The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 19, 1966, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    Wednesday, October 19, I9bt
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MISS PRESCOTT ... and Pauhellenic president
Erma Winterer prepare to leave the Union following
Monday's convocation.
KD Alum Advocates
Returning To Ritual
.The Executive Secretary
of Kappa Delta, Miss Min
nie Mae Prescott, spoke
Monday evening at Pan
hellenic Night in the Ne
braska Union.
Mils Prescott based her'
speech on the Panhellenic
Workshop theme "Pledges
today: Members tomor
row". She emphasized that
each pledge was a potential
member, and during her
pledgship should attempt to
gain five qualities: loyalty,
cooperation, leader
ship,"" good grooming and
responsibility.
Miss Prescott said that
all active members should
set an example for the
pledges. An active should
be able to instinct a pledge
"not to do as I say, but to
do as I do."
Although all pledges may
not become active mem
bers, Miss Prescott empha
sized that they, should be
thankful since they had se
lected a particular group,
and that group in turn had
chosen them.
Miss Prescott advocated
a return to the rituals and
also said that sorority wom
en should set the tone of a
campus. She said that t h e
image of the Greek sys
I ten :.wfll 'Improve slowly
over the years by an in
Sig Eps Break Ground
For Planned Addition
Construction will begin
on a $130,000 expansion to
the Sigma Phi Epsilon fra
ternity. The new addiiton will in
crease the potential number
of residents from 46 to 72.
Ground breaking ceremo
nies were conducted Satur
day by several of the fra
: tensity alums. The bond
ing is scheduled to be com
pleted within the year.
The addition, which is to
be built north of the pre
sent building, will be three
stories high plus a base
ment. The basement will con
tain a completely new li
brary and also expanded
kitchen and dining facilities.
The upper three floors will
contain two-man living quar
ters plus expanded lounge
area.
Keepsake'
5 -3
Perfect diamond . . . per
fect styling . . . perfect
choice. Choose the Keep
sake Diamond Ring that's
perfect for you.
Twfc Milt aU
i '-- ' f mM
U32 TT It
"vsssxsts- TO ItTg
creased effort of each
house.
Scholarship awards were
presented to the top three
houses in scholarship from
last semester. First place
went to Gamma Phi Beta,
second to Chi Omega, and
third to Alpha Delta Pi. Al
pha Delta Pi was also
awarded a trophy for the
most improved scholarship.
The top individual schol
ar in each house was also
recognized. These included
from Alpha Chi Omega,
Gail Skinner; Alpha Delta
Pi, Rose Ann Wirth; Alpha
Omicron Pi, Glenice Bar
rows; Alpha Phi, Peggv
Blue; Alpha Xi Delta, Don
na Bush; Chi Omega,
Jackie Eads; Delta Gam
ma, Maryann Jorgenson;
Delta Zeta, Gaynelle Podoll
and Linda Hammer.
Gamma Phi Beta, Vicki
Dowling, Vicki Schurtz,
Rosie Fowles, and Donna
Eschilman; Kappa Alpha
Theta, Shirley Voss, Jeanne
Fauss, and Pam Dalling;
Kappa Delta, Sherie Sick
lebower; Kappa Kappa
Gamma, Kathy Augustine;
Pi Beta Phi, Mickey Mc
Farland; Sigma Delta Tau,
Trudy Lieberman; Sigma
Kappa, Marcia Thorton;
Zeta Tau Alpha, Marcia
Lagerstrom.
Also planned in the con
struction are better interior
electrical facilities and new
furniture in the present
building. According to Norman
Beatty, alumnus adviser,
the date has not yet been
set to begin construction.
The reason for the delay,
he said, is that time is need
ed to secure the necessary
funds.
Beatty said that most of
the money will be raised
through donations from al
umni. Construction is hoped to
be under way in about a
month, he said.
The new addition was de
signed by Clark and Enerson
of Lincoln.
fjri I Hold that creae? I
'JL I M You bet it will.
y 1 I If the fabric is one of the great,
mpl I 1 1 new pem.anent-press blends
, 1 of 2-ply polyester and cotton
f'' yy h! 1 ' masterminded by Galey I Lord.
if For the new dimension
Hm0JLy I I in collegiate slacks,
f. l00kt0
Schaafs Appointments
Cont. from Pg. 1, Col. 7. whether they like or dislike
"The student's role on this the organizations,
committee should be to talk "This evaluation could de
to as many students as pos- termine the organization's re
sible in order to get their lationship with the Universi
ideas on scholarships and ty, especially making note of
then present the findings to the things they do to benefit
the committee," Stickney the University," Iverson corn
said, mented.
Chosen to serve on the sub- He sees his role as being
committee on Student Organ- an intermediary between the
izations, Jim Iverson stated students and the faculty. "I
that he is not sure of his role would carry ideas both ways,
on the committee. from the faculty to the stu-
"We have not had any dents and vice versa."
meetings yet and I haven't Bruce Jensen was chosen to
talked to too many people serve on the Calendar and
about the committee," he ex- Examinations Committee. He
plained. "I would, however, feels that his duty is to bring
like to see some evaluation the views of the students to
of student organizations made the faculty concerning t h e
by this committee." times for exams and vaca-
"This evaluation would de- tions.
termine whether or not the "My job will be merely to
organization is effective or advise and give the student
not and how close they fol- view. I feel that my views
low their constitution. It are that of the typical student
would also determine h o w on campus as to when to have
these organizations are seen vacations and exams."
Placement Interviews
Placement interviews for
the week of Oct. 24 have
been scheduled. Additional
information is availabl ein
the Placement Office in the
Nebraska Union.
MONDAY. Oct. 24
The Bfndlx Corp.-Kansas City Divi
sion: B.S.. M S E E.. M.S., Ch.E.
Dow Corning Corp.: All degrees
Cbem., di.E.; B.S., M.S. E.E.. M.E.
B.S. Physio; B.S., B.A., M.B.A. Bus
Adm.. MM.. Acctg., Mgmt.
Deere and Co.: B.S.. M.S. E.E..
Ch.E.. I.E., M.E, Math., Acctg., Bus.
Adm.
Overseas Personnel Church Related
InstitutionsJoint Recruitment for Ac
tion in Mission: All degrees Education.
Bus. Adm.. Lib. Arts, Agri., Social
Work, Nursing, Medicine, Ministry. Audio-Visual,
Radio, Television, Hospital
Anm.
Mallinckrodt Chemical Works: B.S.,
M.S. Ch.E., M.E., I.E.i all degrees
Chem. (Analytic); M.S. Chem. (Org.);
Ph.D. Chem. (Phys., Inorg ).
Humble Oil and Refining Co.: B.S.,
M.S. Bus. Adm., Acctg.. Econ., Fi
nance, Ind. Mgt., Lib. Arts, Mktg.
Employers Insurance of W a u s a u:
B S B A lib. Arts, Bus. Adm., Acctg.
Pitman-Moore Division Dow Chemi
cal Company: Pharmacy.
TUESDAY, Oct. 25
Bendix Corp.: Kansas CKy Division:
as before. , ,
Dow Coming Corp. as before.
Mallinckrodt Chemical Works: as oe-
toDeere and Co.: as before. Also, on
East Campus Ag.E., Ag. Mecn., Ag.
Sales
U S. Army Material Command: M.S..
PhD. pert err i but will consider up
per quart BS. Physic. Math.at..
Chem.. E E.. M.E., Ch.E.
Black. Sivalb and BrysOT. Incrop.:
B.S.. M.S. M.E., Ch.E.. Ag.E.. I.E..
Agr.. Bus. Adm.
Geo A. Hormel and Co.: BS.. B.A.,
M.S.. M.A.-Bas. Adm., Lsb. Arts, Agr..
Arch E.. I.E.. M E., E E., Acctg., Live
stock Buyers, TransportatJon.
Department of Personnel, City of St.
Louis: B.S., M.S.-C.E.. M.E.. EE..
Ch E , I.E., Arch., City Planner, Traf
fic. Easrg., Bad., Med. Teasm.
WEDNESDAY. Oct. 26
Geo. A. Hormel and Co.: " before.
Idaho Nudear Corp.: All degrees
M.E.. EE.. Ch.E., Mat., Chem.
Inorg ), Physics.
PittSburgh-Des Moinea Steel Co. B.S.,
M S -C E , M E. .
Caterpillar Tractor Co.: B.S., M.S.-
Ae.E., C.E.. Ch.E.. E E.. M.E.. E.M..
Math. ..
Hooker Chemical Corp.: B S ME,
Chem.; B.S., M.S. Ch.E.
I'nivac Data Processing Division:
B.S. M.E., E E., Math.; M.S. EE. U
thesis is directly related to compute
or their application.
t'nivac Defense System Divisloa:
All degree levels E E.. I.E.
Mallinckrodt Chemical Works: as be
fore. THURSDAY. Oct. tt
International Harvester Co. B S ,
look for the golden arches . . . McDonald's
5305 'C St.
t mw wmu .'. win v imumi mm 4
in the eves of the faculty.
M.S. M.E. . E.E., Ch.E., Ag.E.. Bus.
Adm., Acctg., Auditing, Distribution.
Sales, Computer Programming, Gen,
Bus.
Caterpillar Tractor Co.: as before.
Idaho Nuclear Corp.: as before.
Shell Companies. All degrees Geol.,
Chem. i B.S., M.S. Ch.E., C-E., E.E
M.E., East Campus Agriculture or re
lated fields.
The Northwestern Mutual Life Insur
ance Co. Law College: Law degree.
Stanley Engineering Co.: B.S. C.E..
Arch., Areo.E.; B ,.. M.S. M.E., E E.
FRIDAY. Oct. 21
International Harvester Co.: as be
fore. Wolf and Co. CP: Acctg.
Corning Glass Works: All degree lev
els Ch.E., M.E., E.E., Acctg., Physic,
Math., Fin., Personnel, Programmers.
Systems Analysts. Prod. Supervisors.
The Bendix Corp. Eclipse-Pioneer
Division: B S Bus. Adm., Acctg., Sys
tems and Proced., Date Proc., Prod.
Mgmt., Contract Adm. with heavy em
phasis la Acctg.
The Bendix Corp. Central Office:
B S.-B A . M.S.-M A. Bus. Adm.. Acctg.
Lib. Arts.
Shell Companies: as before. Also as
before on East Campus.
Northwestern Mutual Insurance Co.
Law College: aa before.
Music Conductor
Speaks Thursday
The conductor of the Con
temporary Chamber Players
of the University of Chicago,
Ralph Shapey, will give a pub
lic lecture at the University
on Thursday.
Shapey will visit the Uni
versity's department of music
Thursday and Friday as a
guest of the Nebraska Career
Scholar Program, and will
meet with the career scholars
in the music department.
He will speak on "Compo
sitionMy Practice and Its
Relation to the Modern World
of Music," illustrating his re
marks with tapes of his own
compositions.
His lecture is scheduled for
7:30 p.m. in the choral re
hearsal Hall of the new Music
Building.
865 No. 27th St.
L
WEDNESDAY
UAAD, 12 noon, Nebras
ka Union.
YWCA, 2:30 p.m., Ne
braska Union.
STUDENT AFFAIRS
Staff Symposium, 1 p.m.,
Nebraska Union.
BUILDERS Tours, 3:30
p.m., Nebraska Union.
BUILDERS College Days,
3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union.
YWCA Christmas Ba
zaar, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
BUILDERS Advertising,
3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union.
NEWMAN CLUB Coffee
Hour, 3:30 p.m., Newman
Center.
CAMPUS Projection, 4
p.m., East Union.
ASUN Student Senate, 4
p.m., Nebraska Union.
YWCA Tutorial, 4:30
p.m., Nebraska Union.
JR. PANHELLEN
IC, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Un
ion. RED CROSS, 4:30 p.m.,
Nebraska Union.
UNION Special Events,
4:30 D.m., Nebraska Union.
YWCA Cultural Tours,
4:30 p.m. Nebraska Union.
AWS Representa
tives, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
UNION Public Relations,
4:30 p.m.. Nebraska Union.
KOSMET KLUB Fall
Show, Auditions, 6:45 p.m.,
Nebraska Union.
ORCHESIS Auditions, 7
p.m., Nebraska Union.
BUILDERS Board, 7
p.m., Nebraska Union.
IFC, 7 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
PI SIGMA ALPHA, 7:30
p.m., Nebraska Union.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA,
7:30 p.m.. Nebraska Union.
CIRCLE K, 7:30 p.m.,
Nebraska Union.
MATH Counselors, 7:30
p.m., Nebraska Union.
' i v
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ad4 AONOgRAMS
The lusty brogue redefined. Ounces lighter, doubly
flexible. The Monogram plate on the instep is our
mark of quality . . . your mark of distinction.
Tbrrr'l a Plain Toe atrle. loo. Both in Black. GoMea
ad Hawlhoia Brown grain call and Cordovan color Corfam$.
a H. BASS l CO., 159
Presenting The Drinking Song for Sprite:
"ROAR,
(To the tune of "Barbara Fritchie")
Traditionally, a lusty, rousing fight song is
da rieeur for every worthy causa and institution.
But we wrote a song for Sprite anyway. We'd like you
to sing it while drinking Sprite, though this may
causa some choking and coughing. So what? It's all in
good, clean fun. And speaking of good, clean things,
what about the taste of Sprite? It's good. It's
clean. However, good clean things nay not exactly bs
your idea of Jollies. In that case, remember that
Sprite is also very refreshing. "Tart and tingling,"
in fact. And very collegiate. And maybe we'd better
quit while we're ahead. So hers it is. The Drinking
Song For Sprite.-And if you can get a group together
to sing H--we'd be very surprised.
Roar, soft drink, roar I
You're the loudest soft drink
we aver sawrl
So tart and tingling, they
couldn't keep you quiet:
The perfect drink, guy,
To sit and think by,
Or to bring Instant refreshment
To any campus riot I Ooooooh--
Roar, soft drink, roarl
Flip your cap, hiss and bubble,
fizz and gush I
Oh wa can't think
Of any drink
That we would rather sit withl
Or (if we feel like loitering)
to hang out in the strlt withl
Or sleep through English lit' withl
Roarl Soft drinkl Roarl
Yeahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh, SPRITEI
(mm
Vrit II II M TINGLING. ffE JVST GOV
KEEP
t a era oirr
Present
Revision By Committees
..... ,1 ....i. anrl urrltde.
By Julie Morris
Senior Staff Writer
EDITORS NOTE: This is
the fifth story In a six-part
series on the University's
1967-69 $98 million budget
request to the Nebraska
Legislature.
It's a long, long road a
winding for University ad
ministrators who must now
go to bat for the school's
biennium budget request in
a series of meetings with
state officials.
The $98.6 million budget
request for the 1967-69 bi
ennium has been in t h e
hands of the state's Admin
istrative Services Depart
ment for over a month. The
request faces analysis and
possible prunings by this
agency, by Gov. Frank B.
Morrison, the governor
elect, the Legislature's bud
get committee and the Leg
islature, itself in the next
few months.
The Administrative Ser
vices Department, which
was created by the 1965
Legislature, will be going
over the University's and
other state agencies' bud
get requests program by
program. The. Department
will make budget recom
mendations to the governor,
according to Mrs. Joy Tup
per, junior budget analyst
at the department's budget
division.
Preliminary Work
The Administrative S e r
vices Department is an arm
of the executive branch of
the state's government and
will be doing much of the
preliminary groundwork on
state budget requests for the
governor.
William Daugherty, the
budget officer for the de
partment, will be handling
ft
Main Street, Wilton, Maine
SOFT-DRINK, ROAR!"
ill
SPRITE. SO TART AND
ILPJLH
IT QUIET..
Budget
the University's budget re
miest. Mrs. TuDner said.
The department personnel
will be talking with Univer
sity officials, principally
Chancellor Clifford Hardin
and Vice Chancellor Joseph
Soshnik, and scrutinizing
every detail of the budget
requests, she said.
When the Administrative
Services Department com
pletes its analysis, their
recommendations go to
Morrison who will study the
budget requests of all the
state agencies and prepare
an executive budget for the
biennium, according to
Hugo Srb, clerk of the Leg
islature. Present Budget
The governor-elect, who
will be chosen (in the Nov. 8
general elections, will also
be faced with the job of
preparing an executive bud
get as Nebraska law re
quires both the incoming
and the outgoing governors
to present budgets.
Both Morrison and b i s
successor will hold budget
hearings in November and
December, Srb said. Uni
versity officials will appear
at these hearings to defend
their budget request.
The new governor will
present an executive bud
' get message to the Legisla
ture in the first days of the
session, which opens J a n
uary 3, Srb said.
Referral
The budget requests with
the executive recommenda
tions are then referred to
the nine - member budget
committee which considers
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I could go for a
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lllnaw
dazing chess
openings.
1 want a man who's
snaking it happen.
S. I spend a lot of time io
the library.
My motto h fan today
mad f uo Cmooiiow.
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To Face
thP reauests ana writes
bills providing for the finan
cial appropriations.
In the course of the Bud
get Committee deliberation,
Srb said, the committee will
be holding public hearings
and will be asking officials
from the state's agencies to
appear to defend their bud
get requests.
The final committee rec
ommendations on the
state's budgets are usually
most at the end of the Leg
islative session, Srb said.
The committee's recom
mendations usually are re
ported as late as the end of
June when the new biennial
year begins July 1, Srb
said. Generally, the bills
are quickly voted on in the
Unicameral and sent to the
governor for his signature,
Srb said.
Unless there is a floor
fight over the budget bills,
Srb said, most agencies
know what their budgets
will be at least two weeks
before actual Legislative
voting on the bills and the
budget authorizations
usually reach the agencies
in the first days of July.
Film To Explore
Water Resources
"Waterbill U. S. A", a
27 minute color film on
American water resources
will be presented at 4 p.m.
at the East Union Lounge.
The film is narrated by
Walter Cronkite. It tells
why America is running out
of water and what can be
done about it.
BARBER SHOP
2. 1 have an exciting pip
collection.
I want to bo who
the action is.
4. 1 read all about ft in Tho
New York Timet.
I want to do 'in' things
wUh 'in' peopla
in In' places.
8. Then I gness yon wouldn't be
intenstcd in someone like ma
who has landed a good-paying
j that will let his family
five well and who, fn addition,
. Las taL:n out a substantial
Lirag Insurance policy from
Equitable that will provide
Iwmlsomely for his family if,
kemnen forbid, anything should
luppentohim.
How' s about showing
e that pipe
"flection, swinger?