the W Np)MP AIM Ivy Day Rehearsal Member of the Ivy and Daisy chain will practice with the ROTO band Wednesday, 5 p.m., on the first floor, Temple building. Thii will be the last rehearsal before Ivy Day. Men's Ivy Day Sing All directors of men's rroups entered In the Ivy Day sing- arc to meet In the Kosmet Klub of flee at the Union at 5 p.m. Wednesday to draw for posi tion and receive general Instructions, Pilings For -Act Crd Students planning to attend summer school at the Uni versity may file for summer activities coordinator until Monday at 5 p.m. Applications may be turned in to Dean Linscott at the student Council office in the Hoover Tells e ine summer coordinator, as- (f aMICTi1! flAfl slstcd by board of five stu ItUI5ir UIIUll dents, Is responsible for main- tainlng a smooth runnlnr acti Procedure Students should see their advis- ers as soon as possible and make Builders and Daily Nebraskan ob an appointment with them to com-1 tain workers through the coordi plete their worksheets, Dr. Floyd nator. W. Hoover, acting director of reg-1 Any new activities initiated dur htratkn and records, mxm,,' Monday. Schedules of classes will be available at Room B-7, Admin istration hall, on May 2. Regis tration will be held May 12, 13 and 14. . Students must pick up grade credit slips in Room B-7, Admin istration hall, before they will be admitted to the assignment com mittee. Ag students may obtain their credit slips in Room 206, Agricul tural hall, A student will be admitted on the basis of his credit hours shown on these slips. Students who Bfive picked up their credit slips for the elec tion May 5, must keep slips for the registration procedure. Those who register this spring will not be required to return un til Sept. 15, the day classes be gin, Dr. Hoover said. Registration next fall will be gin Sept. 10, for those who do not register this spring. CC Members To Hear Talk By Hitchcock New Coed Counselors and board members will meet Tuesday after noon to hear Dr. Arthur A. Hitch cock, director of Junior Division. The meeting will begin in Room 313, Union, at 5 p.m. According to Nanci DeBord, vice president, other speakers will be Nancy Whitmore, Marge Mo- ran and Nancy Peterson, who will talk on their experiences as Coed Counselors. April Beta Delta Any University blood donor who has contributed three or more times during the school year should submit his name, address, phone number and number of donations to the Red Cross box in the Union base ment. The student who has given most will be April Beta Delta of the Month. A 35 per cent certificate will be presented to the organized house or organization which has that percentage of blood donors among its membership. The name of the house, blood donors and total membership of the organization should be placed in the Red Cross box. These names should be in by 5 p.m. Tuesday. Awards will be presented at the Red Cross banquet Thurs day, . Cartoonist 4fu - IKI PASCAL FOR PUBLICITY . . . Dick Pascal, University junior, draws cartoons for a hobby. This year he has expanded his hobby by drawing for the 1952 Cornhusker and The Daily Nebraskan. (Daily Nebraskan Photo.) VOL. 51 No. 133 pen Dvofoes Union. A 4.5 average Is required. Appli cations will be reviewed by the Council on May 7. Interviews will also be held then. vity program on the campus during- summer school. Summer projects carried on hv ' Coed Counselors, Associated ordinated through the coordina tor's office. Barbara Bredthauer was co ordinator last summer. One of the projects carried out under her guidance was the Town Meeting: of the Air program. The office works closely with the Union activities summer pro gram and the YWCA. (ptwiot By CHARLES KLASEK Staff Writer A father shook his hpad snrfiv as his son left the room. For the second successive semester his grade report showed nothing but l's and 2's. "I am finally convinced." he told his wife, "that our son must! nave a sixth sense. There's rer. tainly no sign of the other five." These sunburns that many girls are sporting thanks to sun baths pose a definite prob lem to the men on this campus. On dates, the fellas never know whether the girls are sun burned or blnshing. In darkest Brooklyn, a Duoil re ported to his nature teacher, "Dis morning I hoid a bold choiping." "No, John." corrected the teacher. "You heard a bird chirp- . . "J-unny." commented John. T couida' swore ft was a boid choip. inffl" ing!' A great scientist had finished his lecture to a Bronxville ladies' club, and the members were buzzing around him as he de scended irom the podium. "Professor." gushed one ladv. "we've been hearing a lot about tnese new lie detectors. Have you ever seen one in action?" "Seen one!" snapped the Pro fessor. "I married one!" Get out the sun-tan lotion. The weather today is sched u 1 e d to con tinue fair and warm with a high tempera ture of 80 de grees. Voice on the phone: Is this the Sal vation Army? Warmer Answer: Yes, it is. Voice: Is it true that you save young girls? Answer: Yes, it is. Voice: Well, please save me one for Saturday night. The principal of a school in the Kentucky moonshine country asked a gangly scholar, "How much is seven and seven?" "Ten." hazarded the scholar, "Well, I'll mark you passing," said the principal, "seem as how you only missed it by one." At Work mm frt,,..; . WMMM:&Z .?.'' '"""f vWP liipiiiliJffiii 4 Official Ballot For Council, Class Officer Election Official Ballot for Student Council and Class Officer Election Student Council ' Arts and Sciences (Vote for three, at least one man and one woman.) Benedict, J. Gilbert Kiffin, Charles Hasebroock, Robert W. Hamilton, Shirley Lou Davis, Jean Hall, Sally Johnson, Joyce Dennlston, Lyle 1 Rystrom, Kenneth Agriculture (Vote for two, at least Reynolds, Dale Beam, Charles Barnes, Theresa Harden, Lura Ann Borgaard, Dixie Business Administration (Vote for two.) Martin, Bennett Sipple, Stan Engineering (Vote for two.) Jones, Gary ' Rasmusson, John Huebner, Richard Wenke, Harriet Young, Robert Peterson, Robert Bailey, William M. (Vote for three, at least Wachal, Joy Whitmore, Nancy Calhoun, Jane Rosenquist, Berneta Newell, Richard Hinman, Diane Shubert, Richard Brownlee, Sue Cook, Sharon Law (Vote for one.) Lawson, Charles Class Officers Senior President (Vote for one.) Pieper, Don Senior Vice President (Vote for one.) Major, Frank Senior Secretary (Vote for one.) Young, Barbara Senior Treasurer (Vote for one.) Matson, Jim Junior President (Vote for one.) Weber, James Junior Vice President (Vote for one.) Hulac, Georgia Junior Secretary (Vote for one.) Jackson, Beverly , Junior Treasurer (Vote for one.) Rasmusson, John Lawlor, Mike , Perry, Edwin C. Tracy, Howard Haitt, Ronald Lowe, John Winkelmann, Don Thode, Irving Adams, Sally Warren, Jack Stern, Arnold Yapp, Rockford Hasebroock, Robert Benedict, J. Gilbert Garfinkle, Allan Holmes, F e College 01 Pharmacy Calls Council Stains 'Unfair' By DICK RALSTON Feature Editor The stand on the Student Coun cil issue of the College of Phar. macy, said Joseph B. Burt, dean, is that if the principle of single representation is. valid, why is it not applied to all colleges? When asked why no student from Pharmacy college had ap plied for Student Council for the coming election, Dean Burt said, "We have been offered a position which we believe to be mequit able and unfair. A student filing for Student Council under the present statutes," he said, would be "an admission of the status quo." Under the present constitu tion, the College of Pharmacy is represented jointly with the College of Dentistry with ope representative on the council. An amendment to change the constitution to specify one rep resentative from each college will go before the student body in the coming election. -There will be no candidate to represent either the College of Pharmacy or Dentistry, however. No one filed from Pharmacy, and, although there was one filing from Dentistry, the election rules state that there must be two fil ings for a valid election. There fore, neither college will be repre sented on the Student Council for the coming year. If a student filed for Student Council from Pharmacy college i P.M. Headlines By CHARLES GOMON Staff News Writer Ridgway Succeeds Ike PARIS On the recommen- of the U. S., the North Atlan tic Council named Gen. Mat thew B. Ridgway to succeed Gen. Dwight . D. Eisenhower as supreme allied commander in Europe. At the same time President Truman announced from' Washington the appointment of Gen. Mark Clark as suc cessor to Gen. Ridgway in the Far East. Clark will also as sume the leadership of the UN command in Korea. Occupation Ends In Japan JAPAN The rising sun flag once more flies over Japan. This outward symbol is only one of the many changes now making themselves evident as Japan takes her position as a state instead of an occupied territory. American troops removed the occupation insignia from Search For Seamen Abandoned WASHINGTON The search was abandoned for the 176 missing seamen from the U. S. destroyer-minesweeper Hob son which sank during a storm in the Atlantic. The Hobson, traveling at high speed, rammed the car rier Wasp. The carrier sus tained a 75-foot gash in her Voicm of 6000 Cornhuther- LINCOLN, NEBRASKA one man and one woman.) Raun, Barbara Teachers ' one man and onerwoman.) Smith. Ronald Li Armstrong, Phyllis Patterson, Carol Folmer, Donna ' it would be an acceptance of the present representation, Dean Burt said. Although he openly discouraged any student from filing, he said that filing was strictly voluntary and there had been no discrimination. "Our position is that either we accept our position as it is," he said, "or we forego representation for a year and try for a change." Dean Burt outlined the reasons he gave to the University senate on Oct. 9, 1951, for changing the system of representation: 1. "The proposal (having both colleges represented with only one representative) is discrim inatory, since all other under graduate colleges are provided with one or more representatives 2. "The proposal of one repre sentative for two colleges is im practical because choice of repre sentatives would depend solely upon which college had larger en rollment. 3. "If the principle of college representation is to be recognized, then in all fairness it should be extended to all undergraduate col leges. Failure to do so is undemO' cratic and at variance with ae cepted procedures of representa tive government. "The Colleges of Dentistry and Pharmacy are as official as any others." he said. "Size doesn't make any difference. If the Stu dent Council representation is by colleges, then the present system is unfair." Lt. Gen. Alfred M. Gruen ther, rumored to be a candi date for the supreme Euro-' pean post, will remain in his present position, that of chief of staff in Europe. Meeting under the new NATO secretary-general, Brit ish Lord Ismay, the north At lantic nations gave unanimous Approval to Gen. Ridgway's name. It was no secret that most Europeans would prefer Gen. Gruenther as their com mander, but by agreement the U. S. picked the officer. . their shoulder patches and the now sovereign Japanese gov ernment issued a "white pa per" to explain its policy toward Russia and Red China. The Associated Press points out that we are gambling on the Japanese being more valu able to the Far East as citizens than as occupation subjects. bow and was forced to return to port. The Hobson sank, in what the navy has termed the worst peacetime naval dis aster in modem times. Heavy seas and murky skies combined to take their toll of the Hobson's survivors. Only 61 of the Hobson's 237 crew members were rescued. Krueger Garfinkle Vice President Joan Krueger will direct the activities of the Nebraska University Council for World Affairs during the coming year. Miss Krueger was elected at the second NUCWA election Monday. Allan Garfinkle, the second high candidate, will serve Army Men Will Inspect ROTC Units Col. Lewis H. Ham, professor of military science and tactics at Colorado A&M, Fort Collins, and Maj. Harold K. Reynolds, assist ant P.M.S.& T. at Michigan State college, East Lansing, will inspect ROTC units at the University Wednesday and Thursday. The team will inspect activi ties, installation, administration and training, as well as meet with the Chancellor or his rep resentative, according to Col. James II. Workman, University professor of military science and tactics. The federal inspection will be climaxed with a formal review at 1:30 p.m. Thursday on the prac tice field. All ROTC units and the University ROTC marching band will participate. Awards will be presented. On Friday Ham and Reynolds will inspect ROTC units at the College of Medicine in Omaha. Colonel Workman will leave Saturday to participate in fed eral inspection in Indiana. He will inspect units at the University of xnaiana, nose Polytechnic (Terre Haute) and Notre Dame. He will be gone two weeks. Malone Wins Prize In Story Contest Marvin Malone is first place winner in the Delphian Union Literary society's annual short story contest. The award for his story, "Midwestern Epic," was made at the society's annual alum ni banquet. Other winners were: Shirlpv Wear, second; Marlin Jo Martin: i U i - J. j-x i iniro; uvenon Turner, Don Thackerv and T. n c A honorable mention. Malone read his story to the 40 active and alumni members pres ent at the banquet. Also included on the program were short speeches by Ormand Meyer and Albert Rosenber; skits by Thelma and Clark Gustin; piano selection by Joan Williams; a playlet by active members and a dance by Joan Williams and Taghi Ker-mani. 'eef. Committee Chairmen Describe 1952 Version By SARA STEPHENSON Staff Writer n.-weeK was a success and as good as last year's in proportion with the drop in enrollment, agreed co-chairmen Paul Chismar and John D. Krogh- at the last E Week committee meeting Monday. The event was described by one committeeman as being a "big program spread out pretty thin" because of the reduction in peo ple in Engineering. i . T I ; y-ry ' ' J - . ' ' - E-WEEK MEN . . . Co-chairmen of Engineers' Week, John Krogh (1.) and Paul Chismar (r.). evaluate the results of the recent pro gram. (Daily Nebraska? Photo.) Tuesday, April 29, 1952 Chosen Conrltsy Lincoln Blur JOAN KRUEGER NUCWA Filings Filings are now open for seven Nebraska Council of World Affairs board positions. i Any interested students, whether NUCWA members or not, may apply until noon Thursday in the central booth main floor Union. They are to sign up for interviews at the same. time. Positions open include chair man of membership, special projects, UN week, spring con ference, mass meetings, pub licity and speakers bureau com mittees. Board members will be chosen at a later date by mem bers of the old and new execu tive boards. Com Cobs There will be an important meeting for all Corn Cobs in cluding new activities in Un ion parlor Y at 5 p.m. Tuesday. 1- Vi" 13 A U." iiiiiii::iJiiiSi Two Hundred Plan To Attend RWC Friendship Picnic Today Approximately 200 American and ioieiSO- students are exper?.! to attend the Religious Wel fare council's friendship picnic Tuesday evening. Cars will leave the Union be tween 5:30 and 6:15 p.m. for Pioneer park, where the picnic will be held, barring rain. Food, to be provided by Ag YMCA 'As Good As Suggestions for 1953's event in ments in Lincoln to show those attending the relationship be jtween what is learned at school and how it is applied to the ac tual jobs. It was generally agreed that one of the greatest improvements was needed in the publicity depart ment. An enlarged publicity com mittee, publicity releases handed in a month ahead of time and ad vertising slips added to milk bot- j - ...- - n! - edrs Hem as vice president during 1952- 53. Miss Krueger, a junior in Arts and Sciences college, is editor of The Daily Nebraskan; president of Delta Sigma Rho, speech hon orary; member of Gamma Alpha Chi, advertising honorary; mem ber of Kappa Tau Alpha, journal ism honorary; and member of the debate squad. She is a Gamma Phi Beta. Garfinkle Is the New Student Week committee representative from NUCWA. A sophomore in the College of Arts and Sciences, he is a member of the Inter Fraternity Council, staff writer for The Daily Nebraskan and scholarship chairman for Sigma Alpha Mu. The second election was held after Charles Gomon, one of the original candidates, found that he would not return to University next year. Other officers were elected Wednesday. Jean Speidell will serve as secretary and Pat Allen as treasurer. Miss Speidel, a junior in the College of Arts and Sciences, is a member of Builders and Wom en's Athletic Association. She is affiliated with Delta Delta Delta. Allen is master of rituals of Alpha Kappa Psi, business fra ternity, and a member of Acacia fraternity. He is a junior in the College of Business Administra tion. He headed the Russian dele gation at the NUCWA mock char ter amendment conference. Beerline To Head Phi Epsilon Kappa Glenn Beerline was elected president of Nebraska Tau chap ter of Phi Epsilon Kappa, national men's professional physical edu cation iraternity. , I Other officers are: Jack Shull, ivice president; Ralph Hall, secre tary; Dale Harned, treasurer; Bill Giles, historical editor; Fred Se ger, guide; Gene Yelken, sergeant-at-arms. and YWCA, will be served at P:30 p.m. Bill Mundell is in charge of picnic recreation following the meal. Although rain is not expected, a secondary location has been se cured for the picnic in case of bad weather. Presby house was in charge of invitations and tickets. Last Year's' eluded the idea of working the program around the establish tle tops were suggested by George Cobel, publicity chairman. The publicity through the high schools was handled very well. Other comments concerned sales portion of the event More salesmen and each sellini? tirkpts to every affair and posters before the sales begin to promoter great er in trest in purchasing were the major suggestions. E-Week ribbon salps IntaUA 9 - 451 and it was approximated that the engineers cleared about $20 on the event. $29,40S Study Grants Awarded To 3 Professors Three University faruUv bers have received research grants totaling $29,408. acrnrHinjr in Dean R. W. Goss of the graduate conege. They are: National Science foundation, grant of $13,700 to Dr. Norman Cromwell, professor of chemis try, for a study of "three-rinf compounds." The grant covers a two-year period. The National Heart institute nf the U.S. public health service, grant or $8,208 to Dr. F. Lowell Dunn. Drofessor of internal mpHi- cine at the College of Medicine in Omaha, for a study of "non organic heart murmurs.'' The Nebraska Heart associa tion, grant of $2,500, to Dr. Dunn for cardiovascular re search. Roberts Dairy enmnanv. want of $5,000 ($1,000 per year for five years) to Dr. P. L. Kelly, chair man of the dairy husbandry, de partment, for a study to most economical production of mine possible for Nebraska dairy farmers through (a) production of pasture and roughage; (b) use of ipasture and roughage; and (c) 'storage of roughage.