The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 21, 1954, Page PAGE 3, Image 3

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    Tuesday, Sept. 21, 1954
THE NEBRASKAN
PAGE 3
NU Union Renovated;
Crib Has Self-Service
Union renovations which wel
comed students' return to the Uni
versity include the re-decoration of
Parlors XYZ, a serve-yourself
counter in the Crib, extensive plans
for an addition to the Union, a
new activities director and an internationally-famed
art exhibit.
Miss Judy Joy Caplan will act
&s activities director for the com
ing year. Her undergraduate days
were spent at the University of In
diana where she worked in several
activities and held various Union
offices. She majored in sociology
and recreation. She studied per
sonnel guidance at the Graduate
College of Radcliffe University.
She lives in Cambridge, Ohio.
The Hallmark Art Exhibit will be
on display in the lounge for six
weeks. The exhibit was originated
under the direction of the Hall
mark Greeting Card Company.
Building renovations which are
NU Events,
Activities
Portrayed
Campus Know-how Sessions, pre
sented by Coed Counselors, will
bsgin Wednesday at 5 p.m. in
Love Library auditorium. The ses
sions for freshman women are to
acquaint them with campus
events, activieies and do's and
don't 's. Laura Garcia is general
chairman for the three meetings.
Wednesday the session is titled,
"Nebraska Does It This Way."
Carol Anderson is in charge of the
program, which will feature vari
ous campus events. During the
narration, events will be repre
sented by groups of Coed Coun
selors. The second know-how session
vill be Wednesday, Sept. 29, at 5
p.m. in Love Library auditorium.
"College Daze" is the title of the
panel discussion, featuring campus
do's and don't's. Carol Thompson
will be in charge.
An AWS skit on camput activi
ties will be presented at the Oct. 6
meeting, to be held at the same
time. Kathleen O'Donnell will be
skitmistress.
completed or being compelted in
clude the transformation of Par
lors XYZ into a room of modern
ism. The folding doors which di
vide the room have been re
upholstered with a fabric-backed
plastic. The double-door entrance
designed by the Union, contains
windows of double-paned glass
with wrought-iron, modernistic fish
decorations. Chairs and table of
black wrought iron and uphol
stered with an ivory plastic fabric
will complete the furnishings.
The game-nook, formerly to the
left of the crib, is now located in
basement room 18. The ping pong
room, also in the basement, is re
ceiving a new tile flooring, new
ping pong tables, and a coat of
wainscoting. The east entrance in
the back of the Union is also ready
for use. A sideswalk which will en
circle the Union has been added.
Most upperclassmen have prob
ably noticed the addition to the
Crib; but few, the subtraction. The
new self-service system is ex
pected to increase efficiency in
service, but will decrease the
capacity. A greater menu includ
ing a luncheon special, take-out
service and call-in service is be
ing planned.
The Round-Up Room will be
open for coffee-breaks from 8:45
to 10:30 a.m. and 2 to 4:30 p.m.
The Round-Up Room, besides reg
ular meals, will serve Sunday night
dinners, but no Sunday afternoon
meals. According to Duane Lake,
Union managing director, plans
are being made to install an or
gan.
A 27-inch television set has also
been ordered and should arrive in
several weeks, according to Lake.
The set now in the lounge will be
installed in the ballroom to be
used on special occasions. Plans
are being considered to install two
television sets in the lounges and
one in the Crib.
Plans for the new addition which
Lake said were still unpredictable,
include a wing to be finished by
1958 which will nearly double the
present capacity and include a
fine arts room for music recitals
with wall space for exhibits, bowl
ing alleys, billard equipment, game
rooms, dancing areas and ping
pong rooms.
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Coffee In The Corner
Classes didn't begin until this on campus. Here seven Univer
week, but coffeeing began with sity students relax in a booth
the arrival of the first students in the continually crowded Crib.
Hansen Assumes Post
As Coed Dorm Head
Hardin Interview . . .
(Continued from page 1)
if anything develope it's our
fault."
Dr. Hardin was born on an In
diana farm near Knightstown in
1915. His eight years in 4-H
Club work were climaxed by win
ning a 4-H Club scholarship to Pur
due University where he received
. his Bachelor's, Master's and Ph.
D. degrees in 1937, 1939, and 1941.
He began his professional car
eer as an extension marketing spe
cialist and an instructor in agri
cultural economics at the Univer
sity of Wisconsin in 1941. After be
coming an assistant professor at
Wisconsin, he transferred in 1944
to Michigan State where he was
chairman of the Department of
Agriculture Economics.
In 1946 he was appointed assist
ant director of the Michigan State
experiment station. In 1953 he be
came Dean of the School of Agri
culture. In the course of his ac
tivities, his work took him abroad
first to western Europe, later to i
South America and then to the ,
Far East. j
As the University's youngest j
chancellor, Dr. Hardin is one of !
the youngest college presidents in
America. Twelfth in the line of
succession, he brings to the cam
pus and the state of Nebraska
well-seasoned experience fortified
by a rich background in scholarly
ard scientific achievement and
outstanding administrative accom
plishments. An author of numerous articles
and bulletins in the field of agri
culture economics, Dr. Hardin re
cently expressed views on athlet
ics, research, education and a
great university in an alumni bul
letin, i
In analyzing athletics and its
position in the college pattern, the
Chancellor wrote, "young people
come first to college for learning.
I want it to remain that way.
Meanwhile, I hope no one will try
to break me for a Saturday after
noon engagement this fall because j
I expect to be in Memorial Sta- j
dium."
"Research," he emphasized, is
"the well-spring from which new
knowledge is born." It provides
"bloom and substance" to the en
tire teaching and educational pro-:
gram.
He defined higher education as
a "great effort to find out more
about the world in which we live
and to communicate the findings
to others so that all of us can live
happier and more productive
live."
A great university, he stressed
must have a great teaching pro
gram. The faculty is "the heart
and soul of a university," he
aid. A great university, he said,
has "the duty of serving the com
munity which supports it ... can
not be fenced in or fenced off . . .
is a part of everyday life . . .should
shoulder responsibilities of a
great democracy . . . should re
spect convention but not worship
it."
Recognizing our age as one of
technology inhabited by the ex
pert and specialist, Dr. Hardin
nevertheless thinks the prime ob
jective is to teach young people
to think for themselves and func
tion as citizens in a democratic
society.
In a press interview last spring
the chancellor was reported as
saying the University should "ex
cel in its teaching, academic stand
ing and research, but should not
lose the common touch."
Ag YM-YW
The annual "Get Acquainted
Party" sponsored by the Ag YM
YW will be held Tuesday at 7:15
p.m. in the Animal Husbandry
Building.
According to John Burbank and
Joyce Splittgerber, co-chairmen of
the Ag campus affair, the party is
especially for freshmen but every
one is welcome to attend.
The opportunity for coeds to
make suggestions about dorm gov
ernment and the chance to devise
the effect are included in the plans
of Miss Olivia Hansen of Lindsay,
new head resident of the Resi
dence Halls for Women.
Miss Hansen received her Bach
elor of Arts degree at the Colorado
College of Education at Greeley,
her M.A. at Iowa University and
did graduate work at Colorado Uni
For seven years she was super
visor of student teachers in the
business education department of
Illinois State Normal University at
Normal, 111.
MEMBERS of her staff are:
Mrs. Forest T. Bradstreet, Hepp.
ner Hall; Mrs. Reese H. Hastain,
Raymond Hall; Mrs. Adele K. Hur
ley, Love Hall, and upperclass
counselors on each floor of the
dorms.
Officers of the Residence Halls
for Women, who are her assistants,
are: governor, Marjeanne Jensen;
vice governor, Charlene Pierce;
Army ROTC
Students Win
DMS Awrads
Twenty-nine advanced Army
ROTC students were announced as
Distinguished Military Students.
Based on scholarship and sum
mer camp training, the selection
provides the cadets with the op
portunity to apply for a commis
sion in the Regular Army upon
graduation. Those named as Dis
tinguished Military Students are:
Artillery Merwyn F. Davidson
Jerry J. Jensen, Dwight W. Jundt,
Ralph J. Knobel, Alan G. Loftis,
Patrick J. Madden and Rolla C.
Swanson.
Corps of Engineers Paul E.
Cook, Virgil Holtgrewe, Donald L.
Keerans, Robert Oberlin, Don E.
Peters and Franklin J. Sazama.
Infantry John Carr, Lyle Den
niston, David F. Lynch, George
W. Wedley, Jean P. Smith and
Paul E. Wray.
Military Police Corps William
G. Cambridge, David J. Chapman,
James Donelan, Gordon L. Kitze
kam, Paul Scheele, Marvin E.
Stromer.
Ordnance Corps Delvert C.
Grim, Carl G. Mammel, Robert
G. Short and Orval L. Weyers.
Frank Kuccra
A'ic Anociolrd
uith the
Iwrty Barber Shop
2 North 13th St
1 1 Murk. South of
I). IMmrial Library
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Fill out the coupon below
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Lincoln
Address
Home
Address
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secretary, Jean Hueftle; treasurer,
Laura Garcia; social chairmen,
Rita Jelinek and LaVera Faimon.
Miss Hansen said that she is
meeting each coed through in
formal gatherings held by each of
the halls, counselor-councilee par
ties or social evenings in her own
parlors.
Miss Hansen and her sister spent
the summer traveling through
Europe where they visited 15 cous
iiia living in Denmark. Miss Han
sen and her sister are both able
to write and speak Danish fluently.
MISS HANSEN said that she
has always liked working with
girls. She said, "I feel that we
dence Halls for Women are start
in the residence Halls for Women
are starting off the school year in
a happy atmosphere. I was
amazed to find the ease with which
the counselors handled the situa
tion when the coeds moved in.
There was no mixed up scrambl
ing around for rooms everything
went off like clockwork. It was
actually as orderly as if it was an
everyday occurrence for hundreds
of young women to move in."
A new house mother of Happnar
she was the housemother at Oak
Grove School, a private school for
girls at Vassalboro, Maine and
at Eastern Maine General Hospiatl,
Bangor, Maine.
Future Construction Plans
To Enlarge Campus Facilities
Future construction plans of the
University include a chemistry
building at the Agricultural Col
lege, additions to the Law Col
lege and physics buildings, a new
office and laboratory at the North
Platte experiment station, a new
Teachers College High School, ad
ditional parking facilities and an
annexation to the present Teachers
College High School building.
Construction plans, discussed in
an interview with John K. Selleck,
general business manager of the
University, explain how the Uni
versity intends to spend the $4,
700,000 it estimates, will come dur
ing the next 3'2 years from its
share of the special 1.1 mill levy
for institutional buildings.
in the first part of 1956, Teachers
College high school students now
attending Teachers College and
temporary buildings on the mall
will be transferred there.
After the transfer, a new wing
will be annexed to the present
Teachers College High .School
building and the University Teach
ers College will occupy the build
ing and the top floor of the annex.
The administration department
will occupy the first and second
floor of the annex. The addition
to the building will be located be
tween Teachers College and Ellen
Smith Hall, transforming the single-wing
construction into an L
shaped building.
Another near-future nrnieot is
The levy, passed by the 1947 j the nurses' dormitory to be located
legislature, is due to expire in at the College of Medicine in
1957 unless renewed. Omaha. The contract is to be let
j in February, 1955.
1 kAlllkKS LULLKlifc. High
School, now under construction,
will be located directly west of
the Sigma Chi house, in a part
of the women's physical education
field. Plans indicate it will be
completed by January 1, 1956.
When this project is completed 1 14 and S Street.
CONSTRUCTION of a pharmacy
building is "at least a year away,"
Selleck said. "The contract has
not even been given to the archi
tects." The pharmacy building
will be located at the corner of
Until construction begins, the
entire area on 14th Street between
S and U directly in front of the
boys' dorm, will be converted into
parking area. When construction
begins, a U-shaped sidewalk will
extend from 14th Street to the
front of Selleck's Quadrangle.
Here is a listing of the future
projects with their appropria
tions: North Platte office and labora
tory, $150,000;
Addition to Law College build
ing, $150,000;
Addition to physics building,
$400,000;
Chemistry building, Ag campus,
$500,000;
Remodel city campus power
plant, $150,000;
Addition to motor lab, Curtis
Schaal, $150,000 ;
Renovate agriculture chemistry
building, $20,000, and
Miscellaneous repairs, $90,000.
The University, which gets .40
mill from the special levy, has
spent $6,075,978 of the $6,821,997
allocated to it from 1947 until De
cember, 1953.
New
New
New
1131 'R' St. Next to
The Nebr. Book Store
Lunches
Where Campus
Friends Meet
Snacks
Kt ofke
National
Bank of
minix
mm
are really
CORNHUSKER" STUDENT CHECKING ACCOUNTS
13TH & 0 STS.
LINCOLN. KEBR,
Member D.I.C.
"YOUR NAME"
is Printed on EVERY CHECK
A "CORNHUSKER" student checking
Account Costs only $2.00 for 20 checks
Your PERSONALIZED checks
ore ready IMMEDIATELY
Open Your Personal
"Cornhusker" Checking
Account
NOW
- . A. ,.-r 1
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