70&,h ' v 70&th located Seneoth I CtsckTawsr One Of The Dial 489-6863 LARGE ST SELECTIONS - LOWEST PRICES LIQUOR - WINE - BEER ONE Of THS FINEST WINE SlfC7ON5 IN (OWN ..next to the Library Lounge." ! 1 i CxtW If 4W O'T.Wr 1G j; Merle Norman creates 4 ? A New Look from 'Pure Nostalgia' . , . dazzling era of Gatsby and Silver Screen Queens. Phone now for your appointment for a complimentary makeup in 'Pure Nostalgia .' fTIERLE nORfTlRn COSfHETIC STUDIO 1340 'O'St. 114 Gateway 432-6235 464-0515 I v . . . i LIL L J&J&A W )& VIC3N T OEZ LI IZ!EL the Superb Handling, the Roominess, the pic up... the the Honda Gar Come on over for a test drive RAHBQLFH 21 tt tk N DSf1GDIl.E 432-4451 - 5 TKE members will run this weekend to raise funds for St. Jy2 Chlldrens Research Hospital. TKEs run play for St. Jude's It won't show in Saturday's game statistics, but 20 members of UNL's Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity will make the big gain of the day as they run a football 200 miles from UNL to Kansas University in Lawrence. The big winner, accoding to Fred Hakes, trek coordinator,' will be St. ' Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis. Tenn. The purpose of the run is to raise money for and disseminate information about St. Jude's, he said. The football the TKEs will carry was signed by President Gerald Ford during his stop at Lincoln Air Park West Wednesday afternoon, according to TKE members. Governor J. James Exon has also signed the ball. The TKEs will leave Lincoln Friday and arrive in Lawrence Saturday. The Nebraska TKE's will be joined by Alpha Phi chapter of TKE (the KU chapter) at Topeka for the last portion of the run. St. Jude's Children's Research Hospi tal is nonsectarian interracial and is free of charge to referred parents who have a disease under study by the hospital. It was founded by entertainer Danny Thomas, who was a TKE while an undergraduate. TKE later made St. Jude's its national charity. Hakes said persons wishing to contribute to the TKE's efforts and the continuing research work of St. Jude's may do so by mailing contributions to: St. Jude's Children's Research Hos pital, P.O. Box 80715, Lincoln, Neb raska 68501. Contributions may also be made by phone. Phones will be open from 5 p.m. Friday and all day Saturday. The phone numbers are: Lincoln -432-0194; Omaha 291 -2200. Cheers... 1 . V ft 1 v. f l. - 7 v1 s , . . - - - T ' " ' "- t , - r t- I Continued from pg. 1 After the departure of Air Force One, the President's plane, some protestors criticized security procedures, claiming denial of their Constitutional rights. "We were denied our rights of assembly and right to petition," one girl said. "We were herded into one area like cattle. "Every time we tried to move, there were men shoving us around, ' ' she said. "I got slugged in the gut by a pig." Another man said the protestors succeeded in shaking what called "middle class apathy." "EvAn though we didn't set through to Ford, I think we succeeded in implanting something in people's minds to move them out of their lethargy into real acton," he said. Despite the demonstrators' criticism of police, Officer Tom Robison said he sympathized with the protestors. "I think they were all in the right," he said. "I'm glad to see they came out to protest, and I'm glad they did it peacefully. "I would have been offended if they hadn't been here." Y ' --: i " f ' . ;. . " A Photos by Gail Folda When a President of the United Stales comes to town, all ages turn cut to welcome him. npi'y nebraskan Correction... According to Richard Bradley. Col lege of Dentistry dean, the Cuiiego of Dentistry faculty are ail paid based on 12-month appointments, not a 9-month basis as indicated in the Oct. 14 Dally Nebraskan. About half of the College of Home EconomiC3 faculty is paid on a i-montn basui &' "jrding ta. Haze Anthony, dean of u.-i college. thursday, October 17, 1974 page 6 ft- h A Jt- & -