Page 4 The Doily Nebraskan Wednesday, November 16, 1966 WEDNESDAY UAAD, 12 p.m., Nebraska Union. PLACEMENT Office Luncheon, 12:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. YWCA-Cultural Crafts, 2:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. YWCA, 3 p.m., Nebraska Union. UNSEA, 3:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. BUILDERS Tours, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. BUILDERS College Days, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. BUILDERS Advertis ing, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. YWCA Christmas Ba zaar, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. BUILDERS Special Edition, 3:30 p.m., Nebras ka Union. EAST CAMPUS Recrea tion, 4 p.m., East Union. ABEL Hall Rehearsal, 4 p.m., Nebraska Union. ASUN Student Senate, 4 p.m., Nebraska Union. JR. PANHELLENIC, 4:30 p.m.. Nebraska Union. THEATRE, 4:30 p.m., Temple Building. RED CROSS. 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. UNION Special Event 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Usion. YWCA-Cultural Tours, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. A W S Representatives, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. UNION Public Relations, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. TEACHERS COLLEGE Dean's Advisory Board, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. TOASTMASTERS Club, 5:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. ALPHA LAMBDA DEL TA Initiation, 7 p.m., Ne braska Union. AUF Lincoln Independ ent Drive, 7 p.m.. Nebras ka Union. SDS, 7 p.m., Nebraska Union. BUILDERS Board, 7 p.m., Nebraska Union. GERMAN Play, 7:30 p.m. Love Library. PI SIGMA ALPHA, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. - COMENIUS Club, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. ALPHA PHI OMEGA, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. CIRCLE K, 7:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. MATH Counselors, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. FELLOWSHIP Of Chris tian Athletes, 9:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. Rights Bill Cont. From Pg. 1, Col. 7 if rights. We have to either establish that we do or don't have the rights. The bill must serve as a delineating or de finitive document." Schulze emphasized. Schulze said that the main problem faced by the com mittee has been in re-evaluating its positions and objec tives. "They seem to keep chang ing" he said. "We first felt aur goal was a legal matter. Then we considered the edu ;ational ramifications. Finally we discussed the various areas of concern. Now we have reached the present point." "We have attained a syn thesis of all our goals. They have been changing, along with our timetable. The time table will most likely continue to change until the bill is ap proved," Schulze concluded. ROGERS presented by Able & Sandoz Hells THURS. & FRI.-NOV. 17-18 8 P.M. UNION BALLROOM Tickets: $1.50 Avc"cl?e tn Union, Call 475-1041, or at the Door Union Selects Site At Arapahoe Basin Arapahoe Basin, Colorado has been announced as the site for. the Nebraska Union ski trip, according to Karen Jones, Union Trips and Tours Committee Chair man. Arapahoe Basin, which is located 66 miles west of Denver, is the highest s k i area in the United States. The highest altitude is 12, 500, and three-fourths of the ski area is above the tim berline. The longest ski run is three miles from top to bot tom and eight ski lifts car ry a capacity of 5,550 skiers per hour up the slopes. Arapahoe Basin is one of the fastest growing ski .areas in Colorado, accord ing to Miss Jones. Most accommodations are new, including the three lighted ski slopes for Friday and Saturday night skiing. The trip, which was for merely to Winter Park, Colo., will be held over se mester break, Jan. 26-29. The exact cost of the trip has not yet been deter mined, but it is expected to be around $85, Miss Jones said. The price includes meals, lodging, ski equip ment rental, two ski les sons, and train transporta tion and lift tickets. This is a slight increase over last years price be cause last year ski lift tick ets were not included, she said. Added Hour Somehow Subtracts Couple-ings Funniest thing about that two o'clock night last week end! Instead of enchanting cou ples with the ideas of togeth erness and pins and rings, it actually lowered the number, as only three pinnings and six engagements were ' an nounced. P.E. Dept. To Furnish Driver Ed The Department of Physi cal Education for men is of fering driving instruction for University students, staff or their dependents. The instruction will in clude ten full hours of driv ing with personal instruc tion from a teacher train ing for drivers' training classes. Students can select any hour from 8:30-4:30 on Mon day and Wednesday or Tuesday and Thursday for two weekly instruction ses sions, according to Gene Gross, assistant professor of physical education. Gross said the instruction will cost about $10. He said the instruction is offered because his students need practical experience in in structing learners in driv ing before they become qualified teachers. Gross noted that any Uni versity - connected person could take the instruction and often students are "wives of instructors". & HAMMERSTWS Payment for the trii may be made ir two parts. The first payment must h made Dec. 2, and the final payment on Jan. 9. An orientation session will be held in Room 332 of the Nebraska Union on Thursday at 7 p.m. Further information will be avail able at this meeting, and students may sign up for the trip. Attending the orientatior. puts the student under no obligation to attend the trip said to Miss Jones. Miss Jones also stressed that information on the trip has come out late be cause the representative from Araphaoe Basin d i d not contact the Union until the previous weekend. Last year approximately 110 students went to Winter Park. This year's trip will have room for 100 students as well as sponsors, a doc tor and an administrative member. Rich Scott and David Younkin from the Nebraska Union Program office will be attending, as well as student sponsors Karen Jones and Jo Christensen. Another advantage of Arapahoe Basin is that an entertainment center is lo cated in the immediate ski area. At Winter Park it was necessary to go three miles into a town for a n y type of entertainment. PINNINGS Judy Trumble, Chi Omega Senior ir. Home Economics from Papillion, to Roy Fred erick, FarmHouse graduate student in Ag Economics from Kearney. Carol Logemann, Phi Mu senior in Home Economics from Omaha to Fred Roeth, Alpha Gamma Rho alumnus from Ohio State Universiy fro mllouston, Ohio. Debra Mattson, Alpha Phi sophomore in Teachers from Omaha to Bill Brown, Sigma Phi Epsilon junior in Arts State Teacher's College from North Platte. ENGAGEMENTS Mary Lea Cooksley, senior in Home Economics and Jour nalism from Broken Bow to Charles R. Wallace, graduate student in zoology from Para gould, Arkansas. Patty Wassenberg, junior in speech therapy from Hum boldt to Kenneth Burrow, Chi Phi junior in chemistry from Humboldt. Ann Xutzman, sophomore in Teachers from Nehawka to Ed Attkinson from Union. Marti Hughes, Kappa Delta junior in Teacher's College from Gretna to Jerry Baird, Delta Sigma Phi alumnus and a graduate assistant in economics from Lincoln. Erma Wendt, junior in Home Economics education from Madrid to Keith Silster, FarmHouse graduate student in animal science from Pen der. Susan Wyers, sophomore in mathematics from Sterling to Jim Spoonhour, junior in po litical science from Fremont LASER CHECKED ... by Dr. Weber, student John Deming and Dr. Tao. Chemical Engineering Grads Use $31)000 Laser Research Device University of Nebraska engineers are using a de vice which emits light waves too brilliant to look at, too hot to "touch" and powerful enough to burn holes in metal. The device is a laser light amplification through stimulated emission and radiation used in the partment's graduate re chemical engineering de search program. The laser tional Scienc eFoundation grant of $31,000. The beam given off is of such high intensity and so concentrated that experi menters have been able to burn holes in metals and even a diamond. The laser "delivers a very large quantity of ener gy to a very small area," according to Dr. James A. Weber, chairman of the department. Prof. Weber and Prof. Luh C. Tao super vise the laser research. Dr. Tao said the beam's temperature is "a million times higher" ( than solar rays. The machine is operated undr e strict safety mea sures. Only one person may work with the device at any one time. Because the beam would blind anyone who looks at it, the researcher must keep his back to the beam when it is on. The door is locked from the inside so no one can enter the room when the device is being operated. University researchers are currently directing the device's energy to metallic Olson To Address . (jlllO U. Asseilll) V " The dean of the Graduate College at the University will participate in the an nual meeting of the Council for Research Policy and Administration in Washing ton, D.C. next week. Dr. Olson will address an assembly at the University of Ohio before going on to Washington. "1TS'T7T7?TWT1TTTTTTF,'I,1 il'Bul'JiMWl'kiil Caravelle is made like an expensive watch yet it's only 10.95 Bulova waited yean until they could make i good $10.95 watch. One with t jeweled-lever move ment, unbreakable mainspring, pre cision fitted parts. A watch that's shock-resistant, and waterproof, too. The result is the Caravelle by Bulova. A very expensive watch for only $10.95. Caravelle division of BULOVA mm Ph. 432-1818 and Thursday 'til 9:00 totwn cm, crystal tnt orown rt intact. M stf samples, trying to develop relationships to predict how the energy will be dissi pated. The beam literally evaporates the metal, Dr. Tao said. Planned research includes study of the effects of the beam on chemical com pounds. This could have practical applications in the making of plastics, with the beam used as the catalytic agent needed to create the reaction between gas and chemicals neces sary for the creation of plastics. The University's laser was made by Korad Corp., a division of Union car bide. There are many kinds of lasers, Drs. Tao and Weber said, but the Uni versity's is a pulse-type, the most powerful there is. How does it work? The Not AWS Campus . . . Door Knob Traps Coeds Two coeds almost gave up hope Monday as they were trapped in their dormitory room for two hours because of a malfunctioning doorknob. There was nothing in the AWS Rulebook about this kind of campus, so the two residents of Selleck 6000 build ing started yelling for help. With no housemen around at 9 p.m., it remained for the student assistant to wield chisel and hammer, remov ing the lath from the doorway in an effort to unlock the door. After an hour of pounding and a crowd of 25 fellow residents had gathered, the lath gave way and the two coeds emerged relieved. "But how will I ever explain this to my date," sighed one of the unprisoned coeds as she rushed to the lobby to greet her patient boyfriend. IB Get this 640 Page, newly expanded Merriam Vcbster Pocket Sized Dictionary 0MLV AT DIVIDEND WITH ANY PUHCHASE S5fS EVERY 1 1 hi 1 ' 1 , ' f-l ; lilt : HI r1 - 1 i y i I - ti a V ' I 1 1 n f V 1 scientists explain it this way: The device has a ruby crystal, surrounded by a flash lamp. When the cur rent is turned on the lamp emits energy which pushes chromium ions in the cry stal into a level of high energy. The pulse is formed when this energy is re leased. When the ions return to a low level of energy they in turn emit energy and that's the energy that is beamed through lenses and focused on the object under experimentation. So intense is the energy that if a single speck of dust is on the devise it would be baked into the machine's optics. So Uni versity engineers take spe cial precautions to keep the machine hospital-clean. CTDMil 4 SAL. Viet War Cont. From Pg. 1, Col. 2 strengthening it and weaken ing the opposing infrastruc ture (e.g., both sides 1 a y great stress on the develop ment of strong recruiting and propaganda teams; both prac tice selective assassination to destory key links in the ene mies infrastructure). Infiltration Furthermore, each infra structure is said to be heavi ly infiltrated by agents of the , opposing one. Significantly, but not surprisingly, many Vietnamese believe that both Viet Cong and government village infrastructures are now much weaker than the traditional village power structure prior to the coming of colonialism or communism. To gain its political and cultural ends, the elite In frastructure on each side has mobilized substantial portions of the population it controls. Each has developed weapons technological, psychological, logistical which are being tested wherever one side can find a weakness in the ether. At the present time, one side has technological and logistical superiority within the contested area, whereas the other appears to enjoy psychological advantage. This is a struggle for pow er, and no holds are barred. The skill in highest demand is that of employing the ap propriate weapon at the right time, whether it be a mortar or a life. "CANDY" Thi centi-M novel they tried t ban is available new ii paper back 75 cents. Lincoln's new est bookstore 236 No. 12rh (lint South of Vanice) New f Storz Real Draft eer Ed George I tMMkttb 1 I I 1 niii.miBi,iiii,iiiiiii in iiiimimiiMin mmm 'N CMIP Extended Hours Planned For KK A late date night for Sat urday, the night of the Kos met Klufo Fall Show is planned by the members of Mortar Board. Coeds' hours will be ex tended from 1 a.m. to 2 a.m., if their dates pay one cent for each minute after 1 a.m. Dates must leave the wo men's living units immedi ately after paying. Any late minutes after 2 a.m. will warrant an auto matic week-end campus, ac cording to AWS. Proceeds from the late date night will be used to finance proposed Mortar Board proj ects for hte year including sending educational materials to Ataturk University, donat ing money to the University Foundation and establishing a Mortar Board scholarship. r.P: "SiJ'j.'f " lit', I , V1 n I kCt TOURS & JOBS IN EUROPE Now it is possible to have am exciting, fun-filled, low priced tour of Europe Ac a paying job anytime during the entire year. Your choice of job & country with wages up to $400 a month. for a booklet with all jobs, tours & application forms send $2 (handling & air mail) to: Dept. K, American Student In formation Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberie, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg. 5 - -fi'r a to go! ti S-'.4,-.:.S-..T!lB Si: swvBW"" ji )