The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 15, 1952, Page Page 6, Image 6

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THE DAILY 'NEBRASKAN
Monday, September 15, 1952
Freshmen Mix Fun, Work During Week
Barbecue
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KIXAXING . . . Chuck Larkln (left) and Libby Russell (right)
it on the grass at the barbeque held at Ag College Tuesday night.
Chuck's eyes plainly say, "Yum-yum," describing the food. A
Tassel skit and a speech by George (Potsy) Clark highlighted
the evening. (Daily Nebraskan Photo by Chuck Beam.)
Beanies '56
Greer
Names
Board
Jack Greer Union Board presi
dent, released the names of the
new Board members elected at the
last spring meeting.
Assisting Greer, a senior In
Teachers, as vice presidents, will
be Professor Thomas Goodding
and Milton Anderson. Secretary
will be Fritz Daly, secretary of
Nebraska Alumni Association.
The Board elects their own of
ficers and the presidency is al
ternated each year between stu
dents, faculty and alums.
The senior Board members, stu
dents who will be serving their
second year as Boardmen, are
Bob La Shelle, Bill Waldo. Thom
Synder, Nancy Weir, Margie Mc
Coy, Jack Greer and Don Leising
Junior Boardmen are Mary Ellen
Maronde, Don Lees, Joy Wachal,
JS,rnie Uebb and Sue Holmes.
Faculty representatives are Dr.
Royce Knapp, Dr. Gooding, Prof.
David Foltz, Mr. Jim Porter, Miss
Jane Stewart and Mr. Oscar And
erson. Alum members are Milton
Fall Construction Planned
NEW PSYCHIATRIC UNIT
Its campus. The unit will
Courtesy Lincoln Star
. . . The College of Medicine In Omaha Is adding a psychiatric unit to
contain special facilities for helping the very young and the very old.
SUMMER MILITARY ACTIVITIES
ROTC Training Camps, Navy Cruises
Attended By 385 NU Male Students
Military training camps and
cruises interrupted summer vaca
tions and jobs for 385 students in
ROTC programs.
Students ' in Army and Air
Force ROTC and Navy Contract
students receive military train
ing and indoctrination during the
summer preceding their senior
Anderson, Fritz Daly and Mrs.! sphftinr.!hin an nn tmirnm,
cruises each summer.
IN VOGUE . . . Chuck and Libby take the next big step at Ben
Simon's as they purchase their freshman beanies from Ted Huer
mann (right), University senior. Libby models in the foreground
as Chuck (left) thoughtfully selects his beanie. Until the first
snow flies or the freshmen win the tug-o-war. (Daily Nebraskan
photo by Chuck Beam.)
Dorothy Holyoke.
The Union Board runs every
thing in the Union from the
service and employees to all
Union activities. Students who
receive a Board position have
obtained the highest station
there is in the Union for stu
dents. Board members are
chosen on their activity record.
Burket
Opens '53
Art Series
Brown Cards
Wf.. Bn'-iiiini ii " t
University Art Galleries will
open its 1952-53 season Monday
with an exhibition of 23 paintines
done in Paris by LeRoy Burket,
assistant professor of Art at the
University.
Mr. Burket has spent the past i initiative, according to CoL Work
two years studying in Paris on a'man-
Fulbrioht prant Durino thic timo
he participated in nine Parisian
One hundred sixty-two Army
cadets went to one of the fol
lowing branch camps: Infantry,
Fort Benning, Ga.; Military Po
lice, Camp Gordon, Ga.; Artil
lery, Fort Sill, Okla.; Ordnance,
Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md.;
Engineer, Fort Lewis, Wash.;
Finance, Fort Benjamin Harri
son, Ind.; Medical Service, Fort
Sam Houston, Tex.
Col. James H. Workman, pro
fessor of military science and
tactics, announced that the six
weeks of training included living
in the field in pup tents; firing
rifles, mortars and artillery weap
ons; demonstrations of new Army
weapons and vehicles; and prob
lems in traffic control, bridge
building and tactics which were
performed under simulated bat
tle conditions.
All cadets were rotated in com
and administrative assignments in
order to develop leadership and
Duncan B. McGregor; Finance,
Homer D. Hobbs.
Approximately one third of the
125 Air Force cadets went to each
of the following Air Force bases;
Rapid City, S. D.; Clovis Field,
N. M., and Sheppard Field; Tex.,
announced Lt. Col. Alex C. Jamie-
son, professor of air science and
tactics.
The four weeks training pe
riod was spent in orientation of
all phases of operating an air
field. Training included orienta
tion flights, leadership drills,
exercise of command and phys
ical training. Informal classes
and lectures were held on se
curity and general routing op
eration of bases.
Regular NROTC sophomores
and seniors spent eight weeks on
a training cruise in the Atlantic.
announced Capt. Thomas A. Dono
van, professor of naval science.
Regular juniors were sent to Cor
pus Christi, Tex., for three weeks
tions. The marines were stationed
40 miles from Washington, D. C,
and spent weekends on sight-seeing
of the capitol.
Contract students spent four
weeks in the Caribbean receiv
ing training and indoctrination
in general seamanship. The con
tract middies were granted lib
erty in the Canal Zone md
Cuba.
A total of 98 NROTC students
went on training cruises this
summer.
Med School
Receives
Unit
The University's building pro
gram has extended to the College
of Medicine in Omaha with the
construction of the Nebraska
Psychiatric Unit this fall.
The building is being espe
cially designed to provide the
most modern type of care and
will have special facilities for
treatment of emotionally dis
turbed children and for study
and treatment of the mintal
problems of the aged, according
to University officials."
The Unit will provide special
ized treatme.it for suitable cases
from all parts of the state, and
its program will be closely inte
grated with the Jniversity College
of Medicine and the state hos
pitals. A comprehensive teaching pro
gram which will give psychiatric
training to students in medicine,
nursing, psychology, social work,
occupational the.apy and post
graduate training to physicians
will be started.
The $1,500,000 Unit is being
built jointly by the University
and the Board of Control each
contributing $500,000 from the
special state institution build
ing levy enacted by the 19 j7
Legislature.
An additional $500,000 is beii:g
made available by the United
States Public Health Service,
from Hill-Burton Act funds.
Bids may be called in Octoberjl
and work is expe ted to start sonn'
after.
Builders Begin Calendar
Booklets Sale Monday
Calendar booklets for the com
ing school year go on sale Monday
for 50 cents each.
The pocket-sized booklets were
published by a Builders commit
aviation orientation and to Little tee headed by Beth Rohwer.
exhibitions.
He received first prize in the
American Section of the Salon de
L'Armee in 1951 and the prix
menton in the Salon Prix de la
June Peintre in 1952.
The show will be open to the
public through Oct. 15.
The following cadets made the
highest scores in rifle marks
manship in their respective
branches: Infantry, Don, L.
Bean; Military Police, Blake W.
Cathroe and Phillip C. Butler;
Ordnance, Max J. Baehr and
Jack L. Mankamyer; Engineer,
NEARING END ... In preparation for the long year ahead Chuck
and Libby pull their class cards from a bin in the Military and
Naval Science Building. A sigh of relief accompanies this near-last
action oi' a week-long round of registration problems and activities.
We'll be seeing them Monday. (Daily Nebraskan photo by Chuck
Beam.)
Fenske To Attend
Travancore, India,
Youth Conference
Cribbing
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IN ALLY ... at last: At last! Registration over and a slack in
activity before the first classes brings Chuck and Libby to the Crib
where all good students sooner or later wind up. It is the privilege
of those whose problems are temporarily over to relax over a
coke in the Union Crib. (Daily Nebraskan photo by Chuck Beam )
Paul Fenske, University grad
uate has been selected as one of
30 U.S. delegates to the third
World Conference of Christian
Youth at Kottayam, Travancore,
India, in December.
He will be the national rep
resentative of the Congrega
tional, Evangelical and Reform
ed Churches.
Fenske is the second University
graduate to be selected for the
conference. Miriam Willey, also a
1952 graduate, is one of four
YWCA delegates to the meeting.
wnne at the University, Fen
ske was president of the Ag In
terdenominational Youth Fellow
ship and a member , of the
YMCA and Farm House fraternity.
About 300 students from 50 na-( Society, will
tions will attend the conferences. Ceremonies.
Dad's Day
Scheduled
For Sept. 20
Creek, Va., for three weeks train
ing in amphibious operations
contract seniors went on a four
weeks cruise in the Caribbean and
marine students received indoc
trination training at Quantico, Va.
The Atlantic cruise was com
posed of 19 ships including the
battleships Missouri and Wis
consin. Training was given the
midshipmen in gunfiring, en
gineering navigation and opera
tions. The middies went ashore
at ports in England, France and
Cuba.
On the aviation-amphibious
cruise, NROTC juniors received
air indoctrination flights in Navy
Patrol Bombers and studied the
operation of Navy air fields.
Training in amphibious operations'
They contain daily entries
with a lit of University events
with space for writing memos.
There are six ruled pages for
addresses and calendars for the
years from 1952 to 1955.
The books have durable covers
and are spiral bound to open and
lie flat.
Representatives o f organized
houses are conducting the sales
campaign which ends at 6 p.m.
next Monday.
Each house may select a Cal
endar Girl Candidate for every
30 calendars sold by its repre
sentatives. The houses will be
notified of their number of can
didates next Monday night.
The 12 Calendar Girls will be
hairdresser and a buyer from Lin
coln stores.
Houses which were not repre
sented at a sales meeting held
Sunday should contact Miss
Rohwer today so that their rep
resentatives can begin their
sales campaign.
was given followine the aviation chosen Sent. 23 and will he nro-
phase and a mock amphibious sented at a dance at the Student
landing was staged at the end of Union Sept. 26.
the cruise. " I Candidates will be judged by
Marine students received train-, the Builders president, a house
ing in infantry weapons and tac- chaperon from the Residence Halls
ucs and attended field demonstra-'for Women, and a beautician, a
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Dad's day will be held Sept
20, the day of the Husker, South
Dakota football same,
The fathers of all students will
be honored at a luncheon in the
morning and also at the after
noon contest. The football play
er's dads will sit on the sidelines
at the game, and will wear plac
aras wnn ineir son s numeral on
it.
Col. C. J. Frankforter, Associ
ate Professor of Chemistry, will
give a pep talk at the luncheon
at 11:30. Coach Ed Weir will in
troduce the players dads and Don
Noble. President of the Innocents
serve as Master of
" YEAR Op sERVicjrg
Special Discounts-3 OFF
Slide Rules Zipper Notebooks
Dictionaries
Pen and Pencil Sets (Standard Brands)
While They Last
FELTON & WOLF CO.
Exclusive Smith Corona Office Typewriter Distributor
1228 P Phone 2-8577
NU Theatre
Opens Season
On Campus
The University Theatre will
move back home this 9nn
For the last several seasons
the "Theatre has been producing
its plays at a downtown movie
theater, but acting director Max
wnmaxer announced that this
year the plays will be held in
the Arena Theater in Temple
uuuaing.
Since the Arena will only seat
124 persons, or about nine hund
red for all eight performances
of each play, Whittaker urged
early application for reservations
and season tickets.
Tickets are on sale now and
may be purchased for $3 from
any Kosmet Klub member or at
the Temple box office from 12 30
to 5 p.m. daily.
The season will open Oct. 29
with "Outward Bound," a fan
tasy drama by Sutton Vane. I
New Codds
New coeds who have not been
assigned to upperclass women as
big sisters should contact Nanci
DeBord.
Miss DeBord may be reached at
1541 S street, phone 2-7933.
Atchison Promoted
Colonel Workman also an
nounced the promotion of MaJ.
Edward R. Atchison to the rank
of lieutenant colonel. Atchison
came to the University in Sep
tember, 1950, as an associate
professor of ordnance. He had
previously served In Hawaii as
commandant of the Pacific
branch of the ordnance school.
BUY YOUR B
OOKS AT Til
ONLY
O
fficial University
Bookst
ore
jai jg
Just North of Love Library
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Said the Ph D
To the Kindergarten Tot
'Let's go see
What Latsch's
You'll agree
got
Exclusive in Lincoln
at COLD'Sl
Maiehiiiatcs
They saw an awful lot
Pencils!
Stencils!
Writing utensil?!
Bind
ersl
Reminders!
Pencil grinders!
Brief
Chief
cases
cases
In lovely
autumn
tones!
Classic Pullover...
100 wool, short sleeve
pullover, a "must" for
every college girl's wardrobe.
Sizes 34 to 40.
Matching: Cardigan...
Danby's matching, long sleeve
cardigan, to team-up with the
pullover and matching skirt.
Sizes 34 to 40.
il
Wool Flannel Skirt...
All-wool flannel skirt, three
fan pleats front and back. Skirt
bursts Into pleats below the knee.
Sizes 10 to 18. 795
Empire Blue Winter Rose
Banker's Gray Aintree Green
Banker's Brown
GOLD'S Sportawear . . Seond Hour
mr
Bark View!
Lots of loose leaf cases!
Letter paper
Better paper
Pencil and Ink pad paperl
Ball Pens!
Tall pens!
Teensy-Weensy Small pens!
Try the Store
That offers more . , ,
For school supplies galore
Latsch Brothers
Stationers
1124 O St. Lincoln
Mail orders promptly filled
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