The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds; and the pessimist fears this is true. Is true. James E. Cabell Happiness is the end of summer school. Maynard Furd Tuesday, August 4, 1964 Summer Nebraskan No. 8 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinj IFC Sends j 1 Rush Booksl I To 2,000 I Some 2,000 prospective rushees are re ceiving their books and applications for fraternity Rusk Week, according to Mrs. Genette Mason, secretary of the Inter Fraternity Council (IFC). It is expected that 600 to 650 students will participate in this activity sponsored by the 24 fraternities on campus. Applications already have been re received from 300 prospective sorority rushees, according to Miss Madeline Gir ard, executive secretary of the Panhel lenic office plans to distribute Rusk Week material to at least 500 rushees who z.rc interested in the 15 sororities on campus Rush week will be held September 9 through 14. The schedule will include orientation sessions, open houses and rush parties. High school students who are in the upper half of their graduating class and college students with the equivalent of a 5.00 grade average during last semes ter are eligible for participation. Information and applications may be obtained from the Interfraternity and Panhellenic offices located on the third floor of the Student Union. What Are Atom's Economic Implications? Bradbury: Need Understanding Hours To Be Changed From August 8 to September 11 the opening hours for the Nebraska Union and Love Memorial Library will be changed. The Union building and Barber Shop will be open Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and the Crib will be open 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Love Library will be open to the public Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 8 a.m. to 12 noon. Faculty and graduate students will be able to use the Library's facilities Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. by entering the west door. y7l ! Pi rJ' tfJtl: If t'l f, i , .j's if,'" ; 4' J 1 .1 . V I? i Mf 7 :i 1 Jjj'.A 7A If ;-' " I if ' I '''77 "4 I fefc v - iwi nnMwM iTOTifMlittmMiiiiiiii Governor Frank B. Morrison and Dr. Norris E. Bradbury sit on the Nebraska Union ballroom stage before the third World Affairs Preview. Governor Morrison introduced Bradbury who spoke on "Education-Atomic Energy Interface". Superior Facilities Here How Talent Is B Lincoln Is s orouff Potential lit T sTir i By Lynne A. Morian Lincoln, Nebraska, has potential as one of the great talent showcase markets in the midwest. Home of the state uni versity with 11,000 students and two other four-year colleges with nearly 5,000 students, Lincoln is entertainment con scious. Incoming recording talent is sure to find Lincoln a receptive city. Lincoln has a complete entertainment f a c i 1 i t y in Pershing Municipal Audi torium. Pershing was completed in March, 1957, at a cost of more than two million dollars. Seating capacity is near ly 8,000 people. The beautiful exterior dis plays a ceramic tile mural which is the largest work of its type ever undertaken in the United States. Pershing is ideally located in downtown Lincoln close to the University of Nebraska campus. A Wcnger full-stage choral shell is be ing constructed in Pershing to make bet ter acoustics for full-size orchestras and bands. The portable shell will give sound a better balance. The acoustics in the building are re markable. According to Ivan (Ike) Hoig, manager of Pershing, "Anyone used to public speaking can easily be heard anywhere in the auditorium with an am plifier." Hoig said, "We have excellent facili ties, with stage equipment, twelve dress ing rooms, a couple of chorus rooms, and lights. Most shows are very compli mentary about Lincoln's facilities." David liaber, Midwest representative of the William Morris Agency, Inc., said that "for the type of auditorium it is, it's the best in the Midwest. Some audito riums have plenty of room for huge capacity crowds, but they do not have facilities. Lincoln does have the facilities which are excellent and the acoustics in the auditorium are good. Hoig said that most performers think Pershing is superior to most auditoriums in the country. Pershing has one of the finest sound systems and the best mi crophones that can be bought. Hoig said that some amplification is needed be-ca'-vs tioa.ia iias to travel a city block from the stage to the seating at the far end of the auditorium. Peter, Paul and Mary, when they ap pealed in Pershing on October 11, 1963, were very impressed with the sound sys tem. They said that it was easy to work in Pershing. Before their show, their manager walked around Pershing with a walkie-talkie checking the acoustics and he found they were better than satis factory. I oln's two main facilities for talent presentation arc Pershing Municipal Auditorium and the Ballroom in the Uni versity of Nebraska Student Union. Pershing and the Union book separate ly. If a large crowd is expected, t h e Union tries to use Pershing's facilities provided the auditorium is open at the lime needed. The Union then tentatively reserves Pershing, contacts the agency handling the talent, agrees on the price and asks for the contract. When it's time to decide what talent to import, priority is usually given to top recording artists because they are the sellout groups. Ilabcr said that students and the public should be aware of, and exposed to, other aspects of culture, such as ballets, sym phonies and plays. Haber said, "If you get only what you want, you won't grow mature to appreciate the finer things in life in the future years." He added that most of the performances are sell outs, however, "it depends on what type of audience you're performing before and what type of material is being pre sented." Haber said that it's best to encompass all forms of exposure for the artists con nected in all fields. And artists shouldn't limit themselves to one group-type of audience. Haber said, "You have to give the public fun things and serious things. When you're out of college, you start looking at things differently. You decide what's important and you want a diversi ty of talent. You'll appreciate ballets and plays more, and your interest will alle viate from rock and roll to the more serious." John Carlisle, Union program manag er, agreed with Haber. Carlisle said that the best bet is with top groups. Ike Hoig of Pershing said that Lin coln liked "hot" talent or "image" talent which should be booked at the right psychological moment. Hoig added that when bringing in talent, "we can't afford to gamble." He said, "We have to slick to bread and butter things because we try to opera'e on a profit basis." According to Hoig, Peter, Paul and Mary hit Lincoln at the right psychologi cal t:mc. It was the first week of school, they were "hot," therefore the front six sections of Pershing sold out the first day. This was the first time, in connec tion with a University sponsored produc tion, that Pershing was completely sold out. A student responsible for bringing the trio to Lincoln said, in contrast to Hoig, "We're not in this business to make money. We're here to bring talent to the students." The Union sold all tickets when the Smothers Brothers appeared at the Uni versity of Nebraska last year. However, their two performances were held In the Union Ballroom and the ticket sales were limited because of scuting capacity. Record sales usually go up before and after a performance in any town, liaber said. This is due to the fact that local dealers display the records and push the i'tists. Radio stations play the records and help promote and stimulate interest. Sometimes artists go to local record deal ers and sign autographs. Hoig said that records move better aft er a performance because the act usual ly stimulates the audience, Even having a star in town stimulales sales. Carlisle said record sales were better alter a performance, A Lincoln record store and all record Showcase departments display records and sell tickets for shows. All agreed that the ar tist popular at the time sold the most records. Peter, Paul and Mary sold a lot of albums, but they are always consid ered a good seller. The Smothers Broth ers sales increased. Another record department said t h e Continued On Page 2 Wake "Atomic energy as a source of power has been oversold", said the director of the Los Alamos re search center. "We need to recognize that power from atomic energy may not be cheaper, but we may be in a position of great need tor a source of power," said Dr. Morris E. Bradbury at the final World Affairs Preview held Thursday in the Nebraska Union. He said that atomic energy's big use will be power as one can be sure in the course of time other power resources such as coal and oil will be used up. Bradbury called for a rational ap proach to' the study of atomic energy so that laymen tan understand its tech nical, economic and political implica tions. If one does not have an understanding, radiation can be a problem. "We ap proach the study of radiation and fall out, for example, with a high degree of emotion or hysteria which becomes a block to further study." "We need courses in our educational system which emphasize the role of science in the course of history. Atomic energy definitely has changed the course of history just as automation and other developments in the past. We need to understand the economic, political and technical implications of these develop ments to make decisions in the future." Bradbury feels that the United States may be lagging behind in education of the layman and that there should be more survey courses which teach the individual how to deal with the scientist. The cost and need for atomic power has been over sold due to over enthusi asm. "The individual needs to decide from an economic sense how much sup port this type of research development should receive. Since WWII, funds for developing atomic weapons have re mained fairly constant until recent years when there has been some tapering off." Bradbury feels that the political ques tion regarding, atomic energy is prob ably the most important and difficult question facing people today. This ques tion does not require extensive techni cal understanding since the destruction effects of the bomb are recognized. Bradbury is on leave from the Uni versity of California to direct the Los Alamos Laboratory in New Mexico, a research center operated by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission. He has been director for over twenty years. The Los Alamos laboratory was es tablished by the United States govern ment in 1942. Research and assembling of the first atomic bombs were done there. I i " Wauirh iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiii 1 Degrees To I 1 450 Friday I In Pershing I The University will confer honorary degrees on two native sons at its summer commencement this Friday, Samuel C. Waugh, former president of the Export Import Bank, and Arthur C. Bryan, presi dent of Union Car fa i d e's Consumer Products Division. More than 450 regular undergrad uate and graduate degrees also will be conferred at the ceremonies in Per shing Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. Waugh, born at Plattsmouth, began his banking career in Lincoln with the old First Trust Company in 1913 and served the firm as president from 1946 until 1953 when he entered federal serv ice with the Eisenhower administration in the state department. After a series of diplomatic assign ments, some with the rank of ambassa dor in the field of international banking, he was named president of the Export Import Bank of Washington and New York, a position he held for more than five years. In an honorary doctor of laws cita tion the University commends Waugh for specialized public service which has helped "to extend new opportunities to millions of people of varying nationalities and contributed to the maintenance of world peace through the encouragement of economic growth and stability." Waugh, now a consultant on interna tional affairs for a New York bank, re sides in Washington. He returned to thtj Nebraska campus last spring to par ticipate in the Masters Program, a series of informal advisory sessions for students. Bryan, a native of Minden and a graduate of the University in elec trical engineering in 1926, also took part in the Univer sity's 1964 Masters Program and has participated in oth er leadership pro grams for students in the area of busi- ii c b 5 auiinin.iu ct- ,t ti lirvan He joined Union Carbide in 1935 after experience as an engineer with General Electric. Bryan held a number of in creasingly responsible positions in Union Carbide's consumer sales and distribu tion system before being named presi dent of the Consumer Products Division in 1959. m ft I 1 f ' Of The a j(iSi(swtM ,i iiniiiiiimiii , y , rfy . ft i ;r, , I 7 ' . ': I II Hi mi. nj. in MP .1 r i Porpoise ' r ' o Ha h, '!: li - pi S K HUtMntMIIIHmUIM W0 0mMIm , : ' i-llWHIII The second and final performance of "The Wake of the Porpoise" will be held tonight at 8 p.m. in Howell Memorial Theatre. Th'i comedy, written by Dr. Joseph Baldwin, tells of life in a bomh shelter after a devasting blast. According to Baldwin, "Charles Winston Sumner III, a wealthy playboy in the play, decides that frivolous people like himself offer the best hope for starting civilization anew after surviving 'The Blast; since they are not serious-minded and dogmatic and ready to fight to death for ideals." The above scene shows from .left Stanley R. Rice as E. Carleton Shropshire, a promising author known for one good novel and several years of mooching on the bounty of wealthy ladies; Pat Patter son as Myra Ealing, stage star with fading glamor and self-styled "society tramp;" and Richard Cross as Charles Winston Sumaw