r mmmmHm2'Tm''m i i 1 rrm-r ni in w ih.i iiminw.LuuLi.i-j. L- Oil 4 Vol. 77, No. 47 The Daily Nebraskan Monday, January 13, 1964 Huskers Top Tigers, 74-69 NEBRASKA UPSETS MISSOURI Huskers Coley Webb and Bob Antulov jump high for a rebound while Charlie Jones looks on Saturday night at the Coliseum. See sports page for details of NU's second Big 8 victory, a 74-69 triumph over the Tigers. First Q-Bowl Match Sst For Wednesday The first Quiz Bowl competition begins Wednesday night at 7:30 between Kappa Alpha Theta II and "The Outcasts of Campus Flat" from Selleck Quadrangle. All team captains are required to be at this meet. Team members are asked to be present, also, since all essential information will be given. Everyone is invited to attend. Matches will be held every Wednesday night in the New Party room of the. Student Union. The following Is a schedule of the preliminary meets: January 15: Kappa Alpha Theta II vs. "The Outcasts of Campus Flat." January 22: Pi Beta Phi I vs Pharmacy College; Theta Xi vs. Phi Gamma Delta; Beta Theta Pi pledges II vs. Theta Chi I; and Delta Tau Delta I vs. Delta Sigma Phi. February 12: VYLR's vs. Pi Beta Phi III; Sigma Al pha Mu vs. Alpha Phi; IPs vs. Sigma Chi; and Kappa Alpha Theat I vs Phi Kappa Psi II. February 19: Pi Beta Phi vs. Beta Theta Pi II; Phi Delta Theta vs. Kappa Sigma; Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Alpha Gamma Sigma;- and FarmHouse A vs. Heppner Hall. February 26: Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Pi Beta Phi IV; Sigma Xu vs Kappa Kappa Gamma; Delta Tau Delta II vs. Beta Theta Pi I; Phi Gamma Delta II vs. Manatt. By April 15 the 39 teams in the preliminaries will be narrowed down to 20 semi-finalists. Ten finalists will be chosen by April 29. Final elimination will be May when fire winning teams will be decided. TThe three winning teams will receive trophies for flrsOecond, and third place according to their scores. : Ulloderators for all the meets will be Albert Book, head of the advertising department of the Journalism School, and Dr. Donald Olson, the coach, of the Debate Team. They will alternate as moderators. Competing for Kappa Alpha Theta on the January 15 . meet-will be Jane CrabilL Maureen Frolik, James Mc Call, and JoAnn Strateman. f The Outcasts of Campus Flat" will be Bob Cherny, Dave Kittams, Jerry Patrick, and Ron RogowskL Machine Sees Hipiff The use of electronic Computers in teaching and research at the University eas increased rapidly and with effectiveness since the Erst machine was intro duced seven years ago. ; Today, professors and stu dents in almost every Col lege of the University rely on the equipment. Around the -clock 24-a-day op eration is common, and scheduling is so tight that operating time on some ma chines must be arranged three weeks in advance. '-The machines are hard for the layman to under stand,' but the goals of a few University scholars and studenti who use them are less difficult to appreciate. JL The reduction of mas sive amounts of medical in formation to computer memory on magnetic tape is an effort of Dr. Roy G. Hol ly, vice chancellor of the University and a noted gynecologist-obstetrician. Increased Use Aiding fS At least 160 scientific jour nals published here and abroad are reviewed by Dr. Holly each month and the important information on the biology of reproduction is abstracted and fed to the computer on the tape. Very soon now, a physl .cian wishing to be kept up to date on the latest infor mation in this area of med icine can be served with a complete listing of the im portant developments in the field. Without computers, Dr. Holly explains, such a systematic review of im portant medical information in this area would be im possible for any one doctor to accomplish in this hey day of scientific reporting and research. A reduction of the entire nine volumes of the Nebras ka statutes to computer "language" is the goal of John Gradwoh!, professor of law. When the statutes have beea committed to magnet Adkins To Head Regents Summer Sessions Budget Increased The University Board of Regents Saturday elected Richard Adkins, Osmond banker and livestockman, 1964 president, succeeding Dr. B. N. Greenberg of York. LeRoy Welsh of Omaha was elected vice president and vice chancellor Joseph Sosh nik, University comptroller, was re-elected corporation secretary. Adkins was first elected to the Board in 1958. He attended Columbia University, Grinell College and the University. The Regents also approved a 1964 Summer Sessions budg et of $467,624.40, an increase of $44,799.89 over the previous year. Director Frank E. Sor enson said that, based on ex pected enrollment of some 4,250 students, tutiton p a y ments would provide nearly one half of the budget. Sorenson explained that the increase was necessary for several reasons: salary ad justments in line with changes in academic year salaries; addition of some staff ap pointments to provide addi tional sections for overcrowd ed classes and to round out offerings in a limited number of departments. lay Cuneiform n Disp Some of the oldest writing known to man went on pub lic display' for the first time yesterday at the University State Museum. Dr. Cr Bertrand Schultz, museum director, said 12 clay tablet cuneiform docu ments, about 4,000 years old, will become part of a muse um display depicting the be- ; ginnings of civilization in an cient Mesopotamia, the land between the Tigris and Eu I f ' .1 IV o 1 ANCIENT TABLET Nathan Mohler, Museum artist, prepariei the 4,000-year-old tablet for viewing. Phoebe, left, and Debra Kaplan, daughters of Dr. and Mrs. S. D. Kaplan of Lincoln, observe. ic tape, a judge, attorney, legislator or bill drafter win be able to search the entire Nebraska code for almost a:iy information it contains in a matter of minutes. Stuart O. Nelson, an ag ricultural engineer with the U.S. Department of Agricul ture, is searching' for ways to destroy insects, bacteria and viruses in plant seed with radiofrequency energy in the 8 to 40 megacycle range. Professor Nelson uses computers to test the statistical reliability of his efforts and to guard against the possibility of killing the seed in the process. These are only three re search projects under way at the University using the digital type computers. An other type, fiie analog ma chines, is used to study a mechanical or physical process with electronic cir cuits. The study of the vi brations in concrete when struck a heavy blow, or the study of a bird's wing In Inevitable "The Panamanian incident was inevitable from the beginning because of the unusual status of the Canal Zone," according to Dr. Alexander Edelmann, assistant professor of political science. Professor Edelmann said in an interview yesterday that the crisis was an accumulation of the grievances that have been building up ever since the establishment of the Canal. He said that there is so much latent anti Americanism in Latin America today that these things can erupt at any time. "I don't mean to imply," said Edelmann, "that senti ment is entirely anti-American. Last summer when my wife and I were in Latin America studying land reform we were very graciously and courteously greeted, not only in the cities, but in outlying districts." Latin American countries have problems with low Trask Dines Dinner with the professor, featuring Dr. David F. Trask, will be held Thursday in the west cafeteria of the Student Union. Dr. Trask, associate pro fessor of history, received his B.A. at Wesleyan in 1951 and earned his M.A. and Ph. D at Harvard in 1952 and 1958. Dr. Trask has been with the University since 1962 The dinner, which is spon sored by the Union program lay phrates rivers. The exhibit will be paH of a larger display which will tell the story of the 'begin nings and growth of civiliza tion. -. Dr. - Prestos- Jlier, chairman of the department of anthropology and Mrs. val erie Nammour, assistant cur ator of anthropology at the Museum, are serving as con sultants. The clay tablets were taken flight, are examples of their uses. One of the most important uses of computers is the op portunity they provide stu dents. James Blackman, as sistant dean of engineering, said a recent check showed that computers are used by students in 28 undergradu ate courses in the College of Engineering and Archi tecture alone. "These courses are not de signed to train students to become computer operators, since thil is a craft or skill better left to the manufact urer of the machines," he said. "Our engineering stu dent of today may be a de signer of better computers tomorrow, and he is here to learn the machines' lim itations and how they can be programed to solve prob lems of analysis and de sign." Students in the College of Business Administration are also heavy nsers. They Edelmann Views Problem- J. .w With Students office, is more or less an open forum between the professor and the students in attend ance, according to Richard Scott, assistant program man ager. Scott went on to say that the dinner allows the students and professors to meet each other outside of a classroom situation. The cost of the dinner, which begins at 6 p.m., is $1. The next dinner will probably be held in February after fi nals. Tablets ifscfni from an area known to Bib lical scholars as the land of Noah and the early Biblical patriarchs, the birthplace of Abraham. Eight of the 12 tablets have been in the Museum archives since" 1914 when they were obtained for only $12 from the private collections of Dr. Edgar J. Banks, an archeo logist and professor of Turk ish and Semitic languages. The Museum obtained the other four from the estates of Myron Swenk, a former professor of agronomy at the University and Mrs. Ralph Johnson of Lincoln. Dr. Alan Pickering, a Uni versity student pastor with experience In the early lang uage, has studied and trans lated the writing on some of the tablets. Dr. Pickering explained that the ancient scribes wrote with reeds which they pressed into clay to form wedge shaped depressions. Some signs, which appear like chicken tracks on mud, stand for ideas or concrete con cepts, and others for syllabic sounds. When the latter are combined in proper sequence they make up words. The clay tablets are of particular interest to scholars because they give insight in to the way man learned to write as well as telling some thing of how he lived 4,000 years ago. graduate with an under standing of bow to use the machines in such areas as financial reporting and the updating of insurance poli cies. Professors of mathema tics, physics and chemis try are able to give their students practical and theo retical problems today that would never have been at empted ten years ago. Another use of computers is the roll they play in regis tration of students and the storage of personal informa tion. Registration officials ex plain that this is a highly ef fective use of the machines in an institution that grows in the number of students at the rate of a small midwest era college each year. One great potential the machines will have in the future will be their use in libraries. Vast, inter-library networks may some day ex change information on their holdings and collections with high speed and efficiency. m m hinci uGDCfli Framm standards of living, poverty, and a lack of education; they are sometimes apt to take their frustrations out on the United States, commented Edelmann. The Russians haven't been as closely connected with Latin America as the United States. Edelmann emphasized the lack of understanding that Balboa high school students displayed when they tried to fly the American flag in violation of the joint directive. "The incident shows that Americans in foreign coun tries should have enough understanding and respect for the sensitivity of the people not to be an "Ugly Ameri can," that is one who is ignorant of, or calloused toward local custom." He also insisted that a good part of the blame for the seriousness of the situation should be placed on the Panamanian Government for not taking adequate meas ures to maintain order. "The Panamanian National Guard should have been called out sooner," said Edelmann. "They were not called out until very late in the game." Edelmann said he was surprised that the incident was not more serious than it turned out to be since any insult that involves their flag touches the "raw nerve of nationalism" and is regarded by them as a kind of "mor al spitting." The fact that Russia did not take the chance to sound off about "American Imperialism" in the Security Coun cil of the United Nations also surprised Edelmann. He cited this and the fact that the rest of the Latin American press spoke in a tone of moderation and confidence that the U.S. would do the right thing as good signs for the future. t Edelmann thinks the U.S. would be very wise not to argue the reparation payment and that the Panamanian income from the Canal should be upped since it has in creased very little since 1912. Negotiations through the OAS will be a tremendous stimulus to the prestige of the organization, and increased pressure to settle the question of control over the Canal will be probable results of the present crisis, according to Edelmann. J o I J V ' ' I 1 ' ' ' &i - 'V'V Queen, Mr. Ugly Chosen ACTIVITIES QUEEN, MR. AUFul UGLY NAMED VIckl Dowling, Activities Queen and Gene Hammond, Mr. AUFul Ugly, were selected at the annual AUFul night last Friday. Six Coed Skits "Life, Liberty, Six sororities were chosen at try-outs Thursday night to participate in the annual Co ed FoDies show, "Life, Lib erty, and Leap Year," to be presented Feb. 28 in Pershing Municipal Auditorium. "The skits were much, much better this year than ever before," said Bonnie Knudsen, Follies chairman. "The judges were impressed with the originality they showed. The six winning houses and their skits are: Alpha Phi, "Phi Folklore," directed by Judy Birney; Chi Omega, "The Lady is Luce," directed by Anne Swanson; Gamma Phi Beta, "Baubles, Bangles, and Bill Boards," Karen Pflasterer directing; Kappa Alpha Theta, "The Status Seekers," directed by Shirley Voss; Kappa Kappa Gamma, "The Abscoundable Morrison Speaks At YD's Meeting Governor Frank Morrison will speak at the Young Dem ocrats meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the Student Union Small Auditorium. The Governor will be greet ed at the R St entrance to the Union by all Young Dem ocrats. All students are invit ed to attend. Comprise Leap Year" Snowman,M directed by Cordy Seward and Pi Beta Phi, "Black, White, and Read AS Over," directed by Linda Goth. Miss Knudsen noted that nons of the skits are at all alike. Letters concerning travel er's acts for the Follies will be sent out Thursday, accord ing to Miss Knudsen. Any University woman may enter the competition and a group may submit as many entries as it wishes. A skitmasters' meeting for those houses that will be par ticipating in the Follies will be held Thursday at 7 p.m. in 232 Student Union. it- VA ! I t t -