Monday, April 4, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 Experts To. Hear 'Outstanding' Prof. A man voted an "Outstand ing Professor" at Purdue Uni versity, Dr. Sam N. Postle thwait, will address an edu cational research symposium at the University Monday through Wednesday. Noted for his innovations in teaching techniques, he w i 1 1 deliver the banquet address at the Second Symposium on Re search and Utilization of Edu cational Media for Teaching the Deaf at the University's Nebraska Center, 7 p.m. Tues day. The symposium will hrinu together 60 leadinz national authorities on the teaching of me aeai. Dr. Postlethwait, a noted botanist and investigator in the use of audio-visual aids in . college teaching, has re ceived considerable recogni tion for the. development of a special teaching center for botany students at Purdue. Student using the center are assigned to special carols where they have access to pro grammed instructional ma terials such as tape recorded messages, 8 mm films and workbooks. The center, considered sup plementary to the usual class lectures, has been shown to be less expensive and more effective in maintaining per sonal contact between profes sor and student than the tra ditional college botany labora tory. Soaring enrollments in bot- These low-eon rate (Dpi? lo all claa elfied advertlsmir In the Daily Nebraskan: atandard rate of So per word and mini mum charre et 50o per classified Inser tion. Payment for these ads will fall Into two catet-orlea: (1) ads running less than one week In succession must be paid for before Insertion. (2) ads running for more than one week will be paid weekly. FOR SALE 196J Ford Galaxy 500 2-door hardtop with redwhite top. Excellent shape. All vinyl interior & new tires plus much more. After 4:00 at 434-7390. TRAILER Merry Manor, 1030 No. 48th. Lot 70, 434-3440 after S. SENIOR MUST SELL. From 4 to S stu dents can purchase 3-bedroom home for 1300-WOO down apiece. Payments $08 month minimal when split 4 or 6 ways. Borrow on signature notes, repay from rent savings. lMi baths, yard. VA ton air-conditioner, double attached garage, ' occupy June. Call Earl Scudder, days law college, nights 435-8359. 447 South 26th. '60 TR-3. 38,800 miles, everything In ex cellent shape. $1150. Must sell. 488-1738. 1956 Plymouth. Call 468-4876. FOR RENT NEW APARTMENTS for upperclassmen near University. One-t h r e e-bedroom suite. Available now. Built In kitchens, air-conditioning, private utility, laundry facilities. $55 per student. Call Jerry Overton 477-81 18. MISCELLANEOUS SUMMER JOBS IN ALASKA (re profitable. Listings of company names and addresses: $1.00 to Denis RytUeskis co E. R. Anutai RR 10; Lafayette, Indiana. Mow Frontier's "21" Fare Discount Card accepted by most major airlines for a 507c savings. Need a card or Infor mation?. Call Robyn Brock, 432-7386. Visit Russia, Israel or Israel, Rumania, Rulgaria, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia. Poland or Spain, North Africa. $999.00. Hotels, Meals, Sightseeing, jet round trip from New York. Sandra Hano, 4548 Banner Drive, Long Beach, Cali fornia, 90807. Think this would I help? i Place classified ad 'SEND THIS Namei Address: .... Days to Runt ADi i mm COSTi Fivt cnl$ a word for each Insertion. Minimum of 50c pir day. Enclose- check, payable to thi Dally Nebraskan. THE DAILY s. i i i any at P u r d u e, an accom panying increase in perform ance of the student body, and significant increases in bot any students' acceptance in graduate colleges has been pointed to as evidence of the success of Dr. Postlethwait's center. Dr. Robert Stepp, head of the bureau of audio-visual in struction at the University of of Southern California, will Nebraska and symposium co ordinator, said Dr. Postle thwait will discuss applica tions of what he calls "multi- facted teaching approaches" to the teaching of the deaf. Dr. Robert Heinich, assist ant professor of instructional technology at the University deliver the keynote address, "Application of Systems Con cepts of Instruction" at 7 p.m. Monday. Dr. Heinich's research is ap plied to determine the amount of self-teaching, that is, learning without the aid of an instructor, a person can ob tain using an array of audio visual devices and techniques. Another highlight of the symposium will be a demon stration at 9 a.m. Wednesday of the use of overhead pro jectors and other devices with deaf children atPrescott School in Lincoln. Campus To Have More Lighting The University campus will have more lighting on streets and sidewalks, according to a report by the ASUN student welfare committee. The University's physical plant has plans and materials to light the area from the li brary to the Greek houses. The lights will be put up as soon as possible and probably during a vacation period. Already lights have been put up in the Area II parking lot east of Cather Hall, as a result of the committee's in vestigation. In another project the com mittee sent letters to the Fac ulty Senate and the faculty bulletin to publicize dead week in an effort to make it more effective. The committee is also work ing on the check cashing prob lem in the Nebraska Union. The problem lies in admini stration because not enough money is sent to the Union to enable students to cash checks for large amounts, chairman Andy Taube said. Two possible solutions, he said, would be to have a commercial bank set up in the Union or to request the comptroller's office to send more money to the Union. Read Nebraskan Want Ads COUPON" NEBRASKAN $ i piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiM Computers Search For Mythical Mates What are your views on sex? Prudish, conservative, liberal, or free love? That's question No. 28 on the SEED computer dance question naire. Proving that computers have a feeling for romance, the April 22 dance sponsored by the University Builders SEED committee will attempt to pair couples as lo compat ibility via electronic brains. Tickets for the dance and the questionnaires will be available in the Nebraska Union until Friday. SEED is selling only 500 tickets to each sex for the computer dance. Contact This is just one example in the current college phenom ena of machine-matched mates. Operation "Contact," run by an MIT graduate stu dent, and "Match," the brain child of two Harvard under graduates, have in nine months processed some 90, 000 applications for computer ized dates across the nation. An important step in the computer process is the ques tionnaire on which personal Five Universities Send Students To 1SU Meeting Chemical engineering stu dents from five state uni versities met at the University gional meeting of the Ameri- Saturday for the annual re- can Institute of Chemical En gineers. The students met in Avery laboratory where they were welcomed by Dr. John E. Davis, dean of the University College of Engineering and Architecture. The students, from the Uni versities of North Dakota, Colorado, Iowa, Iowa State and Nebraska, will tour the plant facilities of the Bruns wick Corporation in Lincoln Saturday morning. They will present special papers on their research from 2 to 5 p.m. in room 217 Fur guson Hall. Robert F. McNamara of Omaha, manager of the mar keting research diversification department of Northern Na tural Gas Co. will speak at the noon banquet in the Ne braska Union. Schedule Corrections A umber of corrections need to be made in the schedul ing book which is now available for next fall, according to Irma Laase, assistant registrar. They are as follows: Corrected Course Number & Title Campus and Room Change (Pne 57) Math 14 04 Algebra and Trig Lect. 16:00 lfiO MWF 224 Keim 161 T 324 Keim lfi2 T D.I. Ifi3 T P.S. 164 Th 324 Keim 165 Th D.I. 166 Th P.S. Room Change (Page 59 1 Math 253 03 Mathematical Analysis Lect. 9:30 1 MWF 114 Bum Matli 255 Deletion Added Quiz Sections (Page 64) Phil 10 03 Elementary Logic Speecli 110 03 Discussion and Parliamentary Procedure Incorrectly printed - listed as Speech 110 Speech 11 03 Business and Profesional Speaking Added Course (Page 85) Zoology 153 04 Parasitology Order By Phone Foster Service (ALLOW APPROXIMATELY 20 MINUTES) OPEN J MA DIAL it iiiju Am 489-4601 DAILY "WHERE QUALITY 46th & 0 Str PIZZA mill'-1 data is recorded. From there the information is fed into a computer which matches indi viduals with similar back grounds and interests. The SEED dance question sheet asks such things as age, sex, height, race and religion. How many movies do you at tend a month? Do you enjoy philosophical discussions, art, literature and sports? Self-Evaluation Self-evaluation plays an im portant part in filling out the questionnaire. Are you a campus leader? How would you rate your own appear ance? How many people have you dated since your first year in high school? Are you a good dancer? Despite articles in national magazines proclaiming the computer as the match-maker of the future, even 'Match' and 'Contact' have their problems. Problems 'Match' recently paired a girl with her roommate's fi ance, and the creater of 'Contact' lost his girl to a punch-card compatible boy from Amherst. Payments Deadline Extended The deadline for payment of deposits for the ASUN European Flight Plan has been extended from April 1 to April 15, according to Ed Human of Van Bloom Travel Agency. As of Thursday, 45 reser vations had been made for the flight. "A number of stu dents indicated an interest in the trip." Human said, "but they felt the- first week in time "-r payment." The deposit which must be paid by April 15 is $100. To tal cost for the trip is $395. The remaining $295 must be paid by thirty days before departure. Plans for the trip include a train to Chicago, and a June 16 departure from Chi cago to London via United Airlines jet. Return to t h e United States is set for Au gust 18. 14:30 MW A. L. 324 14:30 Sec 14:30 8:30 12:30 51 F A. L. 324 52 F B5 Burn 53 F B5 Burn 54 F 107 Burn 1 MWF 307 T Lect. 13:30 Lect. 11:30 1 MWF BHA Lab 13:30 1 M 203 BH 16:30 Lab 8:30 2 T 203 BH 11:30 Lab 13:30 3 T 203 BH 16:30 Lab 13:30 4 W 203 BH 16:30 PIZZA HUT MENU Onion Sailing Mushroom Anchovy Mozzarella CheoM Hamburger Groan Pepper Papperoni Pizza Supreme Vi Cheese Vi Sowiago Close Fridays & Saturdays 1 AM All Other pays Midnight LX1U REIGNS SUPREME" Lincoln Some girls receive lists of their ideal matesall girls' names. The emphais on simi larity leads to the frequent pairing of a man with his sis ter. However, Gary Gundcrson, SEED chairman, said "There might be a few little prob lems, but for the majority the dance will be a lot of fun." He said that the object of the dance will not be to find the ideal mate, but to just to have fun with someone whose interests are the same as your own. Discussion To Feature Rhodesia Two Rhodesian students will lead a discussion on the politi cal and humanitarian aspects of their country Sunday at 1:30 p.m. in the Nebraska Union. The program is the second of a three-part series on Afri ca sponsored by the Univer sity YMCA. Godwin Dube, a University student, and Edson Nyama pfene, a Nebraska Wesleyan student, will lead the major part of the discussion. Their talks will be supplemented by written material from the Na tional Council of Churches, ac cording to Dave Kittams. Kittams explained that the first country discussed in the series was South Africa, and that the third discussion will feature Angola and Mozam bique, because all have prob lems stemming from govern mental control by white mi nority groups." Theatre Presents 'Parcel9 An original play, "The Par cel", written by Don Coluc ci, a University graduate stu dent, will be presented Sun day and Monday at the Tem ple Building Arena Theatre. The second in a series of original plays produced this semester, "The Parcel" was published in the February is sue of Scrip magazine and has been entered in a nation al playwriting contest. Cast members include Mike Dobbins, Bruce Borin and Jarvis Green. The play will be directed by Mike Karel, a University graduate stu dent. Stephen Cole, director of the experimental theatre pro gram, said "The Parcel" is about a man who is psycho logically "taken apart and put back together" on t h e stage. The one-act play starts at 8 p.m. There is no admission charge. The purpose of the experi mental theatre program, ac cording to Cole, is to offer students an opportunity to write and have their plays produced as part of their ac ademic curriculum. Nebraska Union Committee 1 -imJr ' Saturday, April 30, 8 p.Ri. Pershing Auditorium Tickets $2.50, 2.75, 3.25, all seats reserved. Block sales 9 a.m. - 12 noon Tues. April 5, Union Program Office. General sales 1 p.m. April 5-8, Union Ticket Desk. April 9, all sales at Pershing Auditorium. MONDAY, INTER Varsity, 8 a.m., Ne BURLINGTON R.R., 11:30 braska Union. a.m., Nebraska Union. MINDEN Jr. High School, 12 noon, Nebraska Union. UNICORNS Activities, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. UNION Special Events, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. YMCA, 4:30 p.m., Nebras ka Union. TASSELS, 4:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. UNION Film, 4:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. PHI MU, 5:45 p.m., Ne braska Union. DELTA KAPPA GAMMA, 6 p.m.. Nebraska Union. TOWNE CLUB, 6 p.m., Ne braska Union. DELTA ZETA, 6 p.m., Ne braska Union. PHI MU, 6:45 p.m., Ne braska Union. UNICORNS - Social, 7:30 p.m.. Nebraska Union. IFC Greek Week Con vocation, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. BUSINESS and Economics Round Table, 7:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. UNICORNS - Public Re lations, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. MATH Counselor Program, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. TAU KAPPA EPSILON, 8 p.m., Nebraska Union. 'Arena9 To Open Play "Some Sunday Morning" will be presented Wednesday and Thursday in the Arena Theatre of the Temple Build ing. Directed by Richard Mauls by, the play was written Dy U. Robert Devereaux, a Uni versity graduate student and University Theatre costume designer. The cast includes: Bill Jam ison,. Pat Brott, Fred Starett, Ric Marsh, Gary Hill and Rod Hernandez. Maulsby said the play de scribes what happens to the party giver after the party is over, or proving that lone liness can be funny. There will be no admission charge for the half-hour play. Music Students Perform April 19 A varity of music by Uni versity students will be pre sented April 19 in a program called "Sound-Off" in the Ne braska Union. The program, which will be held on the Union's north bal cony, will include folk singing groups and soloists. The soloists are Bob Rose and Bob Bovee. The singing groups include: the Bel Can tos, Ember Singers, Guys and Gale and Charlie Armstrong on a flamenco guitar. Students For Your Drug Needs Try 1901 "O" Sr. Fenton Drug Open Til Midnite Phone 477-1802 Special Events Presents: COMEDIAN Bill Cosby Star of TV' 'I CDV ASUN Voting A program to acquaint Uni versity students with voter registration procedures has been completed by the ASUN student welfare committee. Andy Taufoe, committee chairman, said that the proj ect was planned to encourage eligible students to vote. The committee's report will be filed in the ASUN office and copies will be sent to the Young Democrats and Young Republicans, Taube explained. Upcoming elections are: city, April 5: county primary, May 10; and county general, November 10. Qualifications f o r voting are: 21 years old, resident of the stats for six month, resi dent of the county for 40 days and resident of the precinct for ten days. Counties In which voters must register before voting, are: Adams, Buffalo, Dodge, Douglas, Gage, Hall, Lancas ter, Lincoln, Madison, Platte, Sarpy and Scottsbluff. Regis tration is unnecessary in all other counties. In counties in which voters must register before an elec Ivy Day Meet Is Wednesday A meeting for the Ivy Day song leaders will be held Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the; Nebraska Union. All song leaders should bring three copies of their' music and a $3 check madei out to AWS for the entry fee i in the song contest. I Preliminary sings will be held April 26. FLYING HOME FOR EASTER? Important that you make your reservation NOW! Call 435-3232 (the green phone) and Go tickets delivered to your house or dorm (We'rt Handling the ASUN BEST GAS 24-H0URS EVERY DAY OF THE YEAR AT DIVIDEND CIGARETTES Lowest Prices fs ! - '.'.'X - t 'WlWH o nm gal Dividend Bonded Gas 16th P Sts. Just Sooth of Campus Finishes Report tion, a person may register and request an absentee bal lot at the same time. In all other counties a student would need to write only for the ab sentee ballot. Absentee ballots may be ob tained from the .county clerk's office any time within 40 days prior to the election. Ballots must be marked and mailed and postmarked no later than midnight on the day preced ing the election. Married students may ap ply for the absentee ballots in the same letter, but both husband and wife must sign the letter of application. Daily Nebraskan Vol. 89, No. 91 April 4. 196 Second-class postage paid at Lincoln Nebraska. Member Associated Collejfiate Press, National Advertising Service, Incorporated. Published at Room 51, Nebraska Union, Lincoln, Nebraska, 68508. TELEPHONE: 477-8711, Ex tensions 2588, 2589 and 2590. Subscription rates are $4 per semes ter or S6 for the academic rear. Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during the school year, except durlnK vacations and exam periods, by students of the University of Ne braska under the Jurisdiction of tho Faculty Subcommittee on Student Pub lications. Publications shall be free from censorship by the Subcommittee or mar person outside the University. Mem bers of the Nebraskan are responsible for what they cause to be printed. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor. JO STOHLMAN t manaflnf edllor, STEVE HUNGEKPORDl nrws rdilor. WAYNE KRKI SCIII Ki night news eclilor JON KEKKHOKFt aports editor, KELLF.Y RAklK: senior staff writers, JAV ITKIN, BRUCE GILES, .11 I.IK MORRIS: junior staff writers, RANDY IRKY, TONI VICTOR, NANCY HENDRICKSON. DAN PILLAR : oho torraphers. TOM HI BIN, RICH Kls F.KR: copv editors, POLLY RHYNOLIIS LOIS QUINNET, PEG BENNETT, BARB ROBERTSON. NANCY COITFAL. BUSINESS STAFF MIKE KIRKMAN, business manager-, SHIRLEY WENTEK. CONNIE RAS MCSSEN. CHUCK KALEM, TIICK TIIEIS, BRUCE WRIGHT. LU WALL ACE. JOHN RASMI'SKEN, buslnesa assistants-. LYNN RATH J EN, clrcula. Hon manager; JIM BUNZ, subscription manager. ' Tour TwjJ Snm European Flight in June) j neDrasKa union j