Chancellors Welcome It is difficult to write a fitting, single salutation for all of you who are beginning Summer Session work at the University. For many of you, the Summer Session amounts to a third semester; another step in the year's study. For others it is a return to the interrupted task of adding to your store of education and professional training. For a few it marks the beginning of college. Only a minority of you are here for the first time, and to you, on behalf of all of us, I want to extend a special welcome. We are very pleased to have you with us. There may have been a time when a Summer Session according to popular notion was a kind of appendage to the "regular" school year. That notion, if it was ever widespread, has all but disappeared. Summer Session work is not "irregular" or casual. You will find the qual ity of Summer Session instruction to be first-rate. Those in charge of our summer program have endeavored to make these weeks especially helpful, stimulating and in teresting through the use of special events, con ferences, and lectures by visiting authorities in various fields. In cooperation with the Union, the Department of Music, and other campus agencies, a series of programs has been provided to give you many pleasant hours of relaxation and enjoyment. We want you to have some fun along with your work. Clifford Hardin Chancellor Calendar Thursday, Jun 14: First day of classes. Friday, June 15: Girls' and Boys' State Dance 3:30 p.m., Ballroom. Saturday, June 16: Classes will be held; Boys' State ends; Qualify ing exams for advanced students in education: All-State picnic, 4 p.m., Capitol Beach. Sunday, June 17: Film: "The Happy Time," 7:30 p.m., Ball room. Monday, June 18: Elementary Ed Club Luncheon, 12 noon; Girls' State ends; Book review, "Poetry of Ogden Nash," Mrs. Roy Green, 4 p.m., Ballroom; All-State Stu dent Recital, 7:30 p.m.. Ballroom. Tuesday, June 19: Phi Lambda Theta luncheon, 12 noon; Phi Delta Kappa luncheon, 12 nocn; Union bridge tensions, 4 p.m., , Parlors AB; Union Handicraft lessons, 7-10 p.m., craft shop." Wednesday, June 20: Union Artist Series, "The Dance- Drama Company," 8 p.m., Ballroom; "Meet the Artists," following pro gram in Parlors ABC. Director's A&f The 1956 Summer Sessions of the University of Nebraska are designed to provide enJiecLipportunitiea for all students. It is expected thatitoet-WOwidents of the estimated 3000 total will be continuing their work from the regular academic year. TlviDOa additional enrollees will include many i eachers anaiflatsbl adminis trators from Nebraska communities. A substantial num ber of those persons enrolled will be from other states and countries. Everything possible has been done to make the campus attractive and comfortable. When the days are not too warm, may we suggest that you stroll about the campus and jiote its many beauty spots. The beautiful trees, shrubs, and grass remindsus of the fact that Ne braska is rich in soil and climate. The University is proud of its new air-conditioned classroom buildings and its wonderful new air-conditioned library and Student Union. We suggest that you utilize the Student Union to the fullest, including the book-nook, the music center, and the game rooms. Together students and staff can make the 1956 Sum mer Sessions at the University of Nebraska the finest in the history of the institution. Your suggestions for im proving the services of the University in the summer are invited. Frank Sorenson Director Vol. 29, No. 93 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Thursday, June 14, 1956 Mrs. Green To Review NashPoem The first book review on the Union schedule for summer ses sion Is a review of the poetry of Ogden Nash, by Mrs. Roy Green, wife of the Dean of the Engineer ing College. Mrs. Green will speak at 4 p.m. Monday in the Union Book Nook, located on the first floor of the Union. Mrs. Green has been reviewing books for over 25 years and has also taught international affairs and reading and book reviewing through the University Extension Division and the General Adult Education Department of the Lin coln Public Schools. She has also written a number of articles and recently published "Books and You," which is based on material used in teaching her courses. This is the first of three sched uled Union book reviews. Refresh ments will be served after the re view and Mrs. Green will be avail able for questioning. There will be no admission charge. Union Slates Free Movies For Sundays The Union will sponsor movies to be presented each Sun day evening for summer session students, Bob Handy, director of Union activities, announced. The movies will be shown in the Union Ballroom at 7:30 p.m., and any summer session student is in vited to attend, he said. , "The Happy Time" starring Charles Boyer will be presented Sunday as Che first movie. Th e picture is an adaption of the one of Broadways biggest hits, "The Male Animal." Succeeding presentations in clude, "A Song to Remember," June 24; "Lion in the Streets," July 1; "Lydia Bailey," July 8; "Home of the Brave," July 15; "The Lavender' Hill Mob," July 22; and "Death of a Salesman' July 29. Parking Stickers Not Necessary Summer sessions students will not be required to . purchase parking stickers to park their cars in University parking areas, according to John Fur row, sergeant of University Po lice. Violation tickets will be given for cars parked on red or green, lines or in areas designated for' faculty . parking, Sgt. Furrow said. Faculty areas are designated by signs, he said. Student parking areas Include the Union .parking lot, the Sel leck Quadrangle parking lot and street parking not otherwise designated, he said. Nathanson To Speak On Morals "Development of Moral Values in Children and Youth" is the topic of clinic Thursday, June 21, from 2-4 p.m. in Love Library Audito rium. The clinic will be sponsored by the department of philosophy and the Summer Sessions office of the University. Dr. Jerome Nathan son, chairman of the Board of Leaders of the New York Society for Ethical Culture, will deliver the main address. Following the address, there will be a panel discussion. Members of the panel will include Arthur Gruenler, principal of North High School, Denver, Colo.; Mrs. Lor raine Giles, principal of "Belvedere Grade School, Omaha; Dr. Frank Court, minister, St. Paul's Method ist Church; and Roy Green, Dean of the University's College of En gineering and Architecture. Two questions that are facing this democracy today are how can the religious and educational in stitutions cooperate more fully in developing strong moral character and how the additional cooperation can be brought about, Dr. Charles Patterson, chairman of the depart ment of philosophy, said. "It is for the purpose of working toward an answer to each of these questions that this special clinic is being conducted," be said. BDCOIT UulDOBTJ s T pern Emily Frackel and Mark Ryder, featured dancers and co-producers will open the union summer of the Dance-Drama Company, Artists Series Wednesday. The concert is scheduled for 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. There will be no admission charge, Bob Handy, director of Union activi ties, said. Following the performance, there will be a refreshment hour to meet the artists In Parlors A BC of the Union, Handy said. The idea is new to the Union series, which are also conducted during the regular, session, and was inaugurated to give the stu dents a chance to meet and visit with guest artists, Handy said. Ryder and Miss Frackel formed the Dance-Drama company, the first of its kind in the country, five years ago. They also do the choreography for numbers which range from humorous satire to classical ballet, and includes dra ma and pantomime in lyric the ater dance. Miss Frackel and Ryder head a company ot six actor-aancers which includes Marilyn Poudrier, Yvonne Brenner, David Gold and Howard White. Other choreography in addition to that done by Miss Frackel and Ryder is done by nationally known Charles Weideman and Todd Bol lender, . who is currently dokig r J iiillillilifil pill! i ifiaifcisii mm ::vv.:-:vvx;v:-;::v-.- . Display Slated In Love Library The Nebraska Bookmen's Asso ciation is presenting a display of textbook audio visual materials Monday through Friday in Love li brary. Standard textbook and school supply companies represented in Nebraska will display their latest products for summer session stu dents. The display will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the east reading room on the first floor. Officers of the Bookmen's Asso ciation are Leonard Larson, presi dent; Dell Hedges, vice president; and F. B. Shrader, secretary-treasurer. Dancers To Perform Emily .Frackel and Mark Ryder, co-producers and fea tured artists in the Dance-Drama Company, are shown above. They will be featured in the first classical ballet work for the New York City Ballet. The Dance-Drama company's repertiore includes spoofs of ra dio and television soap operas, classic romantic ballet music of Claude Debussy, a jazz number about teen-agers today, and a fan tasy ballet based on fairy tales. Miss Frackel and Ryder, who are married in private life, began dancing together in 1949. For their first season, they created the pro gram, costumes, scenery, booked and manged themselves, and made a debut in New York. Since then, they have made ex tensive tours, including a six-week tour of Israel, and have danced at the famous Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival and the New Lon- Union Artists Series Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. There will be no admission charge. The group will present a varied program. don Dance Festival. All members of the company are trained in ballet, modern Hin du interpretations, jazz, primitive, tap acrobatics and folk and dra ma styles of dance. Other Union Artists Series are scheduled for presentations throug out the summer. The Mitchell Ruff Duo will be presented on Wednesday, June 27; a film of Sakespeare's "Hamlet" will b shown July 11; and the final pre sentation is scheduled for July 23 and .will feature Winslow and Car ringer. Handy said that he urged sum mer sessions students to attend as many of the presentations as possible. "Each one is well worth the time," he said.