The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 20, 1966, Page Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Thursday, October 20, 1966
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 3
Seniors'
Focuses
For freshmen the most
important part of the Union
would have to be the Crib.
But for seniors, emphasis
shifts to the third, floor,
where the job-placement
center is located.
Frank Hallgren, director
of the placement service
said that the placement ser
vice began its operation in
1963. Before that, placement
was done on a college-foy-college
basis.
According to Hallgren,
service can affect not only
seniors, but alumni and jun
iors who are interested in
summer employment relat
ing to their career.
Ag Students Pass
Exec Constitution
A new constitution for the
Executive Board of the Col
lege of Agriculture and Home
Economics was passed in an
election on East Campus
Thursday.
Students voting for the new
constitution numbered 294; 21
voted against it and three
ballots were invalid.
The Ag Exec Board had
adopted the constitution last
spring, said Dave Snyder,
Exec Board president, and it
had to be submitted to Agricul
ture College students for fi
nal approval.
IJ
Interest
On Jobs
"Last year," said Hall
gren, "we placed five to six
hundred seniors. I would es
timate that of the seniors
who actually accepted em
ployment, 90 percent were
placed through our office."
A graduate of the Univer
sity should have little prob
lem finding a job, said Hall
gren, and probably will be
faced with a choice of sev
eral job offers.
Each year the University
arranges interviews with
seven thousand employers,
ranging from General Mo
tors to the "Municipality of
Grand Island.''
"The important thing,"
stressed Hallgren, "is that
each senior, no matter what
his post-graduation plans,
should file his credentials,
faculty evaluation, refer
ences, and a resume of his
educational background,
with the placement office,
and set up interviews."
For one thing, a student
can meet more employers
through the placement of
fice while he is a senior
than he could in six months
after graduation.
"Another factor students
should remember is that
most employers have mil
itary - leave programs, so
that even if a graduate is
faced with a military ob
ligation," explained H a II
gren, "he will have many
job opportunities."
Hathaway: Mr. Winters, how do you like our new
Club shirts?
Winters: Fine. Except for that tapered waist.
Hathaway: Not enough?
Winters: Too much. The first time I wore one, I looked
so darned slim that people would come up
to me in the street and give me
money for a meal.
Hathaway: Pretty embarrassing, but . . .
Winters: Then, girls would feel sorry for
me and take me home for dinner.
Their mothers would take one look
at my tapered middle and pow! I'd
spend hours at the table.
Hathaway: I see. But . .
Winters: And I want to tell you it's
pretty frustrating. After all that
food, I was too tired to do anything
but go home and sleep.
Hathaway: Yes, I can understand that.
But taper apart, how's the rest of
the shirt?
Winters: Great. As soon as I get some
weight off, I'll be wearing
'cm again.
Jonathan Winters, star of television, motion pictures, etc.,
is both author and cartoonist of the recently published
"MOUSE BREATH, CONFORMITY AND OTHLR SOCIAL ILLS?
la our picture he ib wearing Huthaway's Ditcochequc.
About $9.50..
The pledge officers of Tau
Alpha are: Christina Dema,
president; eJan Underwood,
vice president; Jane Kin
kead, secretary, Marti Som
mer, treasurer; Janet
Fudge, scholarship; Karen
Jo Bennett, music; Jean
Burr, social chairman; Av
ril Kucer, Junior Panhel
lenic. The Ag Men pledge class
officers are: Larry Green,
president; Jim Jarosik, vice
president; Kenneth Stevens,
secretary-treasurer; Jim
Wobig, social chairman.
The 1966-67 officers of Pi
per Hall are: Sandy Lovell,
president Susie Williams,
vice president; Br en da
Nicholson, secretary-treasurer;
Lana Hughes, activi
ties; Bev Cassidy, social;
Claudia Schaefer, intra
murals; Susan Thompson,
inter-dorm council repre
sentative; Susan Deite
meyer, scholarship; Jane
Critchlow, A. W. S.; Jody
Eldridge, publicity.
feS :i - -xtiyXi-i:t 4f
r -, 7
I
New Dates Announced
For Teaching Exams
College seniors preparing
to teach school may take
the National Teacher Ex
aminations on any of t h e
announced today by Educa
tional Testing Service, a
nonprofit, educational or
ganization which prepares
and administers this test
ing program.
New dates for the testing
of prospective teacher are:
Jan. 7, March 18, July 1,
and Oct. 7, 1967. The tests
will be given at nearly 500
locations throughout the
United States, including the
University. . .-
Results of the National
Examinations are used by
many large school districts
as one of several factors in
the selection of new teach
ers and by several states
for certification or licens
ing of teachers. Some col
leges also require all seni
ors preparing to teach to
take the examinations.
Leaflets indicating school
systems and state depart
ments of education which
use the examination results
are distributed to colleges
by ETS.
On each full day of test
ing, prospective teachers
may take the Common Ex
aminations, which measure
the professional preparation
and general cultural back
ground of teachers, and one
of 13 Teaching Area Exam
mastery of the subject they
expect to teach.
Prospective teachers
1 r . I
' ' ' f
A i , " f . , ' J ' , f, -1
should contact the school
systems in which, they
seek employment, or their
colleges, for specific advice
on which examinations to
take and on which dates
they should be taken.
A Bulletin of Information
containing a list of test cen
ters, and information about
the examinations, as well
as a registration form,
may be obtained from the
Teacher Placement office
at the University or from
National Teacher Examina
tions, Box 911, Educational
Testing Service, Princeton,
N.J., 08540.
Collegiate Poetry
Due For Contest
The spring competition of
the National Poetry Press
being held for students in
all junior arid senior col
leges will close Nov. 5.
There is no limitation as
to theme or form of the en
tries, but the judges prefer
shorter works because of
space limitations.
Each poem must be typed
or printed on a separate
sheet and must bear the
name and home address of
the student, as well as the
name of the rclieg? attend
ed. Manuscripts should be sent
to the Officers of the Press,
National Poetry Press, 3210
Selby Avenue, Los Angeles
34, Calif.
Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiin
KU Women Makel
Own Hours Rules I
Key systems, narcotics,
charity drives and loyalty
oaths are a few of the
things preoccupying other
campuses as the sixth
week of school begins.
Kansas University junior
and senior women now
have no closing hours. Each
living unit is permitted to
decide on its own "sign in"
and "sign out" system,
keys or however they want
to run their system.
Freshmen and sopho
mores have 11:30 p.m.
hours Monday through
Thursday, 1:30 a.m. hours
on Friday and Saturday and
12 a.m. hours on Sunday.
The Kansas State Colle
gian reports that it is study
ing its rules.
The University of Kansas
Alpha Phi's stayed out late
one night to try out their
new liberty under the k e y
system. They came back
and found they were locked
out because the lock had
been changed during the
summer and they hadn't
been told.
The Colorado Daily re
ports that a 17-year-old co
ed and a 24-year-old part-
Nebraskan
Want Ads
time watchman were ar
rested and charged with il
legal possession of mari
juana. Earlier another
male student was arrested
on similar charges. The ar
rests were part of an in
creasing number of narco
tics violation in the Boulder
area.
The Iowa State Daily re
ports that the Campus Chest
drive netted $16,400. The
money was raised by car
nivals, beauty contests and
games.
Colorado State is consid
ering adding an extra week
to each quarter to allow a
"dead week" with no class
es before each quarter's
finals, the Colorado State
Collegian reports.
Iowa State is experiment
ing with closed circuit tele
vision classes. It currently
has 7,000 students enrolled
in 22 television courses.
The University o Illinois
YWCA and the SDS are
working together to collect
funds to aid the appeals of
11 South African apartheid
defendants, according to the
Daily Illini.
The Kansas State Colli
gian reports that the head
of the local Women's Chris
tian Temperance Union is
circulating petitions to
cause repeal of the recent
city ordinance which per
mits dancing in taverns
within the city limit.
Kansas State fraternities
will use a summer rush be
ginning July 1 to ease the
pressure of rush week and
to add more men to the sys
tem. Oklahoma State Univer
sity students paid $35,000 in
campus parking fines last
year, according to the Daily
O'Collegian.
Debate, Social Studies
Attract High Schools
Four hundred students
from 50 Nebraska high
schools will attend a debate
and social studies institute
at the University Saturday. .
Dr. John L. Petelle,
speech professor and direc
tor of the institute said that
the institute is a workshop
lecture type situation.
The high school students
will be exposed to more
ideas and information about
their high school discussion
topic and they will observe
a model discussion and de
bate. The high school discussion
Art Collections
To Be Displayed
During October
Two major exhibits, the
Howard S. Wilson Memo
rial Collection and the Art
of Printmaking, will open
at Sheldon Memorial Art
Gallery on Tuesday.
The Art of Printmaking
is a 10-day inaugural show
ing of selections which will
be circulated throughout
Nebraska in 1967 as part
of the Centennial celebra
tion. The display consists
of an extensive loan of
prints from the library of
Congress in Washington,
D.C., and is sponsored by
the University of Nebraska
Art Galleries and the State
Library Commission.
The exhibit contains old
master prints of the 18th
and 19th centuries, includ
ing early American exam
ples. Such master print
makers as Durer, Rem
brandt, Goya, CaJlot, Whist
ler, and Picasso are rep
resented in the display.
The Howard S. Wilson
Collection was begun in
1959 by Mrs. Wilson as a
memorial to her husband,
a lifetime Lincoln resident.
The collection, donated to
the University through the
University of Nebraska
Foundation, is composed of
works by American artists,
with particular emphasis on
the early decades of this
century.
This exhibition is the first
complete showing of the
paintings, drawings, and
sculpture acquired for toe
collection to date. Additions
and changes may be made
in the future. Thomas Ea
kins, Ernest Laws on, Pat
rick Henry Bruce, and Wil
liam Brown are among the
artists whose work will ap
pear in the display of over
30 pieces, which will be at
the Gallery through. Nov.
13.
wim
VMB
W HAXJDS Cti
1 WHO JUMPED 0TH6. 1
topic is: What should be the
foreign aid policy of the
U.S.?
The institute is sponsored
by the University speech
department and the Nebras
ka high school activities as
sociation. The program features
speakers and small discus
sion groups.
Captain Arthur C. Mullen,
U.S.N., professor of naval
science, will speak on for
eign military aid. Dr. Er
nest Kuhn, professor of eco
nomics, will speak on eco
nomic aid and development.
A demonstration discus
sion will be conducted by
Iowa State University stu
dents and will be directed
by Edward Bodaken, direc
tor of forensics at Iowa
State.
Dr. Donald Olson, Univer
sity director of debate, will
conduct a workshop-seminar
on case construction for
visiting debate coaches.
High school students will
act as chairmen of the dis
cussion groups. Students
from University debate
classes will critique the
discussions as to bow they
were conducted.
After the second round of
discussion students from
the University and Iowa
Slate will present a model
debate on the proposition:
Resolved: That the foreign
aid program of the U.S.
should be limited to non
military assistance.
Each high school has been
limited to ten participants.
The institute will be held
at University High School.
Second Info Day
Set For Saturday
Students from 34 Nebras
ka high schools will visit
the University Saturday,
for the second in a series
of four Senior Information
Day programs.
The program is designed
to acquaint high school sen
iors with college study
opportunities.
A total of 441 seniors and
their counsellors are ex
pected to attend, according
to John Aronson, director M
admissions.
' Oiiter Senior Information
Day programs are sched
uled for Nov. IB and Feb.
11, l7i At each session,
the seniors meet with mem
bers of the University fac
ulty from virtually every
area o study. They also
tour residence balls and
participate in a discussion
period wia students and
faculty.