Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 25, 1966)
Friday, March 25, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Page 5 Seven 'Masters' Picked For Visit Seven distinguished persons have been announced as vis itors for this year's Masters program April 24-26. Jim DeMars, Masters pro gram chairman, said that in addition to these seven at least two more people will be Invited. The Masters thus far Include: U.S. Sen. Walter Judd, J. Martin Klotsche, A. H. Moseman, Allen J. Suther land, John Becker, Forrest E. Behm and Eugene Holland. Sen. Judd of Minnesota has been a congressman for twen ty years. He gave the keynote 2teltgtmta Crimea BAPTIST Basils! SludtM Fellowship 141k K Rtudcnl fellowship! :1 a.m. Worship! 11:49 a.m Dlnnor: 6:30 p.m. Jtrnf All, director. CATHOLIC T. THOMAS AQUINAS Mlb Q Mass! 7.0,10,11 a.m. I 12: IS p.m. Newmaa Club supper! 5:30 p.m. Father Raymond Haiti. IT. EPISCOPAL MARK'S ON THE nth a CAMPUS Worship! 1:30, 10:30 p.m. Canterbury Club) 5:30 p.m. Oenrge Peek. vloar-chaplaUL John Hall, asa't. chaplain. LUTHERAN Lutheran Student Chapel (LCAALC) US No. 16th Worship: 9. 10:30 a.m. Lutheran Student Aaan.:5:30 P.m. Alvln M. Petersen, paator. Ron Thomson, assistant. University Lutheran Chapel (Mlaiourl Synod) Uth Q Worship: 9:30, 11 a.m. Gamma Delta: 5:30 p.m. A. J. Norden. paator. R. W Lehenbauer, vicar. METHODIST Methedltt Chapel Center 640 No. 1MB Hols Communion: 9 a m. Worship: 8:30. 11 a.m. Dupper and forum: 5:30 p.m. Duane Hutchinson, director. Bruce McSpadden, Kenneth Ford. JEWISH Tlrereth Israel Sjnafocue Sheridan Bird. Worship; 8 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m. Satur ay. Hlllel: p.m. first Sunday of month, Nebraska Union. Rabbi Maurice Pomerantz. UNITARIAN 300 A Worship: 11 a.m. Charlea 8. Stephen, pastor. UNITED CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP 333 No. 14th StudT Group: 0 a.m. Worship: 10:45 a.m. Supper and forum: 9:30 p.m. Alan Picketing, director. Hudson Phillips. Choice Of Fiances 'Reflective' With the projections for stu dent enrollment in the coming years presented to University officials, Dr. Floyd Hoover has included an addendum ex plaining the reasons for his belief in increasing enroll ment. He compared the present situation to one following World War I when eighth graders began to enroll in high schools in unheard of numbers. He said in the addendum that exactly the same social and economic forces impell ing eighth graders to continue their education are now af fecting students reaching 12th grade. College Necessary Hoover noted that it is no longer necessary for the early adolescent to work in order to supplement the family in come. The high school student has also begun to realize that a college education is necessary for a job in the same way the eighth grade student be gan to realize that a high school education was neces sary for a job. Hoover pointed out that there has become a social pressure to go on to college. Re presented figures show ing that 5 per cent of the high school students went on to college in 1910, 37 per cent in 1954 and 55 per cent in 1933. "If there is no appreciable leveling off of the interest factor in higher education dur ing the next ten years, its ef fect upon the University of Nebraska and upon rtll the state and locally supported and controlled institutions -is certain to be enormous, Hoover concluded. addres atthe lflftfl RrvnWnn National Convention. Klotsche Is thechancellor of the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee. Moseman Is the. Assistant administrator for technical co. operation and research In the u.&. Department of State in Washington, D.C. As chairman vf th Sam Diego Division Board of Sa. curity First National Bank. Sutherland was named "Mr. San Diego" in 1963. Becker, an Omaha business and civic leader. Is a member of the Omaha Chamber of Commerce, t h e Creighton University Board of Trustees, Ak-Sar-Ben and vice Dresl- dent of junior Achievement. Behm. who was a momhsr of the 1940 University football team who went to the Rose Bowl, is president of Corning Glass. Holland is the Dresldent nf the Masonite Corporation. 'Your University Exhibit To Open Friday A Hernoon "Get-to-Know-Your -University" will be the theme of a large exhibit in the Nebraska Union ballroom beginning Friday. The exhibit will include displays from approximately 40 University departments in order to equaint students and parents with work and re search being done in differ ent parts of the school. The display will be open from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and will also be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday through Monday to coincide with Parents Day. Bible Parables To Be Discussed A discussion on Bible para bles in the New Testament will be held by the University Lutheran youth group Sunday at 6:30 p.m. The group will be led by Vicar Ronald Lehenbauer of the Lutheran Chapel. 'Bush' Priest To Speak At St. Mark's A member of the Bush Brotherhood of St. Barnabas will be a guest speaker at St. Marks-on-theCampus Sunday evening. The Rev. Eric C. Hampson will speak at the Canterbury CM) meeting at 7 p.m., at St. Mark's Episcopal church, 1309 RSt. The Brotherhood of St. Bar nabas, of North Queensland, Australia, is a group of un married men within the Ang lican communion who volun teer to serve as priests or teachers for five years in the Australian Bush. The parish of which Fr. Hampson had charge in Aus tralia was an area the size of Nebraska. The two largest, towns had populations of about 1200 each Fr. Hampson was born in South Africa and attended a university and semi nary there. He has served in England as well as Australia. Tickets Limited? There may be a limited number of low-cost student tickets available for Sen. Ed ward Kennedy's appearance at the Democratic Jefferson Jackson Day dinner. The dinner, an annual event, will be April 23 at the Omaha Civic Auditorium. Tickets to the dinner are epiiinff at Drices from $35 to $100, according to Ted Mun- ster, administrative assistant to U.S. Rep Clair Callan. Munster said students may be able to purchase tickets at reduced prices, depending on the number sold at regular prices. He noted, however, that tickets are selling fast, and there may not be student tickets available. However, some provision will definitely be made for students. Munster said. There is a good possibility of stu dent admittance to the bal cony free of charge or for a nominal charge. This space, he said, would be reserved first for students, then for the general public. Kennedy may also be ap pearing in Lincoln and other cities throughout the state, according to the state Demo cratic Party headquarters. L : ' 1 K n faul till EVEN OUR MOTHER . . . coulden't tell us apart says one of the fifty sets of identical twin calves located on East Campus. Visitors Not Really Seeing Double; Beef Center Has 50 Sets Of Twins Probably the only place in the world where one can see fifty sets of identical twins is at a University's re search center on the outskirts of Lincoln. True these twins are all heifers at the Beef Cattle Re search Center; but neverthe less, this is almost as strange for animals as humans, ac cording to Dr. D. C. Clanton. The heifers were sought out, positively identified and finally purchased by a Uni versity animal research team in visits to ranches in sever al states during the past year. The team's head, Clanton, associate professor of animal science, traveled 25,000 miles in finding the twins and bring ing them to Lincoln. "When you consider the fact that it is rare to find two sets of twins on a sin gle ranch, a lot of herds were visited to find the 50 sets of twins," Clanton commented. It was found that about one set of calves in every five were identical as dis tinguished from "fraternal" twins, he added. The calves were assembled for use in research project designed to study the effect of pre-calving energy levels on the energy retention and reproductive performance of first-calf calf two-year-o 1 d heifers. The 50 sets purchased in klude 35 sets of Hereford calves, 12 sets of Angus, two sets of shorthorns and a sin gle set of crossbred calves. FRIDAY ENGLISH department 12 noon, Nebraska Union. UNIVERSITY tele vision, 12:15 p.m., Nebraska Union. PLACEMENT luncheon, 12:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. A.PH.A., 1: 30 p.m., Ne braska Union. Nebraska College Students To Counsel Youth ASUN, 3 Union. p.m. AWS interviews, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. ASUN student court inter views, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. NEBRASKA Union board, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. JAZZ 'n java, 4 p.m., Ne braska Union. TOWNE club Pioneer hour dance, 7 p.m., Nebraska Un ion. PALLADIAN literary socie ty, 8 p.m., Nebraska Union. A group of Lincoln college students will be spending this weekend in informal discus sion and counseling sessions with Lincoln Junior high school students as part of "Project Horizon." About 25 junior high stu dents will be meeting with the college students from the Uni versity and i r o m Wesleyan University at Camp Nysted in Danncbrog, Neb. The project is an annual event sponsored bv the Ne braska District YM-YWCA. The program is designed to give the students an opportun ity to meet on informal grounds with games, music, hikes in the woods and camp fire gathering scheduled for the program. The junior high students will come from juvenile court references, from underprivi leged homes and from middle class families, according to Twig Gordon, director of the University YWCA. The Rev. and Mrs. Law rence Stanton are directors of the project which is now in University Gets Student Grants The University will receive $16,850 for 421 students in ed ucational opportunity grants for the academic year 1966 67, according to First District Congressman Clair callan. In all Lincoln colleges and universities will receive $185,- 711. Nebraska Wesleyan will get $38,430 for 64 students and Union College, $16,850 for 26 students. The grants are made under the Higher Education Act of 1965 and provide from $200 to $800 per academic year for full-time students. The students have to be in good standing and show evi dence of outstanding academ ic or creative ability or be exceptionally in need of fi nancial assistance. These grants are matched with equal acounts of finan cial assistance through loans, scholarships or employment provided by individual col leges. Other Nebraska institutions and their individual grants: Concordia Teachers College, Seward $18,960 for 63 stu dents; Midland Lutheran Col lege, Fremont-42,470 for 106 students; Wayne State Col lege, Wayne-$37,920 for 126 students; Peru State Colloge, Peru $22,790 for 31 students, and York College, York $15, 840 for 32 students. Mclntyre Heads Maxwell Senate The chief justice of the ASUN Student Court, Keith Mclntyre, has been elected dean of the Maxwell Senate of Delta Theta Phi profession al law fraternity., Other officers are: Larry Hall, vice dean; Stephen Stastny, tribune; Raymond Baker, clerk o exchequer; Steven Rrunuey, clerk of rolls; Gary Thompson, mas ter of rituals; and Paul Con ley, bailiff. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS I Mm db 111! M its third year of operation;: Rev. Stanton said that "Pro. jeet Horizon" Is "wortnwnue because instead of spending 24 hours listening to speakers, the college students will be getting to know themselveg and the junior high stu dents." The junior high students participating in the project benefit because they are able 4. i i At ;ti fl 1 : 1 10 see wnai iney win De ue by talking to the college stu-' dents, Rev. Stanton noted. Rev. Stanton, associate pas tor of the First Plymouth Congregational Church in Lin coln, is a former missionary to Mexico and was a director of a work camp for the Ma lone Community Center in Lin coin. Stanton said that there "hasn't been a carry over," in friendships formed while working in "Project Hori zon." lie stressed that the weekend is "only a beginning. He said that the project af fords "one chance to look in to the life of another person." The number of college stu dents attending the weekend session has not been con firmed, according to A n d i Block, University YWCA pres dent. She said the students will be attending an orienta tion coccinn hofnro thp wppk. end project. Marsh To Speak io umLAJixns Nebraska Secretary of State Frank Marsh will speak to UNICORNS Monday night on University appreciations. .. ; The meeting will be held in the Nebraska Union small auditorium at 7:30 p.m. 11 1 0EUEVE I COUU? REALLY GET SERIOUS AgOUT QlJ?Y IF SHE WASNT SO pang TALL," SNOOKER BOWL Open Bowling 1 P.M.-6 P.M. 25c after 6 P.M. & Sunday 40c 16 Snooker 6- Pool Tables Girh FREE with Dates Shuffleboard SN01KER BOWL 1 block south of N. 48th , Holdrtgt 434-9823 BEST GAS 24-HOURS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR AT DIVIDEND CIGARETTES Lowest Prices lid ttua Cyl ; iwwttin'tri"T-ii,T..i.r iiimiimiWiifsiiiiiallsr bt half the pre tammawr i --MiiiiMiirr-''-',1iiriiiiiiii"iiiiim"r 1 v i awamnwaMiwiiniiraaasiiissa'siirniairiisiiiiHisiaaiaj Braniff International's new fare, for anyone twelve through twenty-one, virtually cuts the cost of flying in half. At these prices, the flyin may soon become as popular as all the other in things that are going on today. (We will permit guitar strumming and folk-singing on route, but no noisy political debates, please.) Eligibility requirements are simple. Just send us a $3.00 registration fee, and well issue an identification card which, when validated, will entitle you to buy tickets at approximately half fare on our flights in the United States. Of course, this will be subject to availability of space at departure time, and does not apply during certain holiday periods. Soon, the same card will qualify you for discounts on hotels and other services. Make your application in person at any Braniff office. Or mail the coupon below. Dividend Bonded Gas 16th e, P Sts. Just South of Campus Braniff International Youth Fare Manager P.O. Box 35001, Dallas,Texas 75235 Mr. Name Mrs. Miss. Age Address Qty State Zip Code. Date of Birth. , Signature. . Be sure to enclose $3.00 check or money order payable to Braniff International.