The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 13, 1953, Image 1

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Vol. 53, No. -13
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
Tuesday, October 13, 1953
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New Naval ROTC Officers
NROTC officers for the fall term company "A" commander;
are pictured above. From left to James Skinner, company "B"
right they are: William Bailey, commander; Eldon Park, bat-
hod Handlers 1 faming
Program To Begin Today
Sessions To Acquaint Personnel
With Sanitation
The first session of the Uni
versity Food Handlers Training
Program will begin Tuesday at
7:15 p.m. in the Social Audi
torium. The purpose of the program is
to acquaint all personnel handl
ing food with the fundamentals
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Awarded
YW Trophy
Gamma Phi's,
Howard Place
Alpha Xi Delta was awarded
the brown jug trophy for first
place winners in the decorations
contest at the Sadie Hawkin's
Party Hop Saturday.
Second place went to Gamma
Phi Beta and third to Howard
Hall.
The trophy will be retained by
Alpha Xi Delta until next year
when it will go to the new win
ner. THE THEME of the first place
winner was old clothes, includ
ing a large pair of red flannels
over the door.
Gamma Phi Beta' decorations
featured spider webs and a long
black tunnel leading into the
house. Decorations at Howard
Hall depicted all dogpatch char
acters.
Judges were Mrs. Jessie
ICnowles, president of the YWCA
Advisory Board; Jack Coyle,
Lincoln Community Chest, and
Jan Osborn, YWCA director.
Helene Sherman and Peggy
Larson were co-chairmen of the
party.
The Outside World
Yugoslavia Calls Conference
To Decide Trieste's Future
By WILLIE DESCH
Staff Writer
In an attempt to discuss the fu
ture of Trieste and the decision
made by the United States and
Britain last week, Yugoslavia has
demanded a conference with the
twoxnajor parties who decided
the future of the land.
Also a protest was sent to the
United Nations secretary-general
by Yugoslavia on the decision to
withdraw British and American
occupation troops from Zone A
of the Trieste territory.
Greek Naval, Air Bases
Permission has been granted
to the United States to use an un
disclosed number of Greek air
and naval bases to help with
forth Atlantic Pact defenses.
The formal agreement was
signed in Athens by American
Ambassador Cannon and Greek
officials. The location and num
ber of bases was not known in
the agreement. However the right
to use them will last until 1969,
the length of the 14-nations At
lantic Pact.
Prisoner Interviews
Interviews for North Korean
and Chinese war prisoners who
refused to return home are ready
to begin, stated the Communists.
They hope to begin the inter
views Wednesday.
Dairymen Protest
Because of "mala dministra
tion" of the. federal milk pro
gram, city consumers are forced
to pay too much for milk, a group
of Midwest dairymen told Con
gress. The spokesman for the group
was J. M. Punderson, general
manager of a Rochester, Minn,
co-operative. He said that high
prices of milk fixed by the gov
ernment in f e d e r a 1-regulated
markets hurts the dairy men as
well as the city consumer. Many
markets have been lost for the
surplus production of butter and
cheese and this affects the pro
duction and markets of milk.
H-Bamb Program
The United States should as-
s!n wartime urgency to its hy
d -ogen bomb program, said Rep.
W. Sterling Cole. Russia may
have "hundreds or even thou-
Fundamentals
of good food sanitation and to
insure that persons handling food
are free from communicable
diseases.
At the first session person
nel will register and make ar
rangements for physical examin
ations. Tom Gable, Public Health
Engineer, will Explain the pur
pose and background of the pro
gram. ALSO ON the 'first week's
agenda is a discussion of basic
bacteriology and personal hy
giene, two movies summarizing
the talks and an Agar Plate
demonstration which shows how
microbes can be found in the
vicinity of food preparation.
The physical examination will
be handled by personnel of
Student Health Center and will
incluie a chest X-ray and a
Wassermann test,
The second session will be held
Oct. 20, 21 and 22 from 7:15
to 8:15 p.m. in the Social Science
Auditorium. The program will
include an, explanation and dis
cussion of infections and poison
ing, an Agar Plate demonstra
tion, a dishwashing demonstra
tion and a black light demon
stration with invisible fluores
cent powder and ultraviolet
light.
THE PROGRAM of the Uni
versity Health Services requires
handlers to attend only one
meeting in each session. Special
sessions will be held for hashers
in Love Hall, Union, Women's
Residence Hall, Ag Cafteria and
Ag Union.
Cooks, second cooks, bus-boys,
dishwashers, housemothers and
all others who handle or pre
pare food in any organized
house or for the University are
considered food-handlers.
Each person, Gable said, should
develop the attitude that ,"no
matter how small his job he's an
important cog in the vast pro
gram of preparing food."
sands" of H-bombs very shortly
said the senator. -
The Soviets will have it within
their capacity to destroy us with
in a short period of time.
CSadette Helm,
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CLAUDETTE HELM
Dance Lessons .Offered
By Unjon On Tuesdays
More than three hundred stu
dents attended the dance lessons
sponsored by the Union Dance
Committee last week.
Lessons are given by Miss Don
na McCandless, professional in
structor, in the Union ballroom,
on Tuesdays, Oct. 13, 20, and
Nov. 3, lO.and 17 from 7:30 to 9
p.m. V
Miss McCandless is teaching
beginning basic steps. Later les
sons will include beginning
.Charleston, tango, jitterbug, rum
ba, and shagj
it'
talion commander; Bill Harris,
battalion executive officer, and
James Tangdall, company C
commander.
it happened at nu
The instructor was enumerat
ing the levels of the social scale
of the Han dynasty of ancient
China.
After stating that the scholar
ranked at the top, he placed
the farmer next.
Hoping to elicit class partici
pation, he asked, "What group
would come next? What is an
other class of producers?"
An eager hand showed up.
"Women," the student said.
(The answer was artisans.)
Coed Mart
To Offer
Activities
Booths Represent
14 Organizqtions
Approximately 14 organiza
tions will be represented, by
booths at the annual activities
Organizations particip a t i n g
will be:
Cornhusker, WAA, Tassels,
AUF, Red Cross, Home Ec Club,
NUCWA, Coed Counselors, New
man Club, Builders, BABW,
YWCA, Student Union and The
Nebraskan.
-ATTENDANCE AT the annual
Activities Mart will be restricted
this year to freshman women
only, Diana Hinman, Associated
Women Students Board Member,
announced. "
Members of the AWS Council
of Representatives will act as
guides and help the freshmen
sign' for activities, so outside
assistance would only add to the
confusion, she said.
"Join the Campus Carnival of
Activities" is the theme of the
Mart, to be held Wednesday
from 3 to 6 p.m. in the Union
ballroom. Each organization will
have a booth where freshmen
women may register to work in
the activities in which they are
interested.
New French Art Film
To Be Shown Tuesday
The new French art film, "Im
ages Medievales," will be shown
for the last time Tuesday at 8:30
p.m. in Gallery B, Morrill Hall.
The film is in color with Eng
lish narration and special musi
cal score by Guy Bernard Dela
pierre. Illuminated manuscript
paintings in the Bibliotheque Na
tionale, Paris, will be shown in
the film.
floor
Television Program Presents Coeds;
Annual Dance Reveals Farm Royalty
Claudetta Helm and Virginia Barnes, a member of Alpha Chi
Barnes joined the University's Omega, entered through an arch-
'Hall of Queens' over the week
end. ;
Miss Helm, a member of Delta
Delta Delta, was presented as"
the Calendar Girl of 1953 onthe
Calendar Coeds television pro
gram Sunday evening. Miss
Two Nebraskan
Positions Open
The Nebraskan has two staff
openings due to the resignation
of Cynthia Henderson, copy ed
itor, and Dave Erickson, assistant
business manager.
The Committee on" Student
Publications will act on these
resignations in a meeting Fri
day and decide if they will ac
cept applications for these posi
tons. German Club Announces
New Executive Board
Three new officers were
elected at a meeting of the Ger
man Club Thursday.
They are: Everett V. Cunning
ham, president; Charles R. B.
Wright, vice - president and
B r i g 1 1 a Matisons, secretary
treasurer. .
The aranization will hold its
next meeting Nov. 12.
M Tassels
To Present
HC finalists
Voting After
Rally Scheduled
Elections for Homecoming
Queen will be held Friday follow
ing the pep rally from 7:30 to
9:30 p.m. in the Union lobby.
The five candidates for Home
coming Queen, who were chosen
by Tassels from among their
members, will be presented at
the rally. Requirements for can
didacy are that the coed be a
junior meeting the eligibility re
quirements of Tassels.
Formerly the queen was pre
sented at the Homecoming Dance.
This year the ceremony will be
held at half-time of the Home
coming game.
. TASSELS PROPOSED this
change because it will reduce the
confusion resulting from the pre
sentation of last year's Home
coming Queen at the game and
the new queen at the dance.
Five booths will be set up in
the lobby this year rather than
two as were used last year. Thus
the Tassels committee antici
pates that voting for the candi
dates will take less time than
in the past.
Identification cards are the
only voting requirement.
First Faculty
Music Recital
Set Thursday
The University School of Fine
Arts will present the first pro
gram in a series of faculty music
recitals Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in
the 1 Union ballroom.
Soloists will be Jack Snider,
instructor of brass instruments
and theory, french horn; Kath
ryn Dean, instructor in music,
contralto vocalist, and Richard
Strasburg, instructor of piano,
pianist.
SNIDER WILL play "Concerto
for Horn and Piano, Allegro
Moderato," by Jacob, and "Ada
gio and Alegro," Opus 70, by
Schumann.
MISS DEAN will sing four
selections: "The Little Shep
herd's Song," by Watts; "When
I Bring To You Colour'd Toys,"
by Carpenter; Lullaby from
"The Consul," by .Minotti, and
Four Sketches from the Far East,
by Alberti.
Strasburg will play"LaTerasse
Des Audiences Du Clair De
Lune," by Debussy, and "L'isle
Joyeuse," by Debussy.
Marilyn Schultz will be ac
companist. The recital is spon
sored by the Union Music Com
mittee. way, of corn stalks to be crowned
queen of the annual Farmer's
Formal at the dance Friday
night.
ESCORTS OF the Calendar
Girl finalists were Dick Glass
ford, Tom Day, Kenneth Pinker
ton, Bill DeVries, Chuck Thom-
sen, and Bod lcne. wick Ames
was vocalist on the show and
presented Miss Helm with roses
and a trophy. Bill Way was or
ganist. The production staff included
Dave Andrews, master of cere
monies and producer, T w i 1 a
Walker, script, Paul Jensen, di
rector, Emroy Williamson, sets,
John . Churchill, execution, and
Dick Phipps, musical co-ordi-nator.
Finalists for Calendar Girl
were Paddy Wright, Daphne
Young, Lynn Holland, Mary
Taylor, Mary Gattis, Sue Muel
haupt, Kay Pasco, Jancy Car
man, Agnes Anderson, Gerdi
Hord, Nancy Mueller and Rheta
Britschge. Each represented a
month of the year.
THE FARMER'S Formal
queen was revealed by Dale
Reynolds, master of ceremonies.
Don Novotny, Ag . Exec Board
president, claimed the first
dance.
Attendants to the queen were
Barbara Crowe, Naomi George,
Connie Clark Karges, Lois Keiu
hafer and Barbara Spilker.
liFciifii0 B
Girl, Ag F
Trip Status
There has been a great deal
of controversy and some mis
understanding in the past
about official and unofficial
migrations. This year's mi
gration to Missouri was de- .
cided upon last year by a
committee composed of Potsy .
Clark of the athletic depart
ment, Band Director Don
Lentz, Dean of Student Af
fairs J. P. Colbert, Dean of
Women Marjorie Johnson, ed
itor of The Daily Nebraskan,
and representatives from Corn
Cobs, Tassels, Innocents, and
the Student Council. It is
wholeheartedly supported by
the Student Council.
It is not called an official
migration only because the
University's lawyer advises us
that we can do so only if it is
NU Begins Educational
TV Series Monday
'Trouble Spot
Show, To Explain
University Television will start
thp first rf a npw erlnratinnal sfi-
ries Monday over KFOR-TV at
7:30 p.m.
The 13-week series of half
hour shows, entitled "Trouble
Spot," will fept are three mem
bers of the faculty: Dr. Leslie
Hewes, professor and chairman
of the geography department;
Dr. Carl Schneider, assistant
professor of political science,
and Dr. Wallace Peterson, in
structor in economics.
IN EACH PROGRAM a cap
sule background of the geo
graphic, political and economic
conditions of a world trouble
spot will be followed by a dis
cussion of the area in relation
to its possible effects on the
United States and the viewer,
Dr. Brill To Speak
On Mental Health
Dr. I. W. Brill, psychiatrist at
the University, will speak at the
first fall meeting of the Lincoln
Mental Health Society, Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m.
Brill will speak on "Mental Hy
giene Services of the Student
Health Service, University of Ne
braska." The local mental health
society was formed to educate
the people about both mental ill
ness and mental health.
The public may attend the
meeting which will be held in
'the' board room of the National
Bank of Commerce.
Swimmers To Affencf
Aquaquettes Practice
The first of two practice ses
sions for Aquaquettes try-outs
will be Thursday at 7 p.m. in
the Colesium pool. The second
will be held Tuesday, Oct. 22, at
7 p.m..
Any girl who wishes to try out
for Aquaquettes will be required
to attend one of the two prac
tices, Jody Holden, president,
said.
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Farmers Fair Queen
Miss Ginny Barnes, escorted
by Don Johnson, is presented
as the 1953 Farmer's Fair
Queen at the annual Farmer's
Formal. Miss Barnes, a senior
Clarified
actually sponsored by the Stu
dent Council. Such sponsor
ship would mean that all stu
dents who went would be
compelled to ride on a com
mon carrier, such as a train
or bus. Since this is not prac
tical, and since the Student
Council cannot be legally re
sponsible for everyone who
makes the trip by their own
means of transportation, the
migration cannot be termed
an official cne.
The Student Council urges
students who would like to
see an away-from-home game
to go on the migration. It is
our hope that a great many
Nebraskans will be cheering
for the team at Missouri.
Jack Rogers, Chairman
Student Council
Migration Committee
13 - Week Half-Hour
World Conditions
Lincoln and WOW-TV
KM TV in Omaha.
and
Thursdays at one a.m. the Uni
versity College of Medicine pro
gram, "To Your Health," may be
seen on WOW-TV. WOW-TV
also is showing a seven - minute
short, "Farm Question Box," on
the Mai Hansen "Farm Re
porter" show Wednesdays at
12:30 p.m.
THE PROGRAMMING is be
ing produced and directed by
Jack McBride, assistant director
of educational television, and
Leo Geier, production assistant.
The director of public relations,
George Round, is in charge of
the programs.
The University's television
unit, in co-operation with the
University Photographic produc
tion and athletic , departments, is
also supplying films of the
Husker football . game to the
TV stations.
Ag Cattle Judging Team
Place 27th In Cotnest
The Ag College dairy cattle
judging team placed 27th in the
National Intercollegiate Dairy
Cattle Judging Contest held in
conjunction with the Dairy
Cattle Congress at Waterloo, la.
Members of the team include
Donald Beck, Darren Nelson and
Donald Novotny. Edward Ibsen
is an alternate.
The team placed ninth in
Jerseys. High man on the team
was Don Beck, who also placed
highest on the team in Holsteins
and Brown Swiss. Darren Nel
son was high man on the team
in Jerseys and Ayrshires and
Don Novotny was high in
Guernseys.
Judging Set Oct. 14, 15
For KK Fall Revue Finalists
Judging will be held Oct. 14 Judges will be Kosmet Klub
and 15 to determine the six members, Bob Young, president;
finalists for the Kosmet Klub Mac Bailey, vice-president; Tom
fall show.
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Courteiy Lincoln Journal
in Ag College, was selected by
a popular vote at the door of
the dance. She is majoring in
home economics, and is a
member of Alpha Chi Omega.
200 Tickets
Now On Sale
To Students
The Missouri-Nebraska foot
ball game Oct. 24 at Columbia,
Mo. will be University migra
tion. The Burlington railroad has
offered a special train if 200
tickets can be sold. The Univer
sity band will buy 110 tickets
and students may buy the re
maining tickets.
Train tickets are available st
the Burlington ticket office at
11th and D Sts. Tickets are
$17.35 plus 15 per cent tax
($19.95). This does not include
the game ticket. '
THE TRAIN will leave about
11 p.m. Friday and arrive in
Columbia about 10 a.m. Satur
day. It will leave Columbia at
7:30 p.m. and return to Lincoln
about 6 a.m. Sunday.
The Innocents will tradition
ally exchange the Victory Bell
with the MU senior men's hon
orary, QEBH. Missouri will keep
the bell as winners of last year's
game.
Miss Marjorie W. Johnson,
dean of women, has granted
women an overnight for the
weekend. This is an extra over
night and will not count in the
regular semester quota of over
nights. About 200 game tickets are
still available in the office of
A. J. Lewandowski, business
manager of athletics. .
Nine Acts
Announced
By Union
Program Chosen
For Talent Show
Acts for the Annual Union
Talent Show were chosen at au
ditorium held Oct. 7 and 8 in
the Union Ballroom with the
members of the Union Board as
judges.
Winners of the tryouts are
Bud Imig, accordion; Pat Syfert,
soprano; Bonnie Young, piano;
Leigh Cartwright, .dance; Shirley
McPeck, marimba; Kirk Wood
ward, reading; Al Holbert Com
bo, "Four of a Trend."
Barbara Freeman, vocalist;
Nick Amos and Marilyn Lehr,
duet, and a trio composed of Jan
Boettcher, Dot Osburn and Phyl
lis Maloney.
MASTER OF Ceremonies for
the Talent Show will be Hank
Cech. The shdw will be held Nov,
8 at 8:00 in the Union.
Prizes for the winners will be
$10, $7, and $3. The program is
sponsored by the general enter
tainment committee.
Miller, treasurer; Marshall
Kushner, secretary; Bill Devries,
Walt Wright Dallas Williams,
Max Whittaker, University The
ater representatives and Frank
M. Hallgren, associated dean of
men.
SKITS WILL be Judged on
originality, cleverness, continuity,
organization, quality and staging.
The time limit will be approxi
mately 10 minutes. Kosmet Klub
member, Bill Devries, said that
vulgarity -and slapstick antics
will be out this year. Emphasis
Application Deadline
Fraternities' and sororities
candidate applications for Prince
Kosme,t and Nebraska Sweetheart
Kushner by Tuesday afternoon.
Innocents will interview candi
dates for Nebraska Sweetheart.
Mortar Boards will interview can
didates for Prince Kosmet Mon
day, Oct. 19.
The 1952 Nebraska Sweetheart
and Prince Kosmet were Barb
Adams and Joe Good, respec
tively. will be on art improved Fall
Show, well staged and produced.
The 18 competing fraternities
and judging times are:
Wednesday Night
Sigma Chi 7:00.
Sigma Alpha Mu 7:20.
Delta Tau Delta 7:40.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 8:00.
Sigma Nu 8:20.
Sigma Phi Epsilon 8:40.
Phi Kappa Psi 9:00
Phi Delta Theta 9:20.
Theta XI 9:40.
Beta Theta Pi 10:00.
Alpha Tau Omega 10:20.
Thursday Night
Zeta Beta Tau 7:00. ! '
Beta Sigma Psi 7:20.
Phi Gamma Delta 7:40.
Tau Kappa Epsilon 8:05.
Pi Kappa Phi 8:25.
' Delta Upsilon 8:55.
Alpha Gamma Ilho 8.-5.
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