The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 25, 1958, Image 1

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    Spring Day v
Scrimmace
See Page 3
ARCHIVES
Columnist
JV
Sec-Page
Vol. 32, No. 100
Lincoln, Nebraska
Friday, April 25, 1958
nth
the
May 3
Ivy Day
Chains
Selected
Women selected to carry
the Ivy and Daisy Chains for
the University's traditional
Ivy Day ceremonies Satur
day, May 3, have been an
nounced by Mortar Board,
senior women's honorary so
ciety. The all-day event the cli
max to the year's student ac
tivitieswill begin at 9 a m.,
and be held just north of the
old Administration building
at 12th and R streets.
In case of rain the program
trill be held at the Coliseum.
Features of the day include
the presentation of the Queen
of May, and her court; song
competitions for groups rep
resenting men's and women's
organized houses; the nam
ing of new members to Mor
tar Board and Innocents, and
the presentation of scholar
ship awards.
Selection of women to carry
the Ivy and Daisy chains was
made bv organized women's
houses. Each chose one fresh
man, one sophomore and one
junior for the Daisy chain,
and two seniors for the Ivy
Chain, in recognition of their
contribution to student life.
See members of Ivy, Daisy
Chains on page 4.
House Order
For Ivy Sing
Announced
Order in which the houses
will appear in the Ivy Day
Sing, May 3. has been an
nounced by Phyl Bonner, sing
chairman.
The women participants, in
the order of their appearance,
are: ?
Love Memorial Hall, Ter
race Hall, Alpha Chi Omega,
Sigma Kappa, Kappa Alpha,
Theta, Pi Beta Phi, Zeta Tau
Alpha, Sigma Delta Tau, Al
pha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi,
University Nurses. Chi Ome
ga, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa
Kappa Gamma, Residence
Halls for Women. Delta Delta
Delta, Delta Gamma, Fedde
Hall, Kappa Delta and Alpha
Xi Delta.
The order of appearance for
men is:
Sigma Nu. Phi Gamma Del
ta, Phi Delta Theta, Beta
Sigma Psi, Beta Theta Pi, Sig
ma Alpha Epsilon. S i g m .- ,
Phi Epsilon, Delta Tau Delta, !
Alpha Tau Omega, Sigma
Chi, Phi Kappa Psi, Kappa
Sigma, Farmhouse, Sigma
Alpha Mu, Alpha Gamma
Sigma and Delta Upsilon.
Lucille Reilly, Beatrice,
Paul David, Newman Grove,
and Glenn Trent, York, have
been named as the judges for
the event, Miss Bonner said.
The winners of The Ivy Day
Sing are to be at KNUS
studios at 4 'p.m.. May 3 to
record their song, she said.
The women's sing will start
at 1 p.m.. May 3; men's sing
will begin at 10:10 a.m. -
Each group will be allowed
between five and ten minutes
for their song, she said.
The sing chairman advised
each group to be there at least
half an hour before their
scheduled time of. appear
ance. Coed Counselors
Will Initiate 150
The annual Coed Counselor
Initiation will be held Sunday
at 2 p.m. in Union A, B, C.
Approximately 150 new
counselors 'ill be initiated.
Jan Lichtenberger, Coed
Counselor president, and Judy
Combs, vice-president, will
speak at the initiation.
Marion Nickerson and Fran
ces Vogel, faculty advisors,
will be introduced.
Orientations for the
Coed Counselors will be
April 30 and May 6.
Hospital Designer
To Lecture Here
Helge Westermann of New
York, a hospital consultant
and practicing architect for
19 years, will be visiting critic
and lecturer here today
through Saturday.
He received his Master of
Arts degree from Harvard and
has designed the hospital at
Manila, Phillipine Islands
and the Baltimore Mercy Hos
pital. His visit is being spon
sored by the department of
architecture.
PATIO GOES IT Seven ZBT's begin
work on the patio built at the front of their
house with bricks salvaged from Ellen
Smith Hall. The patio was put up in honor
of an "old friend."
Foreign Newsmens' Tour
To Begin Here Sunday
KVOX-TV, J-School, Tractor Lab
On Docket; Rag To Hold Coffee
Journalists representing the
major newspaper and radio
and television stations of 13
European countries will visit
Lincoln this weekend.
Their Lincoln stop is part
of a 4-week tour of the Unit
ed States.
Visits to KUON-TV, the
School of Journalism and the
Nebraska tractor testing lab
oratory will be part of the
Lincoln tour.
Rag Coffee
A coffee for the newsmei
sponsored by the Da'ily Ne
braskan will be held Sunday
at 5 p.m. in the Union.
The coffee is planned es-j
penally to give tne loreign
journalists a chance to meet
informally with students from
their home countries attend
ing the University.
The newsmen will visit
the School of Journalism
Mondav. They will be present
at an Open House to be held
at 10 a.m. Monday in Bur
nett 306.
"The open house will give;
students interested in journal
ism a chance to discuss Eu-j
ropean journalism with these1
newsmen," said Dr. William
Hall, chairman of the School
of Journalism.
"It will be on an informal
talk rather than a formal
speech basis," he added.
The group, sponsored by
the U.S. Department of State,
the Air Force, the U.S. In
formation Agency and the
Governmental Affairs Insti
tute of Washington, will ar
rive in Lincoln April 25.
Pageant
Saturday the group will
tour Lincoln and visit the
Journal-Star printing plant.
That night they are invited to
attend the Miss Nebraska
Pageant.
The journalists will visit
Nebraska Wesleyan Sunday.
That same day they will at
tend the coffee hour at the
Union of the University -of Ne
braska. The Lincoln tour will end
with the visit to the School
of Journalism and a tour of
the State Capitol.
Lincoln is the only major
civilian visit scheduled on
their program, which is com
posed mainly of tours devot
ed to military activities.
" The newsmen and the coun
tries they represent are:
Maurice Haurez, Belgium;
Knud Damgaard, Denmark;
Leonard Beaton, Gilbert
Carter, Stephen Barber, Roy
Lewis. Anthony J. Smith and
John Davy, England.
Alain De Sedouy, Jean
Louis Guillaud. Etien Anthe-
r i e u, Pierre Bournaud,
Georges Gallean, France;
Alexander F. Marfeld, Adal
bert Baerwolf, Dr. H. Her
bert Koch. H. Olaf Von Wran-
gel, Otto Merk, and Emil A.
Obermann, Germany.
Ioannis Vandoros, Panagi-
otis Panavannopoulos, Deme-
trios Chronopoulos, Greece;
Dr. Favio Maria Crivelli and
Armando Silvestri, Italy.
Andre Pierre Claude, Lux
embourg: H e n d r i k E
Janszen. the Netherlands;
Terje Eaalsrud, Hans Kris
tian Skou, Norway; Monsignor
Antero De Sousa, and Dr.
Jose Da Cunha Motta, Por
tugal
Rafael Salazar, Spain;., and
Hikmet Feridun, and Turhan
Selen, Turkey.
Representatives from the
London and Paris offices of
the USIA, two Air Force
officers and two photogra
phers will accompany the
newsmen.
Chancellor Names
One Tribunal Judge
Senior Selections
Withheld By Council
Editorial
Spanks
Council
The Daily Nebraskan
takes issue with the "sup
pression" of news in 1) the
dismissal of Rag reporters
during the selection of the
Tribunal Judges, and 2) the
concealment of the names
of senior members of the
Tribunal already selected.
All This
On
Page
Ellen Smith
'Lives On
In ZBT Patio
Ellen Smith Hall may
soon be forgotten by most of
the campus, but the Zeta
Beta Tau's won't forget
their long-time neighbor for
quite some time.
With bricks salvaged from
.the building's ruins, the
ZBT's constructed a patio
at the front of their house.
The work involved dig
ging a foundation, setting a
sand base and hauling the
bricks, Steve Rosenblatt,
sophomore in Business Ad
ministration, said.
Maynard Small, Law Col-j
lege sophomore, onginatea
the idea, and was appointed
"project supervisor." The
move was brought about be
cause the ZBT's have been
Ellen S m i t h' s neighbors
since 1922, and various up
stairs rooms have been
named by the buildings op
posite them, for example
first and second floor
Presby, Dave Herzog said.
"Although Ellen Smith is
no longer with us," he said,
"our room names remain."
The name of one judge for the Student Tribunal was
released Thursday afternoon.
He is Theodore Aakhus, professor of Engineering Draw
ing.
His name was released by Chancellor Clifford Hardin
who said that the second;
'Big Knife' Posed
For Sunday Nite
THE BIG KNIFE is the Sun
day Nite Movie to be pre
sented April 27 at 7:30 p.m.;
in the Union Ballroom. j
The movie stars Jack Pa
lance, Ida Lupino, Rod Stei
ger, Shelley Winters, Wendell
Corey, and Everett Sloane.
The explosive movie is about
a man who sells his soul to
hang onto the fame and for
tune that go with being a
movie star. He wakes up al
most too late and struggles
desperately to regain his self
respect. Admission is free with stu
dent identification.
Engineers
'Popular'
Crowd Thursday;
Picnic Today
Attendance at Thursday's
E-Week activities were "as
good or better as any of the
past 7 or 8 vears I have seen,"
Dean Merk Hobson of the Col
lege of Engineering and Ar
chitecture said.
"The exhibits were very
well attended." he said, and
he estimated attendance at;
8-10,000.
Paul Johrde, a 1947 Uni
versity graduate, spoke
at 11 a.m. todav at the E-
Week Convocation.
The topic of his speech was
A Challenge to All Engi
neers.
Johrde is from Ridgeway,
Penn. and is employed by
the Elliott Co.
He was co-chairman of En
gineers' Week in 1947, a
member of Sigma Tau and
Pi Ma Epsilon and recipi-i
ent of the O. J. Ferguson
Award.
At the present time, Johr-;
de is the secretary-treasurer
of the Ridgeway Section of
the A.I.E.E. and chairman
of the Ridgeway Planning and
Zoning Commission.
Picnic
The picnic at Pioneer Park
will be from 12:30 to 1:30
this afternoon, with Field
Day beginning at 1:30 and
ending at 4:30.
The Engineers Banquet at
Cotner Terrace will be from
6:30-9 p.m.
The Field Day activities in
clude three-legged races, egg
bearing contests, a tug of
war and a Softball game.
Points will be given the win
ners which will count toward
the over-all trophy that will
be awarded to the depart
ment with the most points.
A number of other awards
will be presented at the
banquet. Sigma Tau will pre
sent a medal to the freshmau
with the highest average and
the O. J. Ferguson Award
will be presented to an out
standing senior. The Bllue
Print will give Gold Keys and
Certificates to outstanding
staff members.
A dance will conclude the
procedings of E-Week. The
Bill Albers Band will play
from 9 p.m. until midnight.
faculty judge for the new
tribunal had not been named
as of yet.
Hardin noted that the fac
ulty judges are nominated by
the Faculty Senate Commit
tee on Committees and are
selected by him.
The Student Council, which
picked the senior members of
the Tribunal Wednesday aft
ernoon refused to release the
names of the selections to
the Daily Nebraskan.
Would Be Nice
"It would be nice to name
them all at once in order to
make the announcement more
effective," Council president
Helen Gourlay explained.
Six nominees were cleared
by the Student Council spe
cial committee last Saturday
and the applicants were voted
upon by the Council in the
Wednesday session. Only Miss
Gourlay, the faculty advisers,
Dr. Robert Knoll and Rut h
New Student Health
Luxury To Ease Aches, Pains
new
held
By Sandy Laaker
Staff Writer
Break an arm lately? Those
tests giving you pounding
headaches? Save your aches
and pains until next fall and
be cured in luxurious sur
roundings! The University has provid
ed a solution for tattered and
torn students the new Stu
dent Health Center.
Plans are being made to
begin moving equipment into
the modern three-floor struc
ture about the first of June,
according to E. W. Simpson
Jr., public health engineer.
Settled in Fall
"Well be all settled and
ready to admit patients next
fall," he said.
Although the new center is
much larger than the present
one, a ' student will have do
trouble finding his way around
once be has deciphered the
code in the multi-striped
floor.
This code is one of the most
unique features of the build
ing. If a student reports at tLe
nurses station that he has a
sore throat, he may be told
follow the yellow stripe to
the throat examining room.
Follow Stripe
And sure enough, if he fol
lows the specified stripe he
will end up in the proper place
and the doctor will be waiting
for him! Each examining
room will have a certain col
or which ends at its doorway.
While waiting for an ap
pointment, the student will
make himself comfortable in
a spacious waiting room, com
plete with lounging chairs,
magazines and a phone booth,
Besides tne waiting room,
nurses station and six exam
mini rooms, also located on
the first floor will be the busi
ness offices, a complete phar
macy, a laboratory, orthope
dic department, X-ray depart
ment, and suites for the di
rector of health, the public
health staff, the mental health
staff and the director of nurs
ing.
A two-way communications
system with all of the doctor's
offices will be set up at the
nurses station.
"There will be no major
surgery at first, Simpson
said, "but minor surgery will
be performed in the new sur
gical room.
The second floor will be the
hospital floor. There will be
16 colorful rooms with a max
imum of two to a room, or 32
patients in alL
50 Patients
"However, under epidemic
conditions we will be able to
handle 50 patients," Simpson
said. The present health cen
ter has a 21 bed capacity.
A patient will discover that
his room would put the Wal
dorf to shame!
Every room will have an in
dividual air-conditioning and
control system. There will
be 100 per cent fresh air rath
er than recirculated air.
Four of the rooms have pri
vate baths and the remaining
12 have half -baths with
shared showers. .
All new furniture has been
bought which will compliment
the pastel painted rooms
Each patient will have a bed,
over-bed table, lamp, chest
and one occasional chair. Ev
ery room will have one loung
ing chair and a mahogany
paneled closet.
Glamorous Basement
Even the basement is not
without its glamor.
An extensive physical ther
apy department with six treat
ment booths and a group tner
apy room will make the one
now in use look "like a clos
et," Simpson said.
From a bright, all -electric
kitchen a staff of dietitians
and cooks will send trays to
second floor in a dumb-waiter.
They will also serve out-patients
(diabetics and others
on special diets) cafeteria
style in a roomy dining area
Staff meetings will be held
in a mahogany paneled con
ference-library room. Books
will be available for consul
tation by the doctors and
nurses.
The student health staff is
expecting a big business boom
next falL They figure that
the center's many ultra-fancy
and modern features will
make it the number one spot
on campus.
IFC
Greek
Weekend
Extended
The Interfraternity council
is making plans for a Greek
Week May 6-9 to replace the
Greek" Weekend of former
years.
Ralph Flanagan and his
band will furnish the music
for the IFC Ball May 9, it was
announced at the IFC meet
ing Wednesday night. Tickets
are $3.50 per couple.
Workshops
In addition to the traditional
ball at the Turnpike, Greek
Week this year will include
workshops on pledge training,
i n t r a-fraternity relations,
scholarship and house man
agemert. The intra-fraternity compe
tition Friday afternoon will
feature a chariot race. The
chariots will be pulled by 2
house members and will be
driven by a queen selected
by the fraternity.
The winning queen will be
crowned queen of Greek
Week at the IFC Ball. Jean
Gardner, driver of the win-
ninz ATU unarioi. was ine
queen last year.
A Thursday mgnt oanquei
at the University Club will
honor present and past house
presidents.
Cadwallader Picked
Gary Cadawllader, presi
dent of the University IFC
was elected vice president of
the Big Eight Inter-fraternity
Council at their first annual
conference May 19.
Other Nebraska delegates to
the conference at Oklahoma
State University were Larry
Schrag, Tom Neff and Ken
Freed.
The conference offered
many new ideas about rush
ing, scholarship and Greek
Week, Cadwallader said.
Recognition
Dessert Set
For Monday
Some 25 women will walk to
the speakers table Monday
night to receive scrolls tor out
standing work on campus as
BABW holds its Recognition
Dessert.
Letters have been sent to
all major organization presi'
dents requesting names of In
dependent women who have
been active in the group and
who have above average
scholarship.
Executive members of
BABW determine the s c r o 1 1
winners.
Presidents ar;d house moth
ers of campus sororities are
also invited every year to the
Dessert.
The Dessert will be at
p.m. in the Union Ballroom
Tickets are on sale in all
independent houses and dorms
and may be purchased at the
door.
Levinson, and the council vice
president in charge of elec
tions, Bill Spilker, know the
names of the four senior
judges.
They were selected from:
Biff Keyes, a member of the
Board of Publications and
president of the Nebraska
University Council on World
Affairs; Lyle Hansen, mem
ber of the Residence Associa
tion for Men; Donald Iburg,
member of Beta Gamma Sig
ma, honorary scholastic soci
ety in business adminis
tration; John Kinnier, presi
dent of Sigma Tau, national
Engineering Honorary, an In
nocent and vice president of
the Student Council: Phyl
Bonner, secretary of the
YWCA and member of the
AWS senior Board; and Frank
Wells, a graduate in Business
Administration now taking a
pre-med course in the Univer
sity. Miss Gourlay said the nom
inees which went before the
special committee Saturday
were either suggested to the
Council by the Faculty Com
mittee on Student Affairs in
accord with the Tribunal
Charter or applied themselves
for the position.
Avoid Politics
Miss Gourlay indicated that
one of tne reasons tne coun
cil did not want to release the
names of the appointments
was to avoid "politics." She
explained that perhaps pres
sures would be placed on the
council members to influence
the selection of the junior
members and the Law Col
lege representatives next
Wednesday.
Dean of Student Affairs
J. P. Colbert said that be had
not been informed of the
names of the senior judges.
He, however, denied rumors
that the council had to get
approval of the judges from
the Division of Student Af
fairs. "The committee on Student
Affairs met officially, made
suggestions of names of pos
sible candidates and fulfilled
its obligation outlined in t h e
Tribunal Charter. Now, the
council has the democratic re
sponsibility of electing the tri
bunal members," Colbert
stdtcd.
Colbert indicated that the
Division of Student Affairs
was holding fast to a "hands
off policy with regard to the
tribunaL "I want to do what
I can to achieve student self
government on the campus,"
he added.
The Dean said that the tri
bunal would be "a great thing
for the University."
Chancellor Hardin was giv
en the names of faculty nom
inees for the tribunal "a week
or ten days ago" according
to Colbert.
The tribunal charter calls
for appointment by the chan
cellor of two faculty judges
who will have terms of four
years. However, to facilitate
continuity on the triounai, tne
first faculty judge would
serve two years and the sec
ond would serve four at this
first appointment.
No faculty judge can serve
more than two terms. It wai
not indicated whether Aak
hus's position would be tha
two or four year one.
Press Removed
The press war removed
from the Council meeting
room Wednesday afternoon
when the selections were
made for senior judges. Miss
Gourlay said this is standard
procedure when elections are
held.
She added, however, that
the council perhaps Unas tt
hard to knew what to do with
respect to the Tribunal selec
tions since this is the first
year the selections have been
made.
The names of the nominesi
for junior and Law School po
sitions on the tribunal were
not released, either, but a re
liable source indicated that
only one Law College student,
Herb Freidman, a present
council member, applied.