The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 29, 1967, Page Page 5, Image 5

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    Wednesday November 29, 1967
The Daily Nebraskan
Page 5
Behind The Signs . . .
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Photo by Du Ladely
STUDENTS PROTEST use of napalm with a demon
stration against Dow Chemical Company. The com
pany's recruiter was on campus Monday, Nov. 20.
.I
Six senior Air Force
ROTC students have been
named Distinguished Mili
tary Cadets. They are Ron
ald Swanda, Brack Eick
hoff, D u a n e Jewell, Virgil
West, Donald Armstrong,
and Daniel Murray.
Each cadet is in the up
per half of his class and the
upper third of his ROTC re
lated classes. They are now
eligible to be Distinguished
Graduates and receive a
Regular Air Force Commis
sion. The Nebraska Hall of Ag
ricultural Achievement hon
ored Charles Marshall of
Avoca, Nov. 27 at a dinner
in the Nebraska Union. He
had served as president of
the Nebraska Farm Bureau
Federation from 1945 until
1966.
Gamma Theta Upsilon,
geography honorary, has
elected new officers. They
are Don Pace, president;
Timothy Rickard, vice pres
ident; Douglass Cobb, secretary-treasurer;
and Dr.
Colbert Meld, faculty adviser.
Some boys need a push
in the ring direction.
'
k
1925 Whitehall WOO.00
Try the subtle approach... steer him in our direction... our
diamond experts win do the rest. He'll get the point. ..and you
the ring. Perhaps one of these lovely ones by
Soring Lincoln Slnct
1129 "0" STREET
Ml:.
Initiated into the society
were Dr. Andrew Warren,
Dr. Gwyn Rowley, Dave
Wishart, James Owen, Rus
sel Gerlach, Harold Vlach,
Dave Milferty, Larry Tep
ly, and Nada Muwakki.
.
The Pershing Rifles Com
pany A-2 has named Lanna
Manstedt sponsor of the
Company.
The new officers of Pi
Kappa Phi fraternity are
Steve Plettner, president;
Biff Hoffman, treasurer;
Carl Wagsvick, secretary;
Deiter Wirtzfelt, pledgemas
ter; Dave Nixon, Historian;
Harold Chader, chaplin, and
Jim Guretzky, IFC repre
sentative. Jane Palmer, Coilege of
Agriculture and Home Eco
nomics senior, has received
the Ceres Club $100 schol
arship. Dr. Merle M. Mussel
man, chairman of the De
partment of Surgery at the
University Medical Center
has been elected president
of the Western Surgical As
sociation. wnn
7905
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Tryouts December 13
For Follies Production
Tryouts for the AWS pro
duction of "Expo in Retro"
will be held December 13,
according to Kathy Kuester,
Coed Follies chairman. A
panel of five judges will
rate the skits and six groups
will be selected for the Feb.
23 performance.
Miss Kuester said that 17
living units have submitted
final scripts. She com
mented that the ideas were
very good and a great var
iety of countries are repre
sented in accord with the
international theme.
A skitmaster's meeting
will be held Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. in the Nebraska
Union, the chairman said.
Procedures for tryouts will
be discussed and each
skitmaster must submit
plans for lighting, back-
YR's Hear
State GOP
Chairman
The first woman to serve
the Nebraska Republican
Party as state chairman.
Mrs. Lorraine Orr, will
speak to Young Republicans
Thursday at 8 p:m. in the
Nebraska Union, according
to Susie Williams. Dublicitv
chairman.
She will exlain the Oppor
tunities Unlimited program
scheduled Saturday in the
Nebraska Center. The all
day event is designed to
acquaint college students
with the career opportuni
ties in politics.
Mrs. Orr of North Platte,
Nebraska was unanimously
elected as state chairman
by the state's central com
mittee in January.
Mrs. Orr, who will serve
a two year term, has en
couraged greater individual
participation by Republi
cans in party work and pol
icy making.
She favors a bill in the
Legislature seeking a con
stitutional amendment to
transform the Unicameral
into a partisan body.
Only one other state
Michigan has a woman
serving as GOP state chair
man. BRITISH
STERLING
So fine a gift,
it's even sold
in jewelry stores.
After shave
from $3.50.
Cologne
from $5.00.
Essential oils impeded from Great Britain
Compounded in U.S.A.
Losls from
fiusli til
uiiuiii
grounds, a floor diagram of
the skit and an estimated
working budget not to ex
ceed $125 according to Miss
Kuester.
She added that any
changes in the songs or di
alogue of a script will be
accepted until December 11.
Ag Campus
Choir Plans
Concert
The University East Cam
pus Choir will present its
annual Christmas Choral
Concert on Sunday, Decem
ber 3.
Students of the College of
Agriculture and Home Ec
onomics comprise the Chor
isters and Choraliers. Mrs.
Adelaide Ports Spurgin is
the d i r e c t o r and Judith
Boyle is the accompanist.
The program will consist
of traditional Christmas
carols as well as special
selections such as "The
Hallelujah chorus" from
"The Messiah". There will
be special accompaniments
by guitars, trumpets, and a
bass fiddle.
The public is cordially in
vited to attend the concert
in the campus activities
building at 3:00. There will
be no charge.
- 1$.
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Sign op for an interview at your placement office-even
if you're headed for graduate school or military service.
Why is IBM interested in so many different people?
The basic reason is growth. Information processing is
the fastest growing, fastest changing major industry in the
world. IBM products are being used to solve problems in
government, business, law, education, medicine, science, the
humanities-just about any area you can name. We need peo
ple with almost every kind of background to help our custom
ers solve their problems. That's why we'd like to talk with you.
Whaf you can do at IBM
Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good tilings at
IBM. Change the world (maybe). Make money (certainly).
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atch Box !
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PINNINGS
SUSAN WESTERVELT,
Delta Gamma sophomore
art major from Lincoln, to
SCOTT WILSON, a Kappa
Sigma mathematics major
from Omaha.
SANDRA MOORE, sopho
more in music from Oma
ha, to BILL STELLE, senior
in Mechanical Engineering
from Arnold.
VICKI HAKANSON, Al
pha Omicron Pi junior in
Arts and Sciences from Ed
gar, to ROGER ABEL, Phi
Delta Theta senior in Busi
ness Administration from
Columbus.
KATHLEEN KUBALA,
University of Missouri, to
JOHN FLEMMING, Delta
Sigma Phi from Omaha.
LINDA McGILL, Towne
Club junior in Home Eco
nomics Education from
Waverly, to FLOYD AN
DERSON, 1967 graduate
from the University of Ne
braska presently in the Ma
rine Corps.
BEVERLY CLATANOFF,
Kappa Delta junior in Home
Economics Education from
Wisner. to GAY WILCOX,
Delta Upsilon junior in Ag
ricultural Engineering from
Lincoln.
CHARLOTTE PETER
SON, Pi Beta Phi senior in
Teachers College from
Omaha, to JOHN HALL,
Beta Theta Pi senior in
Teachers College from Lin
coln. e4 b
ENGAGEMENTS
KATHY BARBER, Delta
Gamma junior in Teachers
College from Omaha, to
JAMES MORLEY, senior
in engineering of Kappa Sig
ma from Omaha.
VERNA RATHGEBER,
1967 graduate of the Uni
versity of Nebraska pres
ently teaching in Omaha, to
LARRY HEADLEY, senior
in civil engineering from
Omaha.
JOYCE VALES, Chi
Omega senior in Teachers
College from Sioux City,
Iowa, to JOHN WAGNER,
Acacia graduate of Colora
do State College from Mc
Cook. JULIE OSBORN, sopho
more in Teachers College
from Ord, to DUANE SICH,
junior in Teachers College
from Ord.
SUSAN SMITH, Kappa
Alpha Theta sophomore in
Teachers College from Lin
coln, to JOEL DAVIS, Pi
Kappa Alpha sophomore in
journalism from Lincoln. .
JO CHRISTENSEN, Gam
ma Phi Beta senior in
speech therapy from Lin
coln to GREG KEMIST, se
nior in chemical engineering
from Lincoln.
Nebraskan
Want Ads
Bring Results
i
it
w
of places to
the U.S.).
Reiger, IBM
Wacker Drive,
A
Last Ag Enrollment
Shoivs Large Gain
Final figures on 1966-1967
undergraduate enrollment
in agricultural colleges
across the U.S. show the
University of Nebraska
second in numerical in
crease in students over the
last 10 years.
In a report compiled by
Dr. F. E. Eldredge, Nebras
ka showed a gain of 52 ag-.
ricultural students from
1957-66, topped only by the
64 student increase at Pur
due University.
"Our Ag enrollment has
Christmas
Celebration
December 4
East Campus will formal
ly initiate the Christmas
season with its annual tree
lighting ceremony on Mon
day night, December 4, at
6:30 p.m.
The lights on the Christ
mas tree, located south of
Animal Science Hall, will
be turned on while the spec
tators, led by the Cornhusk
er Choraliers, sing Christ
mas carols and listen to
readings of the Christmas
story.
The public is invited to
East Campus Monday night.
If your major
is listed here,
IBM would like
to talk with you
Nov.29thor30th
Continue your education (through any of several plans, in
cluding a Tuition Refund Program). And have a wide choice
work (we have over 300 locations throughout
What to do next
Well be on campus to interview for careers in Market
ing, Computer Applications, Programming, Research, Design
and Development, Manufacturing, Field Engineering, and
Finance and Administration.
If you can't make a campus interview, send an outline
of your interests and educational background to Mr. C. J.
Corporation, 100 South
Chicago, Illinois 60606.
We're an eaual ODportumty employer.
had a phenomenal in
crease," Eldridge empha
sized, "without a decrease
in quality." There is at the
present time, a higher per
centage of freshmen en
rolled in agriculture at NU
representing the top half of
their high school graduat
ing classes than in past
years.
Enrollment at Nebraska
of 1,159 agricultural under
graduate students in 1966
represented a 79 increase
over the 1957 figure of 647.
Of the majors offered on
Ag campus, Animal Science
and Pre-Vet have had the
greatest increase of enroll
ment in the last 10 years.
The number of jobs of
fered to Ag graduates hat
also increased. Last year
there were several times as
many job opportunities as
there were available Ag
graduates.
Support the
war in
Vietnam.
Buy stock
in DOW.
by Critchfield
r.lr CJ V U