DIVERSITY OF NCBRl LIBRARY FMA New Cornhusker Look 19i it aces ARCHIVES Of Getting Fraternity Backing Serious Problem By GARY LACEY Nebraskan Staff Writer The biggest problem the Fraternity Management Association (FMA) faces now is getting the support of all the fraternities, according to Jerry Dickinson, Interfratern ity Council (IFC) FMA com mittee chairman. The FMA was organized last spring by IFC and be gan operation on a limited basis this fall. Through the association all member houses cause of the mass buying buy food cooperatively. !j0ne by the house. The or A 1 1 businesses retailing a ganization is working on a specific product are sent bid limited basis now handling AUF Students For Five Five charities for the All ; University of Nebraska. Ob University Fund (AUF) Fall j jectives of the association Drive will be chosen by the j are research, community student body from a list of! service and education. eleven possibilities Votes will be cast today, to morrow and Wednesday at the AUF booth in the Union. Charities on the AUF Poll Include: The American Medical Cen ter for Burma, is a hospital located three miles from the Red China border. Founded 40 years ago, the hospital has served thousands of people. Special funds are needed this year to build and equip a maternity and pediatric cli nic. Cedars Home, located in Lincoln, is a home for depen dent and neglected children. The home accepts children from school age through high school. In 1962, Cedars served 162 needy children. LARC LARC School for retarded children is also in Lincoln. LARC sponsors a school and training center for mentally retarded children not eligible for special public school edu cation. Contributions help to operate and support a coun ty school and home for these children. The National Multiple Scler osis Society needs donations for research projects, fellow ships and special projects for Multiple Sclerosis, a crippling disease of the central nerv ous system which strikes vic tims from 20-40. The Nebraska Division of the American Cancer Society will benefit cancer research in Nebraska. Funds for re search education and service are still needed. Nebraska Heart Association donations will be used in the study of heart diseases at Creighton University and the i nit Xav" j is 'If M --jmc M "nmxnr-. fmim mr.-m. ART GALLERY Designed by Phillip Johnson, lead ing architect of New York City, the $3 million building of Roman Travertine marble is considered one of the most important architectural structures in Nebraska. Art Gallery Ceremony To Be Held Tomorrow The laying of the cornerstone for the new $3 million Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday. The ceremony will be held at the east steps leading up to the entrance of the gallery's Great Hall. Chancellor Clifford M. Hardin will serve as master of ceremonies Speakers on the program are Clarence Swan son of the Board of Regents, Fred N. Wells, President of the Nebraska Art Association and Mrs. A. B. Sheldon, one of the donors. The structure, designed by well-known architect Phillip Johnson of New York City, is one of the most important architectural structures in Nebraska. The 100 by 150-foot gallery Is covered with Roman Travertine marble. It contains a bridge-type grand stair case which will lead to main galleries on second floor. A striking feature of the new gallery is the Great Hall, 50 feet wide by 100 feet long, which is faced at both ends by glass. An auditorium seating 300 people, administrative of fices, and a Sheldon memorial room will be included in the complete building. slips, and the company re turning the lowest bid is giv en the contract. AH member houses must agree to buy from this company. According to Dickinson, the competition between the var ious businesses means the lowest possible product price for the FMA members. Needs More Members He said that the more members the association has, the lower prices will be be- Drive To Vote C s Orthopedic Nebraska Orthopedic Hos pital is a state hospital lo cated in Lincoln. The Hospit al is the home for underpriv ileged children who are handi capped mentally or physically Operation Help! is a new charity in Nebraska. Father Tom Morrissey, a missionary priest in Brazil for eight years, is asking for help so that communism will be de stroyed in Brazil. Operation Help will provide a radio sta tion for the Voice of Free dom. Thomas A. Dooley Founda tion is an organization whose efforts are directed toward medical assistance programs in Southeastern Asia. University of Nebras ka Speech and Hearing Clin ic, located on campus, is a clinic which provides diagnos ic and training devices for all types of speech and hearing problems. It is the only clinic of its kind in the state. World University Service, (WUS), is an association of students and professors in col leges who wish to share their knowledge with contemporar ies throughout the world. WUS helps to provide food, housing, education, and health and offers student refugees assistance. Solicitations will begin Nov. 5 and end Nov. 19. During this time AUF members will solicit on the campus and in Lincoln. AUFul Night, highlight of the drive, will feature the crowning of the Activities Queen and Mr. AUFul Ugly tickets, on sale from AUF house representatives, are 50c. i dairy, bakery and laundry"! services. With the 28 per cent discount on bakery goods last month Sigma Alpha Epsilon saved $25.77; Sigma Nu, $29.49; The to Xi, $27.59, and Phil Delta Theta, $31.11. The fourteen member fraternities spent a total of $535,89 where they would have spent $883.18 if they had net had the bakery discount. The dairy company con tracted by FMA sells milk at a 10 per cent discount be low the other dairies. Dickinson said that FMA had some trouble at the first of the year with the other dairies because they all matched the price of Skyline dairy who had the FMA con tract. Skyline dairy has agreed, however, to go down another 10 per cent making a 20 per cent discount below the regu lar retail price of dairy pro ducts. Fraternity Members The fraternities which be long to FMA now are: Phi Delta Theta, Theta Xi, Farm House, Beta Theta Pi, Pi Kappa Phi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Tau t wi Arfo T3 ft o C i rf rvi -v "Dpi Ao cia, Phi Gamma Delta and I Sigma Alpha Mu. Dickinson said that as FMA expands, the number of pro ducts which they deal with will expand. FMA plans to MARSHALL J-School Professor Is Dead Marshall, Noted World Journalist Associate Professor of jour nalism, Alan Marshall, 56, died early Saturday morning in a Lincoln hospital. He had undergone explora tory surgery earlier this week which indicated medication, rather than further surgery, could lead to recovery. Prof. Marshall was a form er member of the Newsweek magazine staff, a veteran of the New Yorker and Esquire magazines and the author of four mystery novels, one of which was made into a mo tion picture. He received his undergrad uate degree from Columbia University and his Masters degree from the State Univer sity of Iowa. He also attended Carngie Institute of Technol ogy and Columbia Univer sity's Graduate School. Before coming to the Uni versity last fall to head a pro gram of magazine editing and writing, Prof. Marshall held faculty positions at Lafayette College, Columbia University, the College of the City of New York, Boston University, St. John's College, the State University of Iowa and headed Butler University's School of Journalism at In dianapolis. He left Newsweek after sev eral years of writing and editing to serve with the Of fice of War Information in 1942, In charge of news and feature desks for Iceland, and also wrote columns for Hawaiian and Indian news outlets. He is survived in Lincoln by his widow, Audrey; father, John Marshall and sister, Mrs. William Nolan, both of Norwell, Mass., and a broth er, Andrew Marshall of Se attle, Wash. Funeral arrangements will be made by the Sparrell Fun eral Home in Norwell, Mass. r r .. 9 I if U ' fj "k add eggs next month, and will continue to add stable pro ducts all year. He said that he is having a big problem with many of the fraternity housemothers, because joining the associa tion limits the places where they may buy food to one, but FMA dmands quality food along with the lowest possible price. Several sororities have indi cated that they would like to join FMA, and all four fra ternities at Nebraska Wesley an University expressed an intrest. Many of the sorori ties at the University buy products from the same com panies that FMA has con tracted. The only thing they have to do to get FMA prices is join. Eventually, Dickinson said, FMA would like to expand in to a legal non-profit corpora tion, but as it stands the whole thing can be run un der the auspices of the IFC. "Greek houses spend $500. 000 annually for food, and it is the goal of FMA to save these houses 15 per cent of this total through cooperative buying," Dickinson said. Vol. 76, Band Day Observes 25th Year CU Situation Tense Senators Presiden Daily Nebraskan Special Boulder, Colo. Two U.S. senators recently denounced ; University of Colorado Presi dent Quigg Newton for lax supervision of University af fairs. In separate letters, Sen. Gordon Allott (R-Colo) and Sen. Barry Goldwater (R Ariz.) decried the publication of derogatory comemnts about Goldwater in the Sept. 21 Daily and concluded that Newton is not doing his job as president of the Univer sity. Goldwater wrote to New ton: "I doubt that you have the interest or the concern to be in the position you hold." Allott protested the "con ditions and attitude which would permit the publication of such an article." The arti cle, written for the Gadfly supplement by senior Carl Mitcham, contained a strong denunciation of Goldwater. Newton, contacted in Wash ington by his executive as sistant Don Saunders, had no immediate comment on the matter. The Arizona Republican wrote as follows on Newton's apology: "I must come to the conclusion that you either do not know what is going on Ak-Sar-Ben Selects Coeds Twelve University of Ne braska coeds are among the sixteen 1963 Ak-Sar-Ben count esses to be presented at the sixty-eighth coronation pag eant at the Omaha Coliseum October 19 and 20. The University coeds are Jeanie Morrison, member of Delta Gamma sorority; Sue Hardin, Delta Gamma; Gay Romans, Alpha Chi Omega; Mary Ann Behlen, Pi Beta Phi; Cori Cabela, Alpha Phi; Marty Elliott, Kappa Alpha Theta; Nyla Jaskowiak, Del ta Gamma; Kit Stuart, Delta Gamma; Susan Swanson, Sig ma Kappa; Judy Tenhulzen, Kappa Alpha Theta; Ann Wil liams, Delta Gamma; and Linda Hesseguie, Kappa Al pha Theta. The remaining countesses are Sarah Taylor, Kearney; Martha Jean Stalp, West Point; Donna Jo Briley, Sid ney; and Marie Campbell, Kilgore. ys r MS NEW LOOK-Penny Sulli van, sophomore cheer leader, is rooting for a victory in her new outfit which suggests the ov eralls idea. The Daily Nebraskan 8COY i in the University, or vou! j don't care, and in charity, I 1 wm presume the former. To put it briefly, I doubt that you have the interest or the concern to be in the position you hold." Saunders described G o 1 d water's message as "a des picable thing. The Senator is trying to play Colorado poli tics and ought to keep his nose out of the University's and Colorado's business. The president (Newton) made a sincere apology, and this is a very discourteous re sponse." Allott said Newton's investi gation of the Goldwater in cident last year was "com pletely unresponsive to the existing situation. The con clusions I reached at that time are more than confirmed now that (1) a paper which is basically subsidized by the state of Colorado should pub lish a libelous article against a fellow colleague of mine, for whom I have the deepest and most abiding respect, and against the President of the United States; (2) that the editor entrusted with the publication of the paper is so lacking in fundamental jour nalistic experience as to per mit the publication of such an article; (31 that the Board of Publications, if this is the proper name, exercises such lax and casual supervision of Quigg the Colorado Daily as to notlDeita Delta Delta, leaves for iustify its existence as a training instru- journalistic mcnt." Morlar Boards Will Discuss NU Activities Mortar Board's "Organi zations NU" is set for to night and next Monday night, according to Cynthia ITolmaufst, MB p u blicity chairman. Mortar Boards are sched uled to speak to all fresh men in the women's or ganized houses on the "Why" of activities. To help freshmen, Mortar Boards has published a list of all organizations on the University campus with their president's name and how one may join the club. Activities c h a irmen In men's houses are asked to pick the publications up at the Cornhusker office this week. rwf:''4W1 'ilk rxp Hrrr1 Hjk, GO BIG RED Cheering the team to victory Saturday was the new Cornhusker spirit symbol. He is personified by Dick Neuman, Sigma Alpha Mu senior in architecture. The 'Cornhusker' sponsored by the Corn Cobs, Tassels and the Athletic department, corresponds with the new cheerleader outfits. See page 4 for the story of the game. (Photos by Pixie Smallwood) Nation-Wide With Vacant By SUE HOVIK Nebraskan Staff Writer Inviting town bands to the n? AmFlca' .USA University football games in I Telstar. These displays order to fill vacant seats lediwilj ta. "P the entire length to the tradition of Band Day I and width of the field. Donald according to John Selleck, originator oi tsana uay. ; , " en... i.:- ...u'of the show. he was business manager of athletics at the University in the early 1930's, town bands composed of parents and chil dren were guests of the Uni versity at football games. Some of the members were not uniformed he added. "Band Day, as we know it today, actually began in 1938," he said. Now the num ber of bands has to be lim ited and they are invited on a two-to-three year rotation basis, he continued. Band Day has to grown so that it is now sponsored by most of the major campuses across the country. Sixty-nine bands, composed of 3,700 musicians and twirl ers, will celebrate the 25th anniversary of Band Day Sat urday as they present the half-time entertainment for the Nebraska-North Carolina State game. In observance of the anni- 61 NU Graduate Begins Training For Peace Corps Setting up kitchen in Africa will be Janet Hansen, a 1961 graduate from North Platte. Miss Hanspn. a member of Peace Corps training Oct. 15. For three mtwf will be learn i n g French which will prepare her for teaching diatetics i n t h e French colony, Ivory Coast, in Af I- rica. She win begin her Miss Hansen training in January at a clinic or hospital and will be there for two years. The group with which she will be training will accom pany her to Africa. She has not received word yet where sh? will do her training. Chemists Will Meet The student branch of the American Chemical Society will meet at 7:30 p.m., today in 324 Avery Lab. Guest speak er, Dr. Robert Parry from the University of Michigan, wiil discuss Chemistry of boron hydrides. Monday, October 8, 1962 Event Begins NU Stadium versary, the bands will ap pear in three spelling forma- i.u piweo oi muuc ai i-jci 1 1 'a xy a y win uun n i ivi cii ly at 9:30 a.m. with a parade through downtown Lincoln. It will be televised by Univer s i t y television KUON-TV; KOLN-TV, Lincoln; KGIN-TV, Grand Island; KHOL-TV, Hol drege; KHPL-TV, Hayes Cen ter; KETV, Omaha; KHAS TV, Hastings; and KNOP-TV, North Platte. The telecast will be narrated by Kenneth R. Keller of University Public Relations. Cheerleaders Will Attend NU Session Approximately 250 Nebras ka high school cheerleaders will attend the fourth annual Cheerleader Clinic Saturday at the University, according to Yell King Louis Burkel. In addition to the tech niques of cheerleading,. the clinic will emphasize the re sponsibilities yell squads have to their schools said Burkel. He also added that some of the schools have been selected to do some of their own yells in order to show other schools what they are doing. The University Yell Squad will be in charge of the clinic, which will be held in the east stands of Memorial Stadium. After a tour of the campus and a noon banquet at the Student Union, members of the group will attend the North Carolina State-Nebraska football game. New IWA Members Help in 'Sister' Plan The Independent Women's Association, (IWA), has an nounced these new members: Katherine Ollenburg, Karen Zagert, Charlene Koelling, Cherie Hoon, Carol Klein and Sheryl Sanger. In other business, IWA will soon, initiate a "twin sister" plan. The plan will allow Lincoln girls and campus girls to team up to get a taste of campus activities such as helping build a homecoming display. fCOQS DGEME5EAV