f 291 University Freshman 1 Students Win Scholarships I For YearList On Page 4 Column Outlines Objectives Of University Theater See Explanation Page 2 Vol. 52, No. 3 THE NEBRASKAN Friday, Sept. 24, 1954 University Orchestra VJislmovj Selects Members; Schedules Concert ilfov. 79 Members of the University or ehestra have been selected, follow- lng a week of tryouts, according to Emanuel Wlshnow, orchestra con ductor. The tryouts were conducted for new students interested in playing with the orchestra. The first con cert of the year for the orchestra will be on November 19, when Saxophonist Sigurd. Raschner will be soloist. ORCHESTRA MEMBERS are: IF IP ror r Women's Tea Set naav The annual tea given by Miss Marjorie Johnston, associate dean of women, will be held Friday from 3:30 to 5:30 p. m. to welcome new students to the campus and to open the 1954-55 social season, In the receiving line with Miss Johnston will be Mrs. Clifford M. Hardin: Miss Helen Snyder, as sistant dean of women; Mrs. Philip Vogel, assistant to the dean, and Miss Olivia Hansen, director of activities at the Women's Resi dence Halls. GUESTS WILL be greeted by Jo Knapp, president of Mortar Board, and Marilyn Brewster, president of Associated Women Students. As sisting with serving in the drawing room and the court will be the presidents of women's organiza tions and houses. Members of Delta Omicron, Mu Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Iota, music sororities, will furnish music dur ing the tea. DURING THE first hour, Mrs. J. P. Colbert and Mrs. John K. Selleck will preside at the tea "table in the dining room. Mrs, G. W. Rosenlof and Miss Florence McKinney will be at the table in the court. At the tea table in the dining room during the second hour will ' be Mrs. Walter E. Militzer and Mrs. Arthur Hitchcock and in the court Miss Dudley Ashton and Mrs. William V. Lambert. AWS Announces Change In Hours Quiet hours in all women's resi dences will begin a half hour ear lier this year, according to a new ruling by Associated Student's Board. Quiet hours will go into ef fect at 7 p.m. instead of 7:30 p.m. Another change in the rules gov erning University women's hours is the 11 p.m. deadline for fresh man women on Sunday. The housemother's permission must be obtained before any coed can take an overnight or return after closing hours. Freshman women may not par ticipate in activities until first grade reports ' have been com pleted on Oct. 20. ; Carol Asbury, violin; Elaine Bar ker, harp; Elizabeth Blunn, cello; Norma Bossard, violin; Fred Bou cher, trombone; Roger Brendle, trumpet; Jeff Bush, tuba; Walter Carlson, violin; Denny Carroll, horn; Morris Collier, viola; Bob Davis, cello. Jon Dawson, horn; Coleen Dre her, violin; Lorert Faist, trumpet; Wendell Friest, trombone; Sarah Jean Graham, flute; Georgia Ann Harmes; Betty Betty Harrison, vio lin; Robert Harrison, clarinet; Gene Hazen, horn; Ruth Johnson, violin; Jerry Humphrey, percus PAUL JERSILD, violin; Gail Katskee, violin; Beth Keenan, vi ola; Mary Kelly, violin; Eileen Knutson, flute; Lucille Lavine, vio lin; Blaine McClary, horn; Virginia cello; John Marshall, string bass; Don R. Moul, violin. Kim Mumme, bassoon; Phillip Leo Murphy, bassoon; Barbara Packard, violin; Charles Palmer, violin; Lois Panwitz, string bass; Paul Parker, flute; Robert Patter son, cello; Wes Reist, clarinet; Hanna Rosenberg, violin; Carolyn Roxberg, cello; Darrell Schindler, cello. SANDRA SHERMAN, viola; Ja net Shuman, horn; Stan Shumway, trombone; Martha Sorensen, cello; Harold Spicknall, bass; Donna Steward, flute; Velda Stokke, vio lin; Joan Szydlowski, violin; Or lan Thomas, oboe; Rosemary Weeks, violin; Harold Welch, vi ola. George Work, bass; Charles Wright, bassoon; Allen Ziegelbeln, horn. Members of the faculty playing with the orchestra are: R. Beadell, clarinet; Louis Trzcinski, viola; Thomas Wikstrom, viola. L S 1 w-w 4 i !. "fewi y n jw-... x i f:' i Aiming For Orange Bowl The first "orange," an orange balloon representing the Minne sota game scheduled Saturday, was popped at the rally last night. Before every rally a balloon representing the forth coming game will be drawn out of the orange bowl and popped. The last balloon in the bowl rep resents Miami Beach, which would be Nebraska's opposition if the team should go to the Orange Bowl. Here Danny Fogel demonstrates the proper way to pierce that last balloon, assisted by cheerleaders Charley Trum ble, Doris Anderson, Ron Green and Don Beck. All-Fraternity Revue 1 3 A m fl fl w A 1 nous YWCA To Sponsor 'Centennial Review' Rendezvous To Discuss Year's Commission Groups, Plans All upper-class women are in vited to attend the "Centennial Preview," the annual YWCA ren dezvous, which will be held be tween 3 and 5:30 p.m. Monday at Ellen Smith Hall. Purpose of the rendezvous is to give upper-class women an oppor tunity to sign up for commission groups and Y projects. Commission groups being offered this year and their leaders are: Leadership Training, Joyce Laase; Noon Discussion, Hanna Rosen berg; This Is Your Life, Gwen Uran; Religion Through The Arts, Pem Bremer; Campusology, Mar tha Glock; News and Views, Caro line Rhodes; Student-Faculty Cof fee Hour, Marty Hill, and Our Be- 'Hello Girl' BABW Board To Hold First Dance Of Season The first University dance of the season is the annual "Hello Girl" dance, sponsored by Barb Activi ties Board for Women, to be held Saturday, Oct. 2, from 9 to 12 p.m in the Union Ballroom. Music will be furnished by the orchestra of Bobby Layne. Admis sion price is 50 cents per person, Tickets will be sold in the Union and by BABW board members. DOTTIE SEARS HAMILTON, president of BABW, emphasized that 'dress for the dance would be informal. The main feature of the dance will be presentation of a "Hello Girl" during intermission. Each organized independent womens' group will choose one contestant. A total of five or six finalists will be chosen from the entire group. The winner will be chosen from amonsr tne nnausts weanesaay night but will not be revealed tin til the dance. The girl decided upon will he the first campus queen of the school year. Last year's "Hello Girl" was Betty Hrabik. The Outside World Prison Rioters Subdued By FRED DALY Staff Writer Rioting prisoners at the Missouri State Penitentiary were finally eubdued Thursday after four convicts were killed, 30 prisoners and three guards injured, and an estimated five million dollars damage was caused by fire inside the prison walls. Missouri State Highway Patrol troopers moved into the smoke clouded prison Thursday morning and in an hour and a half stopped the danger of any mass outbreak. The riot was confined within the walls of the penitentiary and none of the prisoners was believed to have escaped. Dissatisfaction over green watermelon may have been the cause ef the riot. Reds Broadcast To Gl's Russian radio propaganda is being aimed at American servicemen stationed at the isolated air base of Thule, in northwestern Greenland, according to the Army. The Thule-beamed Russian radio is part of a Red propaganda effort directed at "undermining . the American soldier's moral," the Army says. A new troop training pamphlet, "Defense Against Enemy Propa ganda," is now being circulated by the Army. The pamphlets outlines the objectives and types of Communist propaganda. Crime To Increase Crime in America will hit a new high this year if the present rate continues, says J. Edgar Hoover, FBI Chief. Hoover reported Wednes day that the crime rate for ehe first half of 1954 rose 8.4 per cent over last year's level during the same period. January to June of this year showed 1,136,140 major crimes com mitted, and average of one major crime ever 13.8 seconds. That is a total of 88,850 more than the same period in 1953. The greatest increase was robbery with a 20.4 increase between the two periods. Ike Attacks 'Deadly Cycle' President Eisenhower has promised that his administration will "avoid extremes" in developing the nation's power as he attacked the "deadly cycle" of federal monopoly of power and other natural resources. - In a speech at the dedication ceremonies of the McNary Dam on the Columbia River, the President restated his administration's basic philosophy that the federal government should participate in power development only to, the extent of necessity. The President advocated a "spirit of helpfulness" to localities and a "spirit of cooperation" with local citizens in the' matter of power development. "It is not properly a federal responsibility to try to supply all the power needs of our people," he said. THE FOLLOWING GROUPS will enter contestants: Love Memorial Hall, Heppner Hall, Raymond Hall, Howard Hall, International House, Wilson Hall, Towne Club, Adelphi and Amikita. BABW will have the following board members selling tickets: president, Dottie Hamilton; vice president, Joan Joyner, and senior board member, Wilma French. OTHER BOARD members sell ing are Doris Frank, Dot Frank, Barbara Colbert and Marlene Hutchinson representing the junior class. Sophomore board members are Carol Anderson, Charlotte Sears, Marion Janda and Ellen Jacobsen. The idea for the dance originated in 1943 as a service for soldiers stationed at the Lincoln air base. After the war BABW sponsored the dance as an annual event. This year will be the twelfth year the BABW queen has been chosen. Crowd Greets NU Band At Omaha Parade A record crowd greeted the Uni versity ROTC marching band Wed nesday night in Omaha as Di rector Don Lentz's unit led the 1954 revival of the spectacular Ak-Sar-Ben Electric Parade along a 33-block route through the heart of downtown Omaha. With Drum Major Neil Miller twirling a baton with a fiery brand at each end, the band drew ap plause and showers of confetti from onlookers who had jammed the sidewalks and office windows along the route for two hours be fore the scheduled start of the first Electric Parade in more than 25 years. Omaha's greatest parade crowd officially estimated at between 175 and 200 thousand by Traffic Inspector Jean Whinnery watched 23 bands and 20 floats, twinkling under the glow of thousands of lights, depicting Omaha's first 100 years. Chorus I Omitted In Class Schedule Students Interested in participat ing in University Chorus should contact their advisor to register for Section I, which meets Tues days and Thursdays at 5 p.m. in Temple, Room 24. j Dr. David Foltz, chairman of the Department of Music, said the section wes inadvertently omitted from this semester's class sched ule. " Earl Jenkins, instructor 'in voice, is director of the section. During the year, the section participates in the presentation of the Messiah, given annually at Christmas time. liefs on Trial, Sharon Mangold. PROJECTS WHICH YWCA mem bers may participate in are Hang ing of the Greens, All-Campus Christmas Vespers, Toy Library, Weekend Service Project, Mass Meetings and the Chaplain's Work shop. , Plans for the Centennial Pre view include use of a giant calen dar of coming events, according to Carol Thompson, membership chairman. Decorations will carry out the idea of a preview exposition. Re freshments will be served during the afternoon. HOUSE REPRESENTATIVES on the membership committee are Nancy Cherny, Alpha Chi Omega; Rhe Yeiter, Alpha Omicron Pi; Kay Yerk, Alpha Phi; Janet Gru ber, Alpha Xi Delta; Carol Wiltse, Chi Omega; Vivian Lemmer, Delta Delta Delta; Janet McClung, Delta Gamma; Aurelia Wray, Gamma Phi Beta; Bobbie Danielson, Kap pa Alpha Theta; Sue Simmons, Kappa Delta; Caroline Rhodes, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Lou Ste venson, Pi Beta Phi; Zelda Ko minsky, Sigma Delta Tau, and Charlotte Benson, Sigma Kappa. In addition, plans are being made for special representatives for Lincoln women and for inde pendent and foreign students. Janet Gordon and Roma Miller will handle plans for the Lincoln women and Dottie Sears Hamilton and Gretchen DeVries will work with independents and foreign stu dents. The annual Kosmet Klub Fall Revue will be held in the Coliseum Oct. 29. The theme for the show is "Fantastic Fables." Skit tryouts will be held Oct. 12 and 13. The specific time for each fraternity to try out will an nounced later. Marv Stromer has been chosen to direct the 1954 revue. The Ne braska Sweetheart, Prince Kosmet and the ten finalists will be pre sented at the end of the show. INNOCENTS AND Mortar Boards will select the Nebraska Sweet heart and Prince Kosmet, respec tively, from candidates selected by the organized houses. Nancy Hemphill and Rex Fischer were the 1953 Nebraska Sweetheart and Prince Kosmet. Phi Gamma Delta preesnted the winning skit, and Phi Kappa Psi and Sigma Nu were second and third. Kosmet Klub officers are: Al Anderson, president; Art Raun, vice president; Marv Steinberg, secretary; Carl Mammel, business manager, and Andy Smith, his- NU Theater To Sponsor Workshop Registration for auditions for the speech department's annual Actor's Workshop will be open today from 2 to 5 p.m.; Saturday, Sept. 25, from 9 to 12 a.m., and Monday, Sept. 27, from 1 to 5 p.m. in the University Theater business office, Room 105, Temple Building. Auditions are to be held daily from 3 to 5:30 p.m. and from 7 to 9:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday, Oct. 4-7, in Room 301 of the Temple Building. TO AUDITION for the Actor's Workshop, - .students are to pre pare five minutes of memorized material to be given before the Theater instructional' staff. The material may be a dramatic or humorous reading, a declamation of a speech from a play. The Actor's Workshop is non credit and -voluntary and will not interfere with credit courses. It is designed to develop the talents of first-year men and women in terested in dramatics by meeting with instructors and working on fundamentals of acting through participation in scenes from plays, said Dallas S. Williams, director of the University Theater. i torian. ACCORDING TO Marv Steinberg, skitmasters for the organized men's houses are: Acacia, Fred McEvoy; Alpha Gamma Rho, Don Novotny; Alpha Tau Omega, Bill Weber and Gary Ford; Beta Sigma Psi, Ed Mar- Skitmaster Meeting Kosmet Klub will hold a skit master's meeting Monday at 4 p.m. in Union Room 315. ffiveff, Dams To Present f 'Trilogy' The "Great Plains Trilogy" produced by University Television returns to the air beginning Sun day at 8 p.m. on KOLN-TV, Chan nel 10. Title of the final series of 13 programs is "Nomad and In dian: Early Man on the Plains." Dr. E. Mott Davis and Marvin F. Kivett will present the pro grams. Dr. Davis is assistant pro fessor of anthropology at the Uni versity and curator of anthropol ogy at the University State Mu seum. Kivett is director of the Ne braska State 'Historical Society Museum. THE FIRST program on Sun day, reveals mysteries of early man from discovery of early camp ing sites in southwestern Nebras ka. Succeeding Sunday programs will trace the history of different Indian tribes in this area and will end with a description of the In dian wars with the white men from 1849-1890. tin; Beta Theta Pi, Al Holbert; Delta Sigma Phi, Jim Copp; Delta Upsilon, Marvin "McNeiss; Phi Kappa Psi, Mac Lundstrom; Sigma Chi, Jon Dawson and Ted Nittler. Sigma Phi Epsilon, Fred Kidder; Delta Tau Delta, Dick Farner; Kappa Sigma, Maury Niebaum; Phi Delta Theta, Pete Anderson; Phi Gamma Delta, Charles Fer guson; Pi Kappa Phi, Burn Elli son; Sigma Alpha Mu, Al Kenyon; Sigma Nu, Bill Lindgren. Zeta Beta Tau, Marv Steinberg and Dave Salzman; Tau Kappa Ep silon, Dana Eurich; Theta Xi, Len Barker, and Sigma Alpha Ep silon, Joe Mesmer and Bill Camp bell. COMMITTEE MEMBERS are: Presentation, Ben Zinnecker and Barry Larson; Master of Cere monies and Band, Bill Campbell and Chuck Tomsen; Off -Campus Publicity, Andy Hove and Bill Devries; Finance, Carl Mammel and Al Schmid; Program, Walt Wright, Neil Miller and Ivan Alt house; Director, Marv Stromer and Andy Smith. Publicity, Howard Vann and Von Innes; Stage, Gary Jones, Bill Cannon, Larry Conners and Dana Eurich; Tickets and Program, Art Raun; Master of Ceremonies, Bill Devries; Production, Al Anderson and Marv Steinberg; Ushers, Dick Charleston. Migration Tickets Approximately 800 bleacher seat tickets for the migration football game at Boulder, Colo., Oct. 23 are expected to arrive at the Coli seum ticket office Tuesday. Tickets will be $3.50, same price as stadium seats which have all been sold. It was previously announced that 400 tickets would be available this week, but they failed to arrive. Scholarships Given Students Through Foundation Grants Scholarships totaling $400,000 have been granted to approximately 200 University students for the cur rent school year by the University Foundation, the Foundation an nounced. The Foundation has given three $1000 Donald Walters Miller schol arships to Ronald Wesley Hunter Willima Perry Maxe and Don Ralph Gerlach. Kenneth F. Rystrom Jr., a June graduate, was awarded the $1000 J.C. Seacrest Fellowship in Jour nalism. Ceylonese Student Brightens Campus By Wearing 'Sari' Mother Of Two Tells Of Communism One of the new faces at the University is a young undergradu ate student and mother whose native dress, the brightly colored sari," gives the campus a touch of internationalism. Mrs. Chandra Dissanayaki, who came from her home in Ceylon on a $500 Cooper Foundation Scholar ship for one year, will take under graduate work in home economics on Ag Campus. The. Ceylonese mother of two children, who thinks Americans are "very friendly," attended school at the Lady Irwin College for two years in New Delhi, where she received her home-science diploma. Later she taught home sciences at the Vis"akha Vidyalaya School at Colombo, the capital of Ceylon. Mrs. Dissanayaki described Cey lon as an island with large beaches and palm trees. Sixty-five per cent of the people, including Mrs. Dis- canayaki, are Buddhists. Ceylon's large population in proportion to lis size has created a housing and food problem there, she said. mm 3 Vs, I Students From Abroad Mrs. T. B. "Chandra" Dissan ayake from Ceylon, right, at tired in a sari, leaves the ad ministration Building with two friends, also foreign students at tending the University. They are Radwan Bekowich, engineering student from Jordan and Lichu Chew, math senior from China. CEYLON has " two political parties, the United National Party and the Communist Tarty. The National Party .is in control of most of the offices, she said, and added that she did not think Cey lon will ever become communistic. Mrs. Dissanayaki described the Ceylon University, the only uni versity in Ceylon and considered the best in the East. The univer sity, which is completely styled after ancient Kany art, provides free college education for 4000 resident students. ADMITTANCE to the university is by competitive examinations, Ceylonese students who expect to enter the University take two years of pre-university work to prepare for the examination. An unusual difference between the Ceylon University and American universities, she pointed out, is that the Ceylonese student who fails three tests in any subject is dropped from school and cannot re-enter under any circumstances. An' internal problem in Ceylon today, she said, is that of Indians, who under British rule were im ported to Ceylon to open up the country's industries, including Copra, tea and rubber. - THESE INDIANS settled down in Ceylon, she said, but their loy alty has stayed with India. Now India wants Ceylon to give these people citizenship, including voting rights, which in some areas would put Indians into public office, ' We want no nation to dictate to us within our country," Mrs. Dissanayaki said. After she returns to Ceylon, she will open her own resident finish ing school for girls. She plans to train each girl in keeping a home of the poor class, the middle class and the wealthy class. Mrs. Dissnayaki's husband is a lawyer in Ceylon. Her children are a girl Chandina, who is three, and a boy, Tilak Bandra, who is nearly two. The $1000 Charles Stuart Grad uate Fellowship was given to Ar lan Dale Woltermath. Howard L. Hawks received the O. N. Mage scholarship in Business1 Adminis tration. HARVEY G. McMILLEN ill awarded the $500 George P. Abel Memorial Fund scholarship for th Engineering College. The Delta Tau Delta scholarships have been given to Paul E. Scheele, Charles K. Thomsen and Richard H. Wells. Ten Scottish Rite scholarships of $100 each have been awarded and eight Sears Roebuck have been given to Ag students. Richard Gentry, a student i n Medical College, received the $1500 C.W. Poynter Foundation Fellowship. Another $1500 award was given to Alistair W. McCrone of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada. This scholarship was given in Geology. A $300 LINCOLN STEEL Work ers scholarship has been given to Patrick H. Moore. Howard Krss noff received the $320 Esther Goodyear Fellowship. Walter M. Arthur was awarded the $200 Cooper Cancer Research Fellowship. Forty-eight Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben scholarships of $150 has been awarded to students at the College of Agriculture. All of these University Founda tion scholarships and fellowships are awarded by the various Uni versity scholarship committees. Ag Union Sets Fall Roundup For October 1 The Ac Union annual nrwn hratca Wrty, the Fall Roundup, will be field Friday, Oct. 1, according to Mrs. Kathryn Peters, sponsor of Ag Union activities. The event is held each year to acquaint new students with activi ties and facilities on the ag campus. An informal open house ceriod will begin at 8 p.m., followed by a dance in the gym. Eddie Garner will provide music for the dance., . AG CAMPUS organizations will set up displays in the lobbv and halls to acquaint new students with the activities they sponsor during the year. The open house is sponsored bv the Ag Union activities committee. Chairman of the committee is Jun ior Knobel. Members are Sharon . Egger, Mane Peterson, Ken Pink- . erton, Bill DeWulf, Walt Schmidt, Joyce Taylor, Jim Dunn, and Slur ley Slagle. DURING INTERMISSION, en tertainment has been planned. A door prize will be given away. Free punch will be served in the lounge. The Dell will be open the entire evening. '