Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1954)
Page 4 On Flie Social Shk Two Engagements Revealed On Monday; Candy Passings Disclose Six Pinnings THE NEBRASKAN Wednesday, February 10, 1954 By MARILYN MITCHELL Staff Writer Dances and house parties fol lowed by Monday's announce ments of pinnings and two en gagements characterized the past weekend on the University cam pus. Besides the Interfraternity Ball, Bome fraternities and sororities Appli Scholarship ication Available Grants Offered Upperclassmen Upperclass University students are eligible to apply for the Donald Walters Miller Under graduate Scholarships and Grad uate Fellowships. Aims, character, temperament, and financial need of applicants will be considered in selection. Candidates must be registered in the University during the pres ent semester. Three scholarships or fellowships of $1,000 each are available for the next academic year. Each college may recom mend two candidates to the Don- old Walters Miller Scholarship Committee. STUDENTS MAY OBTAIN application forms at their dean's otfice. Undergraduate applica tions should be filed with the dean of the college in which the student is registered, unless the student is a senior expecting to enter the Graduate College. Sen iors and graduate students must file applications with the dean of the Graduate College. Applications should be accom panied by a letter which in cludes educational and profes sional objectives. The committee requests personal letters from! one or two staff members as' recommendations. Applications and letters should be sent to the appropriate dean or director, March 1 is the deadline for ap plications to deans. Final date for nominations to the Donald Walters Miller Scholarship Com mittee is March 15. The award will be made April 1. NU Groups To Sponsor Art Exhibit A commercial art exhibit will be displayed on third floor of Morrill Hall from Sunday through Feb. 22. The exhibition is sponsored lointly by the School of Jour nalism and the Art Galleries. It will feature outstanding ex amples from the 32nd annual exhibition of the New York Art Directors' Club which will be here as part of a nation-wide tour. A comprehensive survey will be presented in many fields of commercial art by leading artists, many of whom have been awarded prizes for the work on display. In connection with the art ex hibit, Gamma Alpha Chi, na tional honorary advertising so rority, will initiate a regional competition for advertising agency work produced during 1853. Winning exhibits will be displayed Feb. 21. held annual parties. Saturday night was the Beta Theta Pi "Ho tel Niagra" house party featur ing mock marriage ceremonies. The Theta Xis had their annual French party, and the Alpha Phis entertained dates at Winter Formal. The Pi Phis had a date dinner Sunday evening. ENGAGEMENTS Krueger-Johnson Janice Krueger, Terrace Hall, announced her engagement to Jerry Johnson from Garland, who graduated from the College of Agriculture in January. Janice, from Plymouth, is a junior in Teachers College. Glandt-Buple Annette Glandt, Sigma Kappa pledge, passed candy to announce her engagement to Harry Buple, who is stationed with the Marines in San Diego, Cal. Annette is a freshman in Teachers College. PINNINGS Corenman-CIouatre Chi O Marilyn Corenman an nounced her pinning to Sigma Nu Jean Clouatre. Marilyn, a junior in Teachers, is from Omaha. Jean is a pre-Dent junior from Gothenburg. Cook-Frieke A Kappa pinning was that of Marney Cook, Teachers College senior, to Bob Fricke. Bob is a former University student and Phi Psi from Ashland. Marney is from Beatrice. Anderson-Simonson Janet Anderson, Pi Phi, sur prised ner sisters witn the an nouncement of her pinning to Ted Simonson, Delta Tau Delta. Ja net, from Lexington, is a junior in leacners college. Ted is a Teachers College sophomore from West Point. Winkler-Roberts Another Pi Phi pinning is that of pledge Gretchen Winkler to Jee Koberts, Phi Delt from Omaha. Lee is a sophomore in Biz Ad. Brewster-McGreer Marilyn Brewster, Alpha Phi, passed candy announcing herpin ning to John McGreer. Phi Psi. A junior in Teachers College. Marilyn is from Holdregc. John, from Lincoln, is a junior in Arts and Sciences. Young Demo Officers it JTii ft V C ST " j V , if i Courtesy Linclon Star Five University students were elected officers of the Lan caster County Young Demo crats Sunday night. New of ficers are (1. to r.) Don Had wiger, chairman; Gene Atkin son, treasurer; Honry Baum, second vice president, and Joyce Wamsley, secretary. Not pictured is Paul Leuenberger, first vice president. Musical Mueller Family Contributes To Carillon Tower Dedicated '49; Designed By Kuska, Architecture Student i w it J j a Programs Of Foreign Tours For Students Announced Fraternities Schedule Discussions Tonight Greek Week To End Saturday Exchange dinners and discus- topics concerned with president, Travel & Study Inc. of New York City has announced a var ied program of foreign tours for iya4. Seventy major international airlines of International Air Transport Association will pro vide air services around the world for prices ranging from $695. FOREIGN ASSIGNMENT for students of journalism and cur rent affairs is lead by Dr. Earl English, Dean of the School of Journalism, University of Mis souri. It offers a program of first-hand contacts with top- ranking political leaders, editors, overseas correspondents, officials of the United Nations and other international organization in seven countries of Western Eu rope, An Industrial Tour offers a view of European industry and management through visits with industrialists, bankers, labor leaders and political figures in England, Scandinavia, Germany, France, Italy, Switzerland and Holland. OTHER TOURS link Spain and Italy; explore the territory of North Africa; visit Sweden, con- Iches Announced Ping-Pong Winner Lionel Iches is the winner of the first round of the boy's divi sion of the Ag Union Pine-Pong Tournament. Ten girls signed up for the tourney. Jean Landen, co-chairman announced. Since entries are still open, anv Ag student interested in the table game are invited to participate. uames are scheduled for bracket play" with the weekly winners going to the playoffs. Finland and Norway: and trast the civilizations of Western Europe and the Near East, in cluding Egypt, Jordan, Syria, Israel, Turkey and Greece. Retailed information on these programs and economical trans portation by sea and air may be obtained from Travel & Study Inc., 110 East 57 St., New York 22, N. Y. TV Show To Feature Prayer Day NU Speech Choir To Lead Singing World Student Day of Prayer will be promoted on a program over KFOR-TV at 4:30 Sunday. Featured on the program will be a speech choir under the di rection of Maxine Trauernicht, instructor in speech and dra matic art. The show will also have a religious service and small group singing. IN THE FORM of a commit tee meeting to plan the World btudent Day of Prayer; which is Feb. 21, the show will give examples of the way this day win oe observed all over the United States and in 50 foreign countries. Jan Osburn, YWCA advisor, stated that the YW president, Joyce Laase, is planning the program with Roma Jean Miller and Lucigrace Switzer writing the script. sion meetings will be held in all fraternity houses Wednesday night as a part of Greek week. Help Week, rushing, pledge training, the discriminatory clause and dormitory problem will be among 20 topics under discussion. Dean Buckingham announced that intramurals will be dis cussed, including the possibility of a reward for the fraternity with the best overall sports pro gram, such as the former Jack Best trophy. THURSDAY NIGHT discus sions of fraternity-university re lations will be lead by Harry Weaver, IFC advisor, in Union Room 313. Ken Keller, assistant director of public relations, will be in charge of the discussion on public relations in Room 315. Religions and the fraternity will be the topic in room 316. All meetings will begin at 7 p.m. Further discussions on scholar ship, rush week and help week will be held Friday at 3 p.m. in the Union. GREEK WEEK will continue Saturday with a pledge exchange luncheon at the various frater nity houses. Then pledges will attend a mass meeting in Love Library Auditorium during which Col. C. J. Frankforter will speak. Meetings concerning pledge training, intramurals and alumni relations will be held in the Union at 1 p.m. Saturday fol lowing the general discussions, treasurer, social chairman and pledge officer duties will be discussed. Fraternity Greek Week ban quet will be held at 6 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. John O. Mosley, eminent supreme re porter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon and "founder" of Greek Week, will speak at 7 p.m. Unseasoned Sun Beckons NU Beauties Nebraska co-eds in swimming suits are climbing to the roof tops with hopes of absorbing some of tebruary s slanting sun rays before the ground hog makes his cold weather predic tion come true. ALL TIME temperature highs are causing Friday afternoon activity to soar, with 70 degree weather inviting students to "come to the country." Golf courses are trimming their greens, birds are flying north and lawn parties are in order. The Nebraska campus has turned into a southern univer sity. Watch out, Arizona and UCLA! All that we need now is a Rose Bowl Queen for Home coming. Musical interest in the Mueller family resulted in the building of the Ralph Mueller Carillon Tower. Ralph Mueller was the son of an immigrant who came in the 1800 s to the United States ana was employed as a railroad worker, but later gave up that occupation to preserve his phys ical well-being. Mr. Mueller tnen moved his family to Council Bluffs where he was employed do ing outdoor work. IT IS told that one day the elder Mueller was working at a home where a little girl was practicing her music lesson. The mother asked if Mr. Mueller had heard the daughter practicing and he replied yes, but went on to say that the girl hadn't played the piece correctly. At the mother's request, Muel ler went into the house and played the piece as he thought it should be played. This incidental happen ing caused Mr. Mueller to start giving music lessons to the daugh ter, and he then became a music teacher in Council Bluffs. AFTER CHANGING his pro fession Mueller had a piano shipped up the Missouri River by boat. He sold the piano and became the first person to sell pianos locally. Formally, all pi anos in the Council Bluffs area had been shipped from the East, after being purchased there. Eventually, his piano dealing was climaxed by the establish ment of the Mueller Piano Cob- pany. Mr. Mueller died, but his son, a brother of the Carillon Tower donor, went on to become a partner in the Schmoller-Muel- ler Piano Company of Lincoln and Omaha, a- company which still exists today, even, though the Mueller brother is not now associ ated with it. THUS THE musical interest of the Mueller family was perhaps the primary reason for donating funds to build the $90,000 tower. Ralph Mueller, .the son and brother of the two men mentioned previously, and donor of the limestone pillar, attended the Uni versity and was graduated in 1898. Now a resident of Cleveland Ohio, Mueller is president of an electric company bearing his name. He has made several con tributions to the University Foun dation, the most outstanding of which resulted in the building of the Carillon Tower and of tha establishing of the Health Gallerv in Morrill Hall. THE TOWER was dedicated on Nov. 4, 1949. It was designed in 1949 by George Kuska who was then a senior in the University Department of Agriculture. Kus ka's plans for the structure were selected from drawings submitted by students in the architectural department. Upon graduation, Kuska went to Salinas, Calif., in order to take up archiiecln--' Italian Model Makers To Address Architects The American Institute of Ar. chitects will meet in Union Room 316 at 7:15 p.m. Friday. Speakers will be Attilo and Lucid Savoia. Attilo Savoia is the foremost model maker in Italy, while his son Lucio is a student of archi. tecture in Rome. They will discuss the model of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome which is now on display at Miller and Paine's. All University stu dents are invited to attend. Main Feature Clock (Schedules Furnished by Theatre) Lincoln: "Money From Home 1:15, 3:20, 5:20, 7:20, 9:25. Stuart: "Knights of the Round Table," 12:30, 2:45, 5:03, 7:18 9:33. ' Nebraska: "Band Wagon," 1:18, 5:19, 9:22. "Affair of Trinidad." 3:30, 7:32. Varsity: "Boy from Okla homa," 1:28, 3:31, 5:34, 7:37, 9:40. State: "The SeaAround Us 2:05,4:03,6:01,8:00, 9:55. Joyo: "From here To Eternity 7:08, 9:38. Grain Marketing Essay Contest Now Open To Graduates, Students Future Sunday Movie Schedule Announced By Union Committee The Union entertainment com mittee has announced that the following movies will be shown as the regular free Sunday night show in future weeks: Feb. 14; "Jim Thorpe," star- Former New Yorker Likes Job In Union As Checker By MAR CIA MICKELSEN , Staff Writer A man whom we often see but nave seldom heard of is K. A. Hinote, checker in the Union. Hinote, an octogenarian, has been checking students' coats and books at the Union stand for two years. He formerly lived in New York, but returned to Nebraska after retiring because most of his rela tives and friends live here. HINOTE LIKES his work in the Union because it provides him with a way in which to pass time. Usually, he is busiest at meal times when students flock to the Union to eat. Having plenty of time in which to observe students, he said, "I only wish I were their age." Hinote admits being "a little bit jealous," and would have liked "to have had the oppor tunity that the students have" to 0 to college. "I LIKE students very 'much," he said. However, he does have one complaint about his Union job students that think the checking booth is an information stand and expect him to know about various places and where they are located in the building or on campus. One change that Hinote has no ticed in the past is that students don't "cut up" as much in the Union Lobby as they did last year. Perhaps this means that college students are finally be coming more mature, he said. ring Burt Lancaster and Charles Bickford. Feb. 21; "Room For One More," with Betsy Drake. Carv Grant, Iris Mann and Laurene Tuttle. , Feb. 28; "With a Song in My Heart," featuring Susan Hay kard, Rory Calhoun, Thelma Ritter and David Wayne. March 7; "Five Fingers," star ring James Mason, Michael Ren nie, Dannielle Darrieux and Walter Hampden. March 14; "David and Beth sheba," featuring Susan Hay ward and Gregory Peck. March 21; "Dancing in the Dark," with William Powell, Betsy Drake and Mark Stevens Movies are free and open tdj an siuaenis. j.ney are snown in the Union ballroom art 7:30 each Sunday evening. Cash prizes totaling $1,250 will be awarded to writers of the 14 top papers entered in the grain marketing essay contest for college students Graduate and under-graduate students enrolled in colleges or universities in the U. S. or Can ada are eligible to compete. Com petition will be divided into the division one each for graduate and under-graduate students. First place winners in each divi- Film Society Ticket Sales grossing Four hundred of the 800 tick ets available for the 1954 Film Society have been sold, Shirley Chapman, Union activities di rector, has announced. Sales will continue until the evening of the opening performance or until all the tickets are sold. Most of the tickets sold have been to adults. Union workers will begin sales in organized houses this week and tickets may be purchased in the Union booth or In the Union office. Price Is $1.80. TEN FILMS will be offered curing me series, iney are: Creed, Feb. 17; Blood of a Poet, T.l'oana, Mar. 3; Duck Soup, The Barber Shop, Mar. 17; A Time Out of War, The Land, Mar. 31; Fictura Adventure in Art, Apr. 7: The Blue Angel, Apr. 21; Fame Is The Spur, May 5. QUICK RESULTS WHEN YOU USE Jisl TkbhaAkcuv Classified AuS To place o classified ad Stop in the Business Office Room 20 Student Union Call 2-7632 Service Ext. 4226 for (Ossified Hours 1-4:30 Mon. thro hi THRIFTY AD RATES No. words 1 day 2 days 3 days 4 day MO S .40 $ .65 $ .85 $1.00 11-15 iO j .SO j 1X5 1.25 16-23 .60 1 .95 1.25 IAQ 21-25 .70 1.10 1.45 US 26-30 .0 j US 1.65 2.00 NU Provost Corps To Hold Meeting Provost Corps, Military Police honorary, will meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. in Room 206 of Military and Naval Science Building. Dr. James Reinhardt, chairman of the University department of sociology, will be guest speaker. He will talk on "Con Men I Have Known." Dr. Reinhardt is a specialist in criminology and lectures regu larly to the National FBI Acad emy and the Harvard University School of Forensic Medicine. In addition to the guest speaker, new members will be initiated into the honorary. Refreshments will be served. sion will receive $300 and all-expense-paid trips to Chicago. . RICHARD F. Uhlmann, presi dent of Uhlmann Grain Com pany, is sponsoring the contest and the Chicago Board of Trade is the administrative agency. Objectives of the Uhlmann Awards Student Contest are "to stimulate broader interest among college students in the market ing of grain, and to develop bet ter understanding of the func tions and operations of the Chi cago Board of Trade." Entries should be suhmitt to the Chicago Board of Trade public relations denartmpnt June 1. Vocation Guidance Program Planned The 1954 Centennial Vocation Exposition will be held in the University of Omaha fieldhouse March 14 to 19. The Omaha Downtown Kiwanis Club and Uni versity of Omaha are co-sponsors of the event. The exposition is designed to supplement vocational guidance carried on in the schools by pro viding a panorama of 100 voca tions. A special invitation has been extended to University students to attend and discuss business op portunities with representatives of national and local industries. Will nancvOlsou ROGERS, jr. NOW FLAYING WarnerColor a SATUTOW tVl fcsT STORY w we Rmt muz I I 1 3 sin 4 iG Biiwd on The Hrwt Sfllrr RACNELLCUSOrS TlIE SEA fiflOUOB US ton nts 50t Atmluloa oiler Students i n. Cards ADDKn. U)LIS1ANA TERRITORY" It's a Landslide! Arroiv "Oxfords" Voted Style Kings Large majority of collegians favor trim good looks of Arrow "Gordon Dover Button-down" CAMPUS WHEEL ASICS: X 5r? MISCELLANEOUS MIS8C. fiinclal rates on Don cigars at Hen Wolf's ClRar Store. Meals served also. 121 N. 12th. FOR SALE FOR BAJLE: Remington Qulet-Elter; one and a half years old. L'ncle Bam tak Inir me, you time typewriter, Reason ably priced. Phone 6-3487. V m:l. mm iilJi Lasting good looks" was the main reason cited for the overwhelming popularity of Arrow Oxfords. These fine shirts which retain their fresh good looks all day long . . . are available at Ell Arrow dealers in white or colors. . "How's your underwear mileage?" f I tie a lot of rolling round," says Axle J. Inner. tube, a big wheel on the campus, "and let me tell you, it'g a lot more comfortable going over curbs when you're wearing Jockey brand Underwear. That's not just my opinion, either...Im spokes-man for plenty of other wheels, too!" Ses. college men choose Jockey comfort; To don't have to be a B.M.O.C. to appre ciate the solid comfort of Jockey brand Underwear. Tailored-to-fit Jockey gives you snug-fitting, easy-sitting relaxation... because... 13 separata contour! pieces are carefully crafted into' one smooth-fitting garment. Nwly-dvlopd heat resistant rubber in waistband outlasts other leading brands, p" I NebaW strip rubber in leg openings elimi- nates sag or bind around the legs. 2 Jockey Shorn WW Unlqu Jockoy front opening never gaps. I' J t ARROW TRADE MARK L '" ' TUi UNDCIWEA HANDKERCHIEFS . OKTSWEAt ill uiw wear gives you coverage but Jockey Contours Skirt . givs you full cemfertl Mess r r if t