Wednesday, March 16, 1966 Paga 3 The Daily Nebraskan Tourney Columns' Warm weather and the state tournament apparently affec ted Cupid's aim, as only five ..coeds were pinned or engaged this weekend. riNNIXGS . Linda Sutton, Zeta Tau Al pha junior in social welfare from Lincoln, to Lynn Rath jen, Theta Xi junior in Teach ers from Beatrice. , Karen Beggs, Kappa Alpha Theta junior in Teachers from Marvel : Cont. from pg. 1, col. 2 'and the one presented to the Legislature was that the final and accurate projection was not ready until two months af ter the Committee on Budget had received the request. Marvel remarked that t h e University's problems are not unique. "Every state, without ex 'ception, will have the s am e problems to tell you," he said. "More is spent on concrete to build highways than on Uni versity's to mold minds I only wish this problem could be solved. It's a fine com mentary on our society." "There is a way around these problems, however, that will not mean either a tuition increase or a special session," he stressed. Jl&TSAlDTHATM'i', IAWWE" IS doin6 fine.. Ht ivw I SHOULD Be V S AW "DIN! THIS HER WS OFF IN TWO MONTHS! JAMMING! HW0PHTHALM0L0I5TANII REGARD. THIS A5 A MAJOR MEDICAL TRIUMPH... UlTH NOTHING MORE THAN A SIMPLE EVE PATCH, tOE HAVE , 0ft3O6HTAM8LSOPlATO ITS KNEES! Nebraskan Want Ads These low-rest rates iiirty to all thi nned advertlsm in the Dailr Nebraskan: standard rat 1 Be per ward and mini main chare at Wo per classified Inser- ItM. ; Parmeat far Ihete ads arlll fall tnta two catee-erles: (II adi rnnains less (baa ane week In succession moat be paid for before Insertion. Z adi running for mora than an areek will be paid weekly. FOR SALE MUSIC SALE Annual gale on music books. Price drastically reduced. Val . nea from 9c to $2.99. NEBRASKA BOOK STORE. Model S.F.D. Friden Flexowrlter with stand, like new, less than 100 hours nse, will sacrifice. Call Mr. Gormley. , . 4664847. Setro Components: preampHflers, Jen ' sen speakers, turn table and ton arm. CaU 432-3404 alter 6. '60 VW Sedan. S6.S00, excellent tires fuel gnaae, seat belts, luggage rack, top condition, 1790. Weekend or after Si 423-6701. TRAILOR Mercury Manor. 1030 No. 48th, Lot 70, 434-3440 after S. MO ee BSA motorcycle, 1957, very food condition. 4 -speed, must aelL 3009 R, ' 432-9684. Please call. FOR RENT NEW APARTMENTS for npnerclasamen pear University. One-t h r e e -bed room (ulta. Available now. Built In kitchens, alr-condltionlng, private utility, laundry fadlltle. t59 per student. CaU Jerry Ontry Hooae, 2140 Orchard, University approved. Nice privet room, cooling, T.V.. 477-8268. Large Apartment, near campus. Also, Efficiency Apartment. Males only - CaU 439-4044 evenings. Apartment available for 1 or 1 boy. . 3410 Dudley. 434-4077. WANTED .Recent facultr appointee and wife de sire furnished apartment or email house of sabbatical professor or other. " 1 to 2 year leaae, healnnliui June. , Reply in full. WO Whitney Avenue, Apt 10. New Raven, Conn. UNIVERSITY RECORDER SOCIETY Interested Recorder Flayers. Call or set Richard VyblraJ. Room J15, Music BuildliK. TENNIS RE-STRINGING TrnnJs Re-Struurtnf with on aervtse. 11.00, Victor airings. 4M-1432. Ruins Effect Lincoln, to Jim Campbell, Phi Delta Theta junior in Arts and Sciences from Omaha. ENGAGEMENTS Judy Trank, Delta Delta Delta junior in elementary ed ucation from Alliance, to Bob Chaloupka, Kappa Sigma freshman in Law College from Callaway. Diane Lakm, Delta Delta Delta junior in physical ther apy from Emerson, la., to Bill Kilzer, Sigma Chi senior in mathematics from South Sioux City. Bonnie Wells, freshman in Teachers from Lincoln, to Keefe Lodwig, senior in Teachers from Riverside, Calif. Senators To Decide Procedures Procedures for the ASUN elections in April will be de cided on at Wednesday's Stu dent Senate meeting, accord ing to Sen. Bill Coufal, speak er of the house. Coufal explained, "Election procedures are basically the same as last year, but the limit for individual campaign costs may be reduced. We mainly want to notify every body about what is happen ing." Voting booths will be set up in the Nebraska Union, the East Union and Love Memorial Library, he con tinued. "Convenience of location is most important," he noted. Another solution that may come up Wednesday concerns supporting a project of t h e Young Democrats. Under this project, candidates for state and national offices would be invited to debate before the students, said Kent Neumeister, ASUN president. Home Economics School To Hold Hospiiality Day More than 2,000 high school girls and their parents are expected to visit the campus for the Home Economics Hos pitality Day on April 2. Sandra Stork, events chair man, said the annual career opportunities day will be dir ected by the University De partment of Textiles, Cloth ing and Design. The. program is intended to present a typical day in the life of a college student. Nat alie Hahn, style show chair man, said the program will include fashion designs and "fashion finds" from -dorm wear to formal wear. The girls and their parents will also be invited to tour each of the five departments of the School of Home Eco nomics, according to Miss Stork. Menus of the future and foods used for experimental nutrition research will be ex hibited at the Department of Food and Nutrition. Money management and research on sleection of cooking utensils will be displayed in the Fam ily Economics and Manage ment display. WS JOB Mm- .. StffM'-jmiitttiAMtiMJtltlj iuaaaaulatiaM JMaMiaBBaV fcaaWaimmii ' Jf s fTDTTx WSWSgz fTSXSTSS T"3 I n t I I m !6 - .V ' M it jut', 4' J.s ft.ia.v ft . J ' - ' ' WIT fi I k i "Mr. Acacia," Roy C. Clark, is shown receiving his commission as an ad miral in the mythical Nebraska Navy from Jim Hunter, master of cere monies at Acacia's sixty-first Founder's Day banquet last Saturday. Clark is the national executive secretary for the fraternity. Other awards given at the meeting went to Stan Matske, class of 1923, who was the alum with the lowest role number; Roger Thornton, Ensign in the Navy, who came the farthest to the meeting; and Brad Baltenspurger, this year's outstanding pledge. Resents Authorize Bond Sales For Construction Of New Dorm The Board of Regents Tues day authorized the sale of $13 million in revenue bonds te finance the construction of the new dormitory complex. In authorizing the sale f the bonds, the Board accepted the low interest rate bid of 4.2241 per cent submitted by an association of 33 firms lead by Lehman Brothers and The girls will be able to see themselves on television with the Home Economics Journalism display. Tours of the two new home manage ment laboratories will also be available. Some 650 home economics students and faculty members will participate in Hospitality Day. WUS Delegate To Address AUF A field representative from the World University Service (WUS), Sue Orrin, will speak at the All University Fund (AUF) meeting Thursday night. Miss Orrin will speak on the WUS which receives the proceeds collected from the AUF Faculty Drive which began Mon "All students and faculty are invited to attend," said J-n Binger, AUF member. The meeting will be held in the Nebraska Union at 7 p.m. j Get it done right. Get MAN-POWER . .'the new power-packed aerosol deodorant! MAN-POWER'S got the stepped-up pene tration power, the 24-hour staying power a man needs. Goes on fast... never sticky ... dries In seconds. Try Itl 1.00 BY J HE MAKERS OF OLD SPICE H U LTO N 1T A T Phelps, Fenn and Co. of New York. The complex, to be located northwest of Nebraska Hall, will consist of three high rise dorms plus a separate food service building, a cov ered swimming pool and sunken garden. It is sched uled to be ready by the fall of 1967. Revenue bonds are the bor rowing of money for construc tion of a building that will make money to pay the prin ciple and interest. The mon ey is being borrowed with the plan that student dormitory fees, principally board fees, will be used to pay back the loan. - The Regents also approved the purchase of the last piece of land needed before begin ning construction of the com plex. In addition, the Board authorized the purchase of a number of lots lying southeast of Abel Hall and east of the railroad tracks. The lots lie along Vine, "U" and "T" Streets near 19th and 20th Sts. In other business, bids were accepted for air conditioning improvements and the pur chasing of a home economics demonstration mobile unit. The mobile unit will be used in a program called, "Re habilitation of the Physically Limited Homemaker" which is being financed by the Ne braska Heart Association. The Regents accepted grants totaling over $1 million for research and training, fel lowships and special pro grams. The funds will be used for research in mental retarda tion, study of air pollutants, graduate training in sociology and social work and for the purchase of art objects. IS l t , ;f i ri4k m. f - ra. I tL I wmm '5 Leaves of absence were granted to several faculty members including Kenneth Von Bargen, assistant pro fessor of agricultural engine ering, who has accepted National Science Foundation Fellowship at Purdue Univer sity for the next year. A EC Manager To Discuss Nuclear Vomer A native Nebraskan and authority, on. .nuclear, reactor power plants, Max E. Jack son of Chicago, 111., will speak at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Ne braska Union. Jackson will address a joint meeting of the Nebras ka professional and student chapters of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics En gineers. A former resident of Peru Jackson is presently a man ager for technical operation of the Atomic Energy C om mission in Chicago. For sev eral years he served as dep uty director of te reactor di vision in the Commission' Oak Ridge (Tenn.) operations office. Jackson's address, open to the public, will deal with re cent developments in nuclear reactor power plants in the United States. ! ;-;yi J I. ' , : I if", , ' ' -' ' 1 I ; c "'y "yJ " ' ' - ' 1 4 i " " ' : I,,,, , , v r.- Buy Your H..S. t'Scaffier-Aff Jackets at v jj Ll Zjj ' UNIVIMITY Of NillAIKA LINCOLN fl X laoooosoooooooooo "'BBtalsji.jiSijl Laejw WEDNESDAY INTER VARSITY, 8 a.m., Nebraska Union. MU EPSILON NU Convo cation - Kenneth McFarland, 10:30 a.m., Nebraska Union. UAAD, 11:45 a.m., Nebras ka Union. KENNETH McFARLANI) Luncheon, noon, Nebraska Union. PLACEMENT LUNCHEON, 12:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. RESIDENCE HALLS Direc tors Meeting, 1:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. YWCA, Girls' Club, 3:30 p. m.. Nebraska union. BIULDERS, Advertising, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. BUILDERS, College Days, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. ASUN Student Senate, 4 p. m., Nebraska Union. YWCA, Cultural Tours, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. RED CROSS, 4:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. BUILDERS, Tours, 4:30 p. m.. Nebraska union. YWCA, Tutorial Project, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. UNION Public Relations, 30 p.m., Nebraska Union. NEBRASKAN SOCIETY for Research into the Prehispanic Cultures of Meso America, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. NEBRASKA CAREER SCHOLARS in Botany, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. TOASTMASTEKS CLUB, 5:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. PHI MU, 6 p.m., Nebraska Union. YWCA-YMCA, Steering Committee, 6:30 p.m., Nebras ka Union. BUILDERS Convocation, 7 p.m., Nebraska union. ALPHA PHI OMEUA, 7 p.m., Nebraska union. KOSMET KLLn Kehearsai, 7 p.m., Nebraska Union. INTER VARSITY, 7:30 p.m. Nebraska Union. NEBRASKA CAREER SCHOLARS, 7:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. MATH COUNSELOR Pro gram, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. PARKING .APPEALS Board, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. YOUNG DEMOCRATS, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. INTER COOP COUNCIL -Nancy Childs Lecture, 9:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. TRYOUTS for "Octarron" and "The Importance of Be ing Ernest," 7 p.m., 301 B, Temple Building. EAST UNION Projection, 4 p.m.. East Union. ASME, Joint Student Meet ing, 7:30 p.m., 206 Richards Hall. RODEO CLUB, 7:30 p.m., East Union. Trio Wins First In Talent Show Trophies were awarded to the top three acts in the East Union talent show March 13. First place went to a vocal tio from Love Memorial Hall consisting of Mary Anderson, Shirley Cook and Cheryle Gustman. Second and third places went respectively to Dave Shoemaker, accordion solo, and Mary Potter, vocal solo. YOU GUYS KEEP ONGOING FORMAL AS LONG AS YOU WMT.Me,lMSMKHItiG TOh.te.KNtT SHIMS 4OQ0000O0aO0O&QC0OCXXX0D&0OC Aquaqucttes Plan 'Dizneyland' Show A friendly dragon, a dock of cards and the three little pigs are some of the characters that will be appearing in the University Aquaquette swim show on March 24 and 25. The theme of the show is "Diznevland" and is ar take off on the famous amusement park, according to Peggy Blue, secretary of tne ciuD. Ten acts from Adventure- land, Tomorrow-land, ranta- syland and Frontierland will be performed by the members of the girls synchronized swimming club at 7:30 p.m. in the Coliseum pool. Music and costuming will add to the theme and carry out the atmosphere of fun and fantasy, said Miss Blue. A cowboy and cowgirl num ber, complete with western attire, will be presented by Alice Dale, Sally Sheridan, Rod Dewey, and Larry Wheel er. "Alice in Wonderland" will be the title of a solo number by Peggy Blue. Her act will be executed under a sprinkler shower of rain and will start with a dive from the high board. Seven girls in a green and orange dragon suit will slith er off the side of the pool into the water to the tune of "Puff the Magic Dragon." Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer will be portrayed in an act by Mary Holm and Sal ly Sheridan. Also on the light er side will be a comedy act called the "Three Little Pigs." Strings of electric Christ mas tree lights will be worn in a Doay-iigni aci in wnicn j DIAMOND RINGS j' V FONTAINE . FROM $150 I rm a i .h.imi-h mumr - isamim -Mniiininmiiin airr"w"--"r ) all other pool light are turned off. Other formation acts will be a "Constellation" number and the finale. The first is a group of girls simulating the constellations of the sky and forming star-shaped patterns in the pool. The finale will be a deck of cards that will make heart, diamond, club and spade for mations in the water. Each "card" will wear a red or black oil-skin costume with diamonds and hearts on t h e front and back. An Indian number which begins with a tom-tom dance will be done by a group of six girls, in feathers and war paint. There are forty members in the club, selected in the fall for ability in synchronized swimming. The girls have been practicing for the spring show once a week since No vember. Director of the club is Miss Zeh of the University physical education depart ment. Tryouts To Open Wednesday Night The University Laboratory and Experimental Theatres will hold tryouts Wednesday night for two lays. Tryouts will be held in Room 301 B of the Temple Building from 7-10 p.m. "The Octaroon" is a melo drama with a cast of 14 men and two women. Two of the men are Negroes. "The Importance of Being Ernest" has a cast of four men and four women. .a