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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1967)
Wednesday, November 8, 1967 Page Thd Daily Nebraskan The Other Half Panhellenic Considers n 1 y - r-' THE EVENING LAMP ... is part of the J. A. Weir collection on display at Shel don Art Gallery. A & Fa pili tips Proviflf"! C7 1 Emsk'n el toe Univer si agrlcu' lira! experi ment staticn facilities, Ln chiin three rew buildings on the East campus, will aEov it to perform better services through added re search ability, Dr. Howard Ottoson, director of the ex periment station said Tues day. "The i ncreased support of the state legislature dur- i5 'j Tih""? ( . t tt5vc- Jtnr - - jT--.!.. p r - pri-.-t ta''v;s." "e sail "-e ne-v '"evel osmesis on the University campus are a new animal science build ing, a new seed laboratory, a new child development laboratory and the remodel ing of the old seed labora tory. MORE SPACE "These new buildings will provide an expanded labor atory program for the spe cif? iiieiDartments to rep'sce the old ones which lacked the necessary fpace," he sail. The new 250.000 dollar child care laboratory m il be located on the north end of the East campus and will "provide a more sophisti cated and effective means of research," Otoson said. The laboratory provides students is home economics with an opportunity to care for and observe children, which is a valuable part of research ia this area, he pointed out INCREASED RESEARC H "The new facilities will provide the students with better means to objectively observe and 'note the chil drens' actions, Ottoson commented. The new seed laboratory, which expected to be fin ished sometime this winter, will allow increased re search on various kinds of plants. The new facility win cost about 231,000 and is ex pected to relieve &e lack of space that is present in the eld structure, Ottoson said. The new seed laboratory win be located on the north end of the campus. XEW VET FACILITY Completion of the new an imal science building is slated for sometime during cest semester and will cost about f 1-5 million, Ottoson recalled. Tbe sew animal science building will be mostly an expansion of the present fa cilities, but it will allow 1st more effective research v It t fV 1 - K cii Station because cf the greater vol ume of wwk that can be carried out," fee said. Other high points of the experiment station's opera tion this year will be the construction of a new vet erinary medicine facility which is in the planning stages at the North Platte station. "The new facility will provide a greater capacity for research on various rv-:" "" riraal d;se?.?es," Oilrrjn ssk!. (r rsT m:ls Oi'.osDi alF9 mEntior.ed a program ti devdoD a com puterised evaluation of a low-cost meal project as an outstanding new achieve ment of the experiment sta tion. 'The program would con sist of feeding information, such as fat starch and car boyhydrate content of the food, into a University com puter to determine the cost of a suitable meal," be said. Quality clothes need Quality cleaning . . . Nancy Est, Tri-Bett, best dresse coed finafst chooses. BSo REP For dry cleaning Engineers . . . Your technical career starts the first day you're at Tektronix At Tktfofii, you start woriu'ng at an entftieer fjjtit horn tht fcefliiMwiB. setting the kind of experts that out a solid foundation under your future. You'fl be assigned specif), swojecta in th many electronic, and mechanical areas in Jved ia developing advanced oscifloacepe. And youM hava umj freedom for creativity and individual accorj fihfnnt K all starts theday you start to work... si TefcUonix. Opportunities foir EEs and MEs If you're neaded for a career in circuit design cr mechanical packaging design, you'J) start work at TektronU in repro duction engineering and evaluation of engineering proto types before joining a project design group. ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Nov. 15 Consult your Engineering Placement Office for eact tim and place, or write: TEKTRONIX INC. Professional Placement Manager P. O. Box 500 Beaverton, Oregon A tquaJ epportutii! employer T ft i m k The information obiained in this way could be used in feeding large groups for example, in school systems. STATEWIDE The low-cost meal infor mation could also be used on an extension basis, Otto son pointed out "Ideal meal situations could be circulated for use throughout the state." he suggested. Another program being developed by I he experi ment ':aUcn is a new me thod for processing pork without first coaling it. The "hot pork" process would speed up meat pro duction. iMHiMiimiHiMiimDiiiinmiiaiiiiiiiiPj i Rklto Billiards 1 1332 p St. I 45c an hour I 16th & Q University Theater will present the second production of "Misanthrope" Nov. 10 and 11. Performances of Mo liere's 17th century comedy will be given at Howell Theater beginning at 8 p.m. The Backstage Club of the Lincoln Community Play house will sponsor the production of Andrew Backer's . "Didn't He Ramble." Try outs will be held Nov. 19, 20 and 21 from 7:30 to 10 p.m. at the Playhouse on 18th and L street. The play will bt directed by Backer, who won the Ne braska Centennial Playwriting" Contest last May. Roles are available for seven males, one female, and jazz mu sicians. Ticket sales will begin Nov. 14 for "Never Too Late," the season's second production by the Lincoln Community Playhouse. The play will be presented for three consecu tive weekends beginning Nov. 17. Sheldon Art Gallery will present Shoot the Piano Player, Nov. 8 as part of the foreign film program. The French film is directed by Francois Truffault and stars Marie Du Bois and Charles Aznavour. The movie concerns a timid concert pianist who re tires from public life to play the piano in a bar, but be comes involved in gangland suicides and gunfights. Charles Aznavour, who plays the pianist, will appear in person at the Nebraska Theater Nov. 14 in conjunction with the Speaker Artist Series. The Nebraska Union will feature "Die. Die, My Dar ling" Nov. 10 and 12 as part of the weekend program. The film will be presented at the Union Friday at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. and Sundav at 7:30 p.m. The movie, starring Stephanie Powers and Tallulah Bankhead. is the storv of a young girl held as hostage by a religious fanatic bent on atonement for an imaginary crime. The Lincoln Friends of Chamber Music will sponsor n performance by the Guarneri Quartet Nov. 10 at Sheldon Auditorium. The'four string musicians have toured Ameri ca and Europe and have released three best-selling al bums. An exhibition of the work of young Mexican painters will begin at Sheldon Art Gallery Nov. 14 and will con tinue through Dec. 17. The display was organized by the University of Texas and the National Institute of Fine Arts of Mexico. A panel exhibition of photographs, plans and perspec tives concerning designs by prominent American land scape architects are being displayed at the University's School of Architecture Gallery through Nov. 12. 1-7 r Bob Dylan ( V; Corns gather 'round people Wherever you roam And admit that the waters Around you have grown. And accept it that soon You1 11 be drenched to the bone, If your time to you is worth savinf Then you better start swimain, Or you'll sink like a stone, for the times they are a-changin ! iWtad frr M.mint be 1M U.S.A. . To cocatmlcate lis the bcgLts&Eg of crtfcystssadlrsg Greek , The possibility of booking Henry Mancini or Harry Belafonte for a concert to J. A. Weir Collection On Exhibit An exhibition of the work of J. Alden Weir, American graphic artist, is being dis played at Sheldon Art Gal lery. The collection will re main at the Gallery until Dec. 3. The display includes 128 examples of etchings, dry points and lithographs pro duced by Weir between 1885-93. The works were done during the evenings and leisure time when Weir was not painting. He said that he particu larly enjoyed dry-point be cause, "it was easy to car ry about in one's pockets a half dozen plates which would fill up odd moments." Most of the artist's work is concerned with his fam ily and friends or the land scape around bis home in Connecticut. He also illus trated scenes from New York, where his studio was located. o Week Concert be held in conjunction with Greek Week was presented to Panhellenic Monday by representative Jan Binger. Panhellenic also discuss ed assessing fraternity and sorority members a fee of $2 to help finance the con cert and a Greek Week speaker. Panhellenic will vote on the issue, at a later meeting. Miss Binger urged sup port of the assessment, and added that the fee would probably lower the admis sion price for Greeks while tickets to the public would be sold at regular admis sion. The tentative schedule for Greek Week, which will be from April 26 to April 29, 1968, includes the following events: a concert, a ban quet, a Greek Week confer ence and individual house activities. ALL THE SPAGHETTI r1QQ YOU WANT FOR... y Every Wednesday N'rts 5 to I p.m. SPAGHETTI FESTIVAL Path Itolion Spaghetti with spicy meat sauce. Served with warm garlic bread, tossed salad and dressing $1 Gel the Gang Together Wed J Join the Fun, PATIO RESTAURANT Fremont ond 48th Streets Sororities have been con sidering a proposal present ed by Kappa Alpha Theta to host a foreign exchange student. Under the propos al, each sorority may adopt a foreign exchange student as a type of social affiliate, participating in house func tions. "The program would be for the benefit of both the foreign exchange student and her hostesses," Jane Johnson, Panhellenic dele gate said. "Two universi ties that I know of Arizona and Colorado are doing similar programs." In other business, a mem ber of the pledge trainer's council reported that it was the consensus of those pre sent at the pledge trainer's meeting that the spirit tro phey for Sigma Chi Derby Day be abolished. A resolu- tion will be drawn up. Pat's