The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 20, 1953, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    If ? a
ymBOa
Gridiron Ceremony Planned
The widely-used, though unoffi
cial "Cornhusker" symbol, pic
tured in today's Nebraskan, is to
be replaced.
A contest to select an official
symbol or decale will be jointly
sponsored by the Student Council
and the Alumni Association. Two
committees were appointed to
work with the Alumni commit
tees. They are publicity: Jack
Rogers, Joyce Bennington and
Marv Stromer; specifications and
judging: Jan Steffen, Murt Pick
ett, Carl Mammel, and Marv
Friedman.
Director of Athletics. George
(Potsy) Clark, requested a stu
dent recognition ceremony, to be
held during half-time at the Min-
CdRNHUSKERS
Unofficial Symbol
This drawing of a tough-looking
cornhusker has been un
officially used as the symbol
of the University for some
time. Many students have seen
it, on their desk -blotters or
have used it as a decale. The
Student Council is to spon
sor a contest whereby a new,
official symbol will be se-
lected.
Five Named
To Council
Committee
Foreign Students
To Plan Projects
Four international students and
an exchange professor have been
selected to serve on the Student
Council student activities com
mittee. Students are Lichu Chen, For
mosa; Hans Steffen, Hanover,
Germany; Rosemarie Hill,
Frankfurt Germany, and Andrew
Sainten, Panama.
H. N. V. Temperley, visiting
professor of physics from Cam
bridge University in England,
was chosen to serve as advisor
on the committee.
ACCORDING TO Rocky Yapp,
Council president, the commit
tee's job is to co-ordinate projects
planned for international students
and to encourage campus organi
zations and individuals to expand
their relations with students from
abroad.
He said that the committee felt
it was important to obtain the
viewpoints of international stu
dents, so applications for mem
bership were accepted from in
terested students.
JANET" STEFFEN, chairman
of the Activities Committee, said
the committee now has world
wide representation, because -it
will have ideas representing the
Far East, The United Kingdom,
Central Europe and Central
America.
Miss Chen, a mathematics and
physics major, is the Interna
tional House representative to
BABW. Before coming to the
University, she attended a church
college in Ohio.
STEFFEN, A Fulbright scholar
taking graduate work in Teachers
College, said international stu
dents do not feel free to attend
open meetings, such as the Stu
dent Council sessions.
An elementary education major
and Fulbright scholar. Miss Hill
thinks American activities are
wonderful. "In Germany," she
said, "we have almost no extra
curricular activities."
Sainten, who is attending the
University for his fourth year,
stressed that international stu
dents did not come to this coun
try to meet other international
students. A nucleus of American
students is needed to make activ
ities with international students
a success, he said.
NU'er To Attend
CAI Convention
Dick Westcott, junior in Busi
ness Administration, has been
selected to represent the Univer
sity at the annual convention of
the Congress of American Indus
tries. He will be a guest of the
National As so ' - - ;
ciation of
Manuf ac t u r
ers. Westcott was
chosen by the
Business A d
ministrati o n
faculty as an
outstandi n g
junior student.
He was se
lected from
nominees
Coortw Lincoln Stmr
Dick Westcott
from each col-
lege on the campus. ,
Westcott, an accounting major,
is the first to be chosen from the
University to attend the covan
tion,, which will be held in New
York City Dec. 2 to 5.
Coffee Hour
A Coffee Hour will be held
from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the
Main Lounge of the Union after
the Oklahoma game Saturday.
Chairman Marilyn Beideck
said that everyone is invited to
attend, and the Hospitality Com
mittee extends a special invita
tion to the parents of University
students to attend the coffee
after the game.
monies
nesota game, Dec. 5. Those stu
dents who had aided most in fos
tering pep and school spirit dur
ing the football season would be
honored.
The council voted unanimously
to sponsor the event and ap
pointed a committee to plan it.
Members are: Mimi Hamer, Art
Raun, Gail Katskoe, Pat Graham,
and Linn Brady.
A RESOLUTION to commend
the football team and coaching
staff for a good reason was ta
bled. Committee reports revealed
that the parking board had heard
one appeal and had granted a
special parking permit which will
be revoked if it is misused. ,
Concerning the compromise on
final exam vacations, the calen
dar committee pointed out that
this action applys to 1953-54 only.
Dean Colbert suggested that the
committee have student opinion
to back up their arguments when
the faculty senate decides the
plan for 1954-55 on Dec. 8.
To determine the student opin
ion on this subject a letter of ex
planation and a poll will be dis
tributed to he students through
the Student Council.
AN INVESTIGATION will be
held to determine the possibility
of having a "floating holiday" to
be declared by the Council in
case of an emergency. It was sug
gested that such action might
prevent a situation like the one
occurring at Iowa recently when
student agitation for a victory
vacation" was denied.
Ken Ry strom, editor of T h e
Nebraskan, a visitor at the meet
ing, reminded Council members
that a written report of the meet
ing should be given The Nebras
kan. He called members atten
tion to a by-law in the Council
which required the written report
to the paper and noted the Coun'
en naa iauea to submit tne re
port thus far this year.
Members were also reminded
to wear their Student Council
shirts on meeting days. The next
regular meeting was cancelled
because of Thanksgiving vaca
tion.
Adams, Poteet
State Support
Of Mitchell
A former state senator and
recent student of C. Clyde Mitch
ell, professor of agricultural eco
nomics, have issued statements
supporting Mitchell in the con
troversy with the Hall County
Farm Bureau.
MARCUS l! POTEET, Waverly
farmer, secretary of the State
Railway Commission and recent
student in Mitchell's classes, said
Mitchell encourages free, discus
sion in his classes' and makes no
attempt to "indoctrinate" his stu
dents. Poteet called himself
"pretty much of a conservative."
Thomas H. Adams, Lincoln at
torney. Farm Bureau member
and former state senator, praised
Mitchell's ability in a letter to
Regents Robert W. Devoe and C
Y. Thompson and W. V. Lambert,
dean of the College of Agricul
ture. HE DESCRIBED Mitchell as a
"top-notch, up-to-date instructor
and leader in agricultural eco
nomics" and wrote: "If a man
of Mitchell's caliber can't give
his viewpoints to the farmers in
our state, then we are just ask
ing for a program to keep our
farm population ignorant." The
Hall County Farm Bureau, in his
opinion, does not "represent much
of the thinking of the members
in the state at large."
The Mitchell-Farm Bureau con
troversy stems from an article by
Mitchell recently published in
Capper's Farmer.
BABW To Hold Dance
Barb Activities Board for Wo
men will sponsor a dance from
8 to 11 p.m. in the Union Ball
room Friday.
Doris Mach BABW board
member, said; that all students
are invited to the informal af
fair. No admission will be charg
ed. 1
Human Relationship
mportant
Dean Says Authority Not Effective
Formal organization is neces
sary for a good school system but
it is the intangible program of
healthy human relationships that
spells the difference between
success and failure.
This was the keynote of an
address by F. E. Henzlik, dean
of Nebraska School Administra
tors conference Thursday after
noon at the Union. The meeting
continues Friday in joint session
with a group of Nebraska busi
ness representatives.
DEAN HENZLIK urged school
administrators to take note of
What he termed the "spontane-
Filings Still Open
For YW Positions
Filings are still open for YWCA
president, vice president, secre
tary, treasurer and district rep
resentative, Neala O'Dell, presi
dent, announced.
Requirements are that the coed
must be a sophomore or junior
member of YWCA with a 5.5
average. Application blanks may
fce obtained in the YW office in
Ellert Smith Hajl.
The nominating committee will
draw' a slate of two nominees for
each, office except vice-president
The (two candidates for president
will be named president and vice
president according to the num
ber f votes they receive in the
spring election.
Volume 54, No. 30
Olds Named Activity Queen
Cathy Dlds, sophomore in Arts
and Sciences, is congratulated
by Rocky Yapp, past-president
of the All University
French Bio-chemist
Explains EDC Program
Clauser Predicts French Showdown
A showdown on France's posi
tion in regard to the European
Defense Community the plan to
merge western Europe s military
organizations is forecast to come
in the next two or three months
Dr. Hubert Clauser, biochemist
from the University of Paris, and
a visiting lecturer at the Univer
sity, believes the question of rati
fication of the EDC will be put
to a vote in the Assembly the
first of next year.
"IF FRANCE agrees to pool
its defenses with the five other
western European countries, then
the Federation of Europe may be
possible in the next five years,"
he said.
He said the French government,
which signed the EDC treaty in
May, 1952, delayed putting the
ratification question to a vote be
cause it knew that the plan would
be rejected.
Dr. Clauser sees the September
election in Germany as a "great
blow to the French opponents of
the plan because the German
election overwhelmingly rejected
the German Nationalist Party."
"IN 1944, the peak year for the
Reds, 700,000 Frenchmen were
registered as Communists, while
today only 350,000 are so regis
tered," Clauser said.
Another indication of the loss
in Communist interest, he said,
is the sharp drop in circulation
of Communist papers in Paris.
The Communists' morning paper
now has 250.000 teaders, com
pared with 700,000 in 1944. The
Reds' evening paper discontinued
publication some six months ago,
he said. '
"IT IS true," Clauser added,
"that the Communist Party re
ceived 20 per cent of the vote in
the last French election. How
ever, most of these votes yere
cast in protest to economic' con
ditions. The French citizens were
voting with the Communists to
seek concessions and not because
of sympathy for the Reds' cause."
Dr. Clauser gave a series of
Builders Bureau
Requests Names
University students have been
requested by the Speakers' Bu
reau of Builders t6 leave the
names and addresses of Nebraska
or out-of-state high school sen
iors interested in attending col
lege in the Builders' office after
Thanksgiving vacation.
This system of obtaining a
mailing list is supplementary to
the form used in the past which
requested high schools to dis
tribute literature. By asking Uni
versity students to submit names,
Builders hope to obtain a more
complete list.
To Schools Henzlik
ous groups that develop among
men and women who freely as
sociate with one another in and
out of school."
Such groups, he said, will not
be found on any school organiza
tion chart but should be con
sidered as integral elements in
achieving the objectives of the
school.
MOST SUPERINTENDENTS,
Henzlik said, are subjected to the
Educators, Administrators
Confer In Joint Meeting
A joint conference, of the de
partment of "school administra
tion of Teachers College and the
Nebraska Association of School
Administrators ppened at the
University Thursday.
Registration began at 1 p.m.
in the Union. Frank Henzlik,
Dean of the Teachers College
spoke on "Some Informal Rela
tions in the School Organiza
tions" at the first general ses
sion at 1:30 p.m.
GUEST SPEAKER at the eve
ning banquet was Dr. Van Mil
ler, professor of education at
the Universitr of llinois. Th
dinner was held at p.m. in
Union Ballroom.
iO.,444
University professors
n
iwSuM fcn)Wi in mm hiiiiiiii i inminiiiiMi" Ki ;
Courtesy Lincoln Star
Fund, as the 1953 Activities
Queen. The presentation was
made at the annual AUF auc
tion in the Union.
economic and political conditions
of his country as seen by a French
citizen. .
Since October, 1952, he has been
a Rockefeller Fellow at the Uni
versity of California.
Symphony
Free Tickets
Necessary
For Concert
Students planning to attend the
University Symphony Orchestra's
fall concert Sunday at 8 p.m.
must secure tickets beforehand
in the Union Activities office.
Miss Shirley Chapman, activity
director,, said that the tickets are
free but necessary for admission
because of the limited space and
the demand for seats by the gen
eral public.
Featured artist at the concert,
in the Union Ballroom will be
Aaron Rosand, a guest violinist.
In 1948 Rosand was hailed by
the New York Times as a vio
linist with "a technique of near
perfection." Since then he has ap
peared coast-to-coast as guest so
loist with major symphony or
chestras. THE ARflST, who is 25,
has many interests other than
music baseball, ping-pong, jazz
and photography. Rosand, who is
especially fond of baseball, be
lieves that athletics have played
an important part in his career
as a concert artist by strength
ening his hands and fingers and
improving his balance and co
ordination. The Special Activities commit
tee is sponsoring the concert in
conjunction with the School of
Fine Arts. Emanuel Wishnow,
professor of violin, will conduct
the orchestra in its first public
appearance this year.
Outside World
Red Also FBI Agent
Says Teto At Hearing
Accused Man, Nat Mills, Refuses
To Answer Upholsterer's Charge
By WILLIE DESCH
Staff Writer
William H. Teto, 53-year-old up
holsterer, created a sensation
when he pointed out a Commu
nist party member during a tele
vised hearing conducted by Sen.
McCarthy.
Deemed
In Classroom
pull of being too authoritative
and strict on one hand, or of be
ing too lenient on the other in
dealing with teachers, pupils and
community groups.
As a rule of thumb to help
solve the continuing problem of
human relationships, Henzlik
tsked the administrators to re
member "that the best results
are gained, as in the classroom,
by educational means, not by the
use of authority."
school superintendents acted as
consultants at four discussion
groups held at 3 p.m. Thursday.
Discussion group reports were
given at the third session at 8:30
a.m. Friday in the State His
torical Society Auditorium.
THE NEBRASKA Education
Business Day conference, spon
sored by the Nebraska Associ
ation of Schdol Administrators,
opened at 9:30 a.m. Friday.
A discussion of educational
problems by Gov. Robert Crosby
and members of the governor's
planning committee for the lay
Jeadership conference on educa-
is nignugni oi uie corner-
e discussion was neid at
eon at 12:15 p.m.
V
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
Plhyl Colbert Eletitedl
F"s? n mm 0 A n n rra
res i
5 Officers
Selected
Wednesday
Phyllis Colbert was elected
president of the All-University
Fund at a meeting following the
AUF auction Wednesday night.
Jean Steffen was elected vice
president in charge of solicita
tions; Mary Jane Mapes, vice
president in charge of publicity;
Carl Mammel, treasurer, and
Cynthia Henderson, secretary.
PHYLLIS COLBERT is Home
coming Queen,' a member of Tas
sels, Alpha Lambda Delta and
Phi Upsilon Omicron and Kappa
Alpha Theta vice-president. She
was formerly in charge of AUF
denominational solicitations.
Jean Steffen is a junior in
Teachers College and a member
of Builders 1 and Gamma Phi
Beta.
Mary Jane Mapes is a manag
ing editor of the Cornhusker and
a member of Gamma Phi Beta.
CARL MAMMEL, re-elected to
serve a second term as treasurer,
is a member of Student Council
and Kosmet Klub, a Union com
mittee head and a Beta Theta Pi
member.
Cynthia Henderson, the only
sophomore elected, is a member
of Alpha Lambda Delta, Gamma
Alpha Chi, Coed Counselor Board,
Kappa Kappa Gamma and a for
mer Nebraskan copy editor.
THE NEW officers, all former
Board members, will be installed
as soon as the 1954 solicitations
and publicity boards have been
appointed.
Present AUF officers are:
Rocky Yapp, president; Joy
Wachal,-vice-president in charge
of solicitations; Harriet Wenke,
vice-president in charge of pub
licity; Carl Mammel, treasurer,
and Phyllis Armstrong, secretary.
University Debate Teams
Travel To Illinois, Kearney
This weekend Varsity debaters
will travel to participate in some
early 1953-54 tournaments.
Jack Rogers. Paul Laase, Ken
Philbrick and Dave Gradwohl left
Thursday for. Peoria, 111., to at
tend the Bradley University De
bate Conference.
Some forty schools in the Mid
west will be at Bradley, partici
pating in one of the early big
tourneys.
Don Olson, director of debate,
made the journey to Peoria with
the debaters.
TWO UNIVERSITY debate
teams will be entered in the full
schedule of supplementary events
of the conference.
Teto said the man was an un
dercover FBI agent during the
time he was also a Communist
party member.
He also said that he worked in
a General Electric plant in Firch
burg, Mass., and that there were
Communist cells there and in GE
plants at Lynn and Everett,
Mass., and Schenectady, N. Y.
The ' man pointed out by Teto
to be a Communist was Nat Mills
who refused to say whether or
not he was a Communist at an
executive session last Wednes
day. Hall, Heady Execution
Dec. 18 has been set as the date
of the execution of Carl Austin
Hall and Mrs. Bonnie Brown
Heady, the kidnap killers of
Bobby Greenlease.
The death sentence was pro
nounced by U. S. District Judge
Albert Reeves within 15 minutes
after a jury of 12 men recom
mended that the two pay the su
preme penalty for their confessed
crime.
They will die in the gas cham
ber. Block, Bridle
Initiates 11
New Members
Eleven agricultural students
were initiated into the Block
and Bridle Club Thursday night.
New members of the animal
husbandry organization are: Earl
Sta 1 n a k e r, Stan Eberspacher,
Wayne fapnicer, Don Leisy, Allen
Trenkle, Duane Trenkle, Jim
Svoboda, Russ Olsen, Eddie Tom
linson, Jim McLean and Gerald
Langemeier.
Dale Van Vlecki. rn-PRiHent.
conducted the formal initiation.
co-cnairman of the initiation
committee were Don Novotny
and Dwight Jundt. Regular meet
ings or the club a-e held the
second and fourth "Thursday of
dienf Of aw
Cathy Olds
As '53 Activity Queen
Cathy Olds was revealed as
the new Activities Queen at the
All-University Auction Wednes
day night.
Miss Olds, a sophomore in Arts
and Sciences College, is a mem
ber of Builders, AUF, Alpha
Lambda Delta, French Club and
Delta Gamma.
The presentation of the Queen
and the auction of 49 pledge
classes, organizations and per
sons attracted more than 750
people to the annual auction.
A NEW mark of $1548.50 for
auction proceeds was set, exceed
ing last year's record by $500.
Filings Open Thursday
For 18 AUF Positions
Applications Available In Union
Filings for 15 All University
Fund Board positions, two as
sistant treasurers and an office
head opened Thursday and will
close Dec. 11.
Applications, which may be
obtained in the AUF office,
Room 306, Union, should be sub
mitted to Rock Yapp, AUF pres
ident. Any student who has been
an AUF worker, has a 5 average
and is in good University stand
ing may apply.
INTERVIEWS WILL be con
ducted by the old and new ex
ecutive board members and fac
ulty advisors on Saturday, Dec.
12.
Positions open are eight solici
tations board members, seven
publicity board members, two
assistant treasurers and an office
head.
A folk-tale-telling contest has
been added to the normal list of
contests, which will include dis
cussion, after dinner speaking,
and extemporaneous speaking.
Bruce Kendall, assistant pro
fessor of speech, coached the
teams in the individual .events.
The University has been invited
to present an exhibition debate
before visiting debaters, students
and faculty of Bradley Univer
sity. The debates will be on the
subject of whether or not the
United States .should adopt a
policy of free trade.
TRAVELING IN the opposite
direction, three University de
bate teams will enter a tourna
ment at Kearney State Teachers
College Saturday.
Dick Fellman and Jere McGaf
fery, Alan Overcash and Homer
Kenison, and Sharon Mangold
and Sandra Reiners will repre
sent the University in both de
bate and discussion at Kearney.
Wilmer Linkugel and Jack Howe,
assistants in the speech depart
ment, will make the trip and
serve as judges at the Saturday
conference.
Young Demos
Approve 18
As Voting Age
University Young Democrats
spearheaded a successful move
ment favoring 18 as the voting
age in the Biennial Young Dem
ocrats Convention held last week
in St. Paul, Minnesota.
The Convention voted its ap
proval of the 18 year lcf age
mark, for voting and criticized
Attorney General Herbert
Brownell's action in the White
case.
Don Knutzen, University grad
uate student and state chairman
of the Nebraska Young Demo
crats, headed the group which
included two other University
students, Ronald Rader and
Joyce Wamsley.
Knutzen said the three-day at
fair was a busy and interesting
one for the delegates.
Faculty To Give
At Second Pot
"Potluck with the Profs", the
second student-faculty co-sponsored
supper, will be held Sun
day from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. in the
Ag Union.
Students on the student-
faculty committee who will act
as hosts and hostesses are Joyce
Taylor, Althea Blunn, Jim Dunn
and Ken Pinkerton, chairman.
Margie Antes is publicity chair
man. -
The faculty committee in
cludes Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Tossland, co-chairmen, Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Davis, Mr. ana Mrs.
R.A. Olson, B.L French, CP.
YD's To Discuss New
Organization Formation
Young Democrats will hold a
meeting Sunday at the City
YWCA at 8 p.m. to discuss a new
organization to be opened on the
University campus.
Friday, November 20, 1 953
Revealed
Bob Backman, auctioneer for the
third year, broke his previous
records by auctioneering $1369
worth of items.
The Pi Beta Phi pledge class
provided to be the most expensive
sorority group, selling for $85.
Th highest-priced fraternity,
Sigma Chi, sold for $61.
THE BACK page of the Ne
braskan went to the highest bid
der for $25. The presentation of
the winning Phi Gamma Delta
Kosmet Klub skit sold for $37.50.
The University football squad
and a pie thrown in the face of
Rocky Yapp were also auctioned.
Solicitations board members
head the following sections: frat
ernities, sororities, organized
houses, organizations, faculty,
denominations, independents and
ag campus.
The publicity board is divided
into: radio and TV, newspapers,
special events, booths, ducation
and worker mass meetings, art
and speakers bureau.
PRESENT SOLICITATIONS
board members are: Bud Wied
erspan, Nancy Hemphill, Jim
Edwards, Sally Speicher, Jean
Steffen, Phyllis Colbert, Sue
Brownlee and Elden Weseley.
Publicity board members:
Mary Jane Mapes, Cynthia Hen
derson, Jack- Gillespie, Doran
Jacobs, Eileen Mullarky, Natalie
Nelson and Marvin Friedman.
Assistant treasurers are: Bill
Devries and Dave Erickson, The
office head is Sue Good.
Women. Need
Permission
To Leave Early
AWS has announced the regu
lations concerning Thanksgiving
vacation which, are to be fol
lowed by women living in organ
ized houses or in the Women's
Residence Halls.
Thanksgiving vacation will be
gin Wednesday at 8 a.m. and end
the following Monday at 8 ajjij
Girls living in organizdTiCuses
must obtain special permission
from their housemothers if they
wish to leave earlier than the
specified time for the vacation
period.
IF THEY return after 8
a.m. Monday, they must also ob
tain special permission from the
housemother. Girls must receive
special permission in the above
cases regardless of whether or
not they have classes. Special
permissions do not excuse any
one from classes.
Anyone who returns after clos
ing hours' on Sunday following
Thanksgiving must get special
permission from the house
mother before leaving and must
note the time she will return on
the sign-out sheet -
On a week-end home, girls
may sign out to return on Mon
day morning in time for their
first class. If a girl is visiting a
friend and is to return Monday
morning, special permission may
be obtained to return with the
friend.
Student's Poem Selected
By National Publication
A poem, "Certainties, writ
ten by Lucigrace Switzer, Arts
and Sciences freshman, has been
selected for publication in the
Annual Anthology of College
Poetry.
The announcement was re
ceived from Dennis . Hartman,
secretary of the National Poetry
Association.
The Anthology is a compila
tion of outstanding poetry writ-
ten by college men and women
representing every section of the
United States. Selections . were
mads from thousands of poems
submitted. '
Entertainment
Luck With Profs
Libeau. Karl Loerch' MjExMum.
gaard, Paul Sand, Francis!? f
kins, Calvin McMillan, At
lJreier and Kathryn Cooley.
The faculty will have c
of the entertainment at
event Pinkerton said evt
is invited to attend but ro
ister in the Ag Union
office by Friday night
AU-Un'iYsnity Sqvc, '
Danes Set For To rJ&
' Ah - all-University s
dance, sponsored by tht.
Country Dancers, -will be he
the Ag College Activities Eu
ing Friday -frora jgrj tc "
p.m.
Violinist Emil E
his accompanist v.
music. Keith I.; lei '
of Ag Cour, try
everyons is v..
I
;
?
1
I
p
I
! ,
v J
$ -
M .
ft
J.
X.
SP"""-'"