that des-
pite the controversy which
j "o u r proposed evaluation
j book has aroused, we are
j more determined than ever to
; provide University students
: with the opportunity to eval
uate their instructors."
"It is our firm belief that
this very necessary project
can be completed successful
ly only through the coopera
tion of every responsible stu
dent," the letter explains.
ine letier asss tnat every;
member of the lhing'units at
Monday night's meeting fill!
out the forms and return them
to either the containers now
provided for that purpose or
to the ASUN office, room 230,
Nebraska Union.
$13.88
19.88
one year
2 years
- 3211
588
MKt
Brother Team Produces
Play, Author To Return
By Bruce Giles
Senior Staff Writer
A former University stu
dent, Larry Dobbins, will re
turn to Lincoln Feb. 25, for
the production of his play
"La Gloria De La Manana."
The play will be presented
as a "New Faces" produc
tion, featuring students who
have never appeared in pre
vious University Theatre pro
ductions. Dobbins brother,
Mike, will direct the play.
Dobbins researched the
play while spending a sum
mer in the slums of Mexico
City.
He was the first person to
do a playwriting thesis at the
University. The play, entitled
"The Darkness Preceding,"
won a Dallas Award (the
University Theatre's equiva
lent of an Oscar) for Larry
for direction and for acting.
Feiv Agriculture College Students
Go Into Farming Upon Graduati
Approximately sixteen per
cent of the University grad
uates in- agriculture actually
go into fanning, according to
Dr. F. E. Eldridge, director
fo resident instruction on the
East Campus. This is due to
the difficulty a college grad
uate has going directly into
farming.
"The intitial capital expen
diture is just too high for the
graduating student. Unless he
has a family operation to take
over, chances are slim that
he will be able to go directly
into fanning on his own," El
dridge explained.
"Once in a while, a unusual
opportunity will occur where
by a farmowner will allow
the young man to take part
in the farm and gradually
acquire its ownership. But
these opportunities do not
often appear," he said.
According to Eldridge, the
student who is really set on
fanning, will not be swayed
from it But often the prob
lems and difficulties tend to
scare the students off.
In order to be successful,
the beginning fanner must
have assets of between $70,
000 to $80,000. The student who
graduates, but does not go in
to fanning, can make about j
the same net income as the
Go with "The
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While attending the Univer
sity, Dobbins appeared on
Howell Theatre stage and in
numerous laboratory and ex
perimental plays.
He received Bachelor of
Science and Master of Fine
Arts degrees at the Univer
sity with an assistantship in
lighting.
Dobbins is currently living
in New Briton, Conn, where
he is teaching speech and
stage lighting at Connecticut
State Teachers College.
Before leaving Nebraska,
Dobbins taught four years at
Wayne High School in Wayne
and one year at Omaha
Westside.
The play will be presented
Feb. 26 and 27 at the Tem
ple Building at 8 p.m.
Featured in the cast for
the "romantic comedy" are
Gary Hill, Jo Flaugher, Bill
farmer, without the need of
the enormous assets.
"The profit expectations of
farmers seem to be rising. Be
cause of this, more and more
students are looking for farm
ing after graduation. But a
downswing in expected profits
would tend to scare them off,"
Eldridge said.
Nearly thirty per cent of
the agriculture graduates go
on to graduate school for
more advanced work. Busi
nesses related to agriculture
draw about fourteen per cent
of the graduates. The biggest
area of this demand is in the
chemical business, which is
attributed to the vast and var
ied amounts of chemicals used
by the modern farmer.
"Business demand for ag
riculture graduates exceeds
the number of students grad
uating by two to four times,"
Eldridge said. "We are very
short of meeting the demand.
"For instance in the area of
vocational agriculture teach
ers for high schools, it Is nec
essary for school systems to
pull teachers from all over
the midwest. Even then, six
Nebraska high schools had to
withdraw the course from
their curriculum because of
lack of teachers."
k Captain Ulalh
Wednesday, Feb. 16, 1966
Lacey, Ric Marsh, Craig
Stuckey, Bill Robart, Rod
Hernandez and Dean Sches
sler. The play is set in Mexico
and concerns a young Amer
ican who adjusts to Mexican
families and customs as he
tries to determine the worth
of his own future.
Richard Manlsby, president
of the Nebraska Chapter of
National Collegiate Players
(Nebraska Masquers), the
group which is sponsoring the
Production, said that the "Ne-
. .. , . . , , i
races proaucuons nau oeen
discontinued for the past sev
eral years, but that it was
revived in an effort to afford
an opportunity for all Unl.
verity students to participate
An admission charge of 50
cents will be charged at the
door.
Students from a farming
background compromise
about eighty per cent of the
Agriculture College enrol
lment. They are drawn from
throughout the state.
"We feel that students en
tering agriculture are more
widely distributed that from
other colleges, such as busi
ness or engineering," Eldridge
emphasized.
"The trend for students to
come from Omaha seems to
be growing. I don't quite know
how to explain this, but it is
partially based on the fact
that Omaha is a leader in
food processing. Most of these
Omaha students seem to be
taking food technology; how
ever, pre-veterinary and pre
forestry students are also rep
resented." said Eldridge.
Research Paper
A paper by Dr. Henry Lynch
has been accepted for pres
entation before the 47th an
nual session of the Ameri
can College of Physicians. He
is an assistant instructor of
internal medicine.
Lynch will present "A Study
of Five Cancer Families" dar
ing the clinical session on
neoplastic disease in New
York City April 18-22.
Golf"
by London Fog
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