The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 21, 1954, Image 1

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    Union Board Posts
Go To 12 Students
Eight New Members From City,
Four From Ag Chbsen For '54-'55
Twelve members of the 1954-
55 Student Union Board of Mana
gers were selected Tuesday by
the old Board.
The Board consists of six fac
ulty members, three alumni, four
Ag Union members and eight
city Union members.
-
TJKREE MEMBERS of the old
Board were elected.
Ag Union Board members who
will serve as juniors are Sharon
Egger and Marx Peterson.
Miss Egger is recording sec
retary for Delta Delta Delta and
is a member of Home Ec Club
Dancers
Festival
Scheduled
1,800 Expected
To Participate
Over 1800 square dancers from
all parts of Nebraska are ex
pected to participate in the 14th
annual Square Dancing Festival
Saturday at 8 p.m. in the Coli
seum. The Square Dancing Festival
Is sponsored by the Lincoln Folk
nrf Sonsrp Dance Council, com
posed of representatives of 24
Lincoln square dance groups.
SQUARE DANCING for chil
dren in city recreation groups
find youth organizations will be
gin at 2 p.m. Saturday. Several
innHrwl sivth erade cirls and
bovs from Lincoln elementary
schools will perform a special
dance pattern.
All dancers will participate in
the grand march to begin Sat
xirday evening dancing. A dem
onstration by an especially
trained group of Lincoln dancers
will be performed at intermis
sion. SPECTATOR TICKETS are
$.50 if purchased before Saturday
and $.70 if purchased at the door.
They may be purchased from
members of local square dance
clubs.
tirfcpts are $2 a eourfe
and may be purchased at the
door or at the Stamp Department
at Gold's.
The University brass choir will
provide music prior to dancing.
Square dance music will be fur
nished by a nine-piece orchestra
directed by Mrs. Jessie Flood,
accompanist for women's physi
cal education classes.
Vet Supplies
To Discontinue
On Saturday
Books and supplies will not be
Issued to veterans after Satur
day, for the current semester,
Harry Stroh, director of veter
ans' affairs announced.
Stroh also announced that re
ceipts for cash purchases will
not be accepted for reimburse
ment after that date.
Exceptions to these rules will
be made in cases of books which
re now ordered and will not be
available until after April 24. In
order to have such books ac
cepted for government payment,
the purchasing veteran must sign
a charge slip at the book store
before April 24. The store may
then issue a due bill, thus en
abling the veteran to pick up
his book after the expiration
date.
No due bills, however, will
be honored after June 5, the last
clav of the second semester.
Students whose theses are be
ing completed and accepted dur
isie this semester may be reim
bursed for authorized thesis ex
penses after April 24, but not
later than July 1.
Veterans who will graduate in
June are asked to retain their
purchase authorizations after
April 24 for the purpose of rent
ing caps and gowns lor com
mencement exercises. Purchase
authorizations may not be used
to obtain books or supplies after
April 24, however.
The Outside World
By WILLIE DESCH
Staff Writer
Amendments Suggested
LINCOLN After the Sixty-Sixth Extraordinary Session of
the Nebraska Legislature was officially opened by Lt. Gov. Charles
Warner, Gov. Robert Crosby laid out a program of six constitu
tional amendments which he said are necessary so thatthe Legis
lature will be free to pass laws to improve he state tax system.
There were indications that the senators intend to fight any
proposal to place the sales tax question on the ballot next
November. Sen. Dwight Burney of Hartington said that levying
new taxes is the function of the Legislature and therefore it should
not be passed on to the electors.
However the Legislative Council Committee on Taxation has
proposed a constitutional amendment which if passed by the
voters would force the Legislature to pass a sales tax at its next
session.
On the other hand sales tax advacates fear this proposal,
because they say that if it is defeated, any hope of taxes other
than property taxes would be impossible forever.
FBI Reports Rise Of Crime
WASHINGTON Major crimes in the United States have risen
six per cent last year to an estimated total of 2,159,080 reported
the FBI.
"Crime is outstripping population rate of growth 4 to 1," the
bureau said in its annual bulletin. This rise cannot be charged
to the increase in population alone added the FBI. .
Of aU the major crimes tabulated from police reports in all
parts of the country, only murder dropped off from 1952. It
showed a decline of 1.2 per cent
Disarmament Talks Planned
UNITED NATIONS, NEW YORK The Western Powers are
preparing for new disarmament talks without knowing whether
the Soviet Union will take part, since the hydrogen bomb. A
subcommittee has been set up by the 12-nation U.N. Disarmament
Commission will start the talks, in private, on Friday.
This commission adopted a British proposal naming Britain,
Canada, France, the Soviet Union and the United States to the
subgroup. It rejected a Soviet bid to add Communist China,
Chechoslovakia and India.
and Vocational Home Economics
Association.
Peterson is president of Ag
Lutheran Students Association,
Ag editor of the Nebraskan and
a member of Builders, Corn Cobs,
band and Farmhouse.
Senior Board members from
Ag Union are Junior Knobel and
Kenneth Pinkerton.
Knobel was re-elected to 'the
board. He is a member of band,
Corn Cobs, Alpha Zeta and Farm
House and is vice president of
Builders.
Pinkerton is a member of Ag
Builders, Agronomy Club, New
man Club, the Cornhusker staff
and Alpha Gamma Rho.
JUNIOR MEMBERS of the
board from city campus will be:
Shirley Jesse, Marilyn Beideck
and Clare Hinman.
Miss Jesse is a member of Al
pha Omicron Pi, Orchesis, and
secretary of WAA Council.
Miss Beideck is a member of
Alpha Chi Omega and Red Cross
entertainment coordinator.
Miss Hinman is vice president
of Delta Delta Delta and a menrv
ber of AWS Board and AUF.
CITY CAMPUS senior board
members will be Delores Carag,
Lois Simmerman, Marilyn Ham
mer, Leonard Barker and Ann
Skold.
Miss Carag is a member of
Towne Club.
Miss Simmerman is an unaf
filiated Lincoln coed.
Miss Hammer is secretary of
Student Council and president of
Delta Gamma.
Barker is president of Theta
Xi, memmber of Corn Cobs, band.
Gamma Lambda and Student
Council.
Miss Skold is secretary of
Builders, member of AWS Board,
and rush chairman of Kappa Al
pha Theta.
NU Catholics
To Host Club
Province Meet
The University Newman Club
will be host to the Newman Club
Province Convention Friday
through Sunday at the Corn
husker Hotel. Newmanites from
the Central States Province of
Nebraska, Iowa, Missouri, Kan
sas and Illinois will attend.
Delegates will view a display
of church artitecture and attend
a mixer dance Friday. Clark
Jeary, mayor of Lincoln, John K.
Sellock, acting Chancellor at the
University and the Rev. C. M.
Reinert, president of Creighton
University, will address the con
vention at the - opening session
Saturday. Delegates will also
take part in student forums Sat
urday morning.
AFTERNOON ACTTVTITES in
clude speeches by Gov. Robert
Crosby and Joseph C. Murphy,
dean of the College of Architec
ture, Washington University, St
Louis. Delegates will also tour
the State Capitol and the Univer
sity campus.
Robert Simmons, chief justice
of the Nebraska Supreme Court,
will speak at the John Henry
Newman Honorary Banquet Sat
urday evening. The convention
dance will be held following the
banquet A Sunday morning tour
of Boys Town will wind up the
convention program.
Applications Open
For Naves Grants
Applications for La Verne
Noyes scholarships are being ac
cepted now in the office of stu
dent affairs, Room 104, Adminis
tration Hall.
In order to be considered for
one of the grants of $65 per
semester, applicants must be di
rect blood descendants of World
War I veterans. The student's
need, scholarship and character
will be considered.
Approximately 15 of the 25
Noyes scholarships will be
granted to students now in
school or upperclass transfers to
the University, with the re
mainder going to incoming
freshmen. Applications are due
June 1.
Volume 74, No. 78
directors- Name
Students To Present 'Wonder Hat
'The Eldest 'Trifles' April 29, 30
Completed casts for three
Labodatory Theater productions
have been announced by the
student directors.'
Jim Boling will play Harle
quin; Amer Lincoln, Pierrot; Jim
Copp, Punchmello; Jean Carol
. ( ,
Masquers
Schedule
'54 Dinner
Group To Give
Special Awards
The 10th annual Nebraska Mas
quers banquet May 14 will cele
brate both the 30th anniversary
of Masquers as a national chap
ter of National Collegiate Play
ers and the completion of the
new Howell Theater.
Presentation of awards will in
clude a special award donated
by ex-Nebraskan Greer Garson.
Other awards will include lab
theater scene design, lab theater
acting, lab theater directing, ex
perimental acting, senior Mas
quers freshman acting, Masquers
service, National Collegiate Play
ers, technical theater and Uni
versity acting awards.
SPECIAL GUEST at the ban
quet will be the national officers
of National Collegiate Theater
who have re-scheduled their ex
ecutive council meeting which
was to be in Chicago so that
they could meet with the group.
New members of Masquers will
be tapped at the banquet. Also
tapped will be the new members
of Purple Masque, the highest
award of University Theater.
The banquet will be held at 6:30
p.m. in the Lincoln Hotel. Marv
Stromer is the chairman.
Visual Study Grant
Goes To Sandstedt
A $3,000 research grant for
continuation of a visual study
of high speed reactions which
take place during certain phases
of starch gelatinization has been
awarded to R. M. Sandstedt agri
cultural chemist.
The grant made thr 'h the
University of Nebraska Founda
tkm, brings the amount Corn
Industries Research Foundation
of New York has provided for
the sound movies to $8,000.
The pictures are the first of
their kind ever made on the sub
ject and are being produced by
the University's- photographic
productions division.
NU Photo Contest
Entries Due Today
The deadline for the All-University
Photography Contest is
Wednesday.
Rules for the contest may be
obtained at the Union activities
office. Completed photos are to
be turned in at the activities
office.
Leonard Barker, chairman of
the Union special activities com
mittee, announced that photo
graphs will be returned if so
desired. It was previously an
nounced that they would not be
returned.
Agricultural
cussed If
DfS
Farming Proclaimed Asset Not Problem, Andrews
Agricultural communications
have become difficult because of
differences in view points ac
cording to Stanley Andrews, ex
ecutive director of the National
Project in Agricultural Commu
nications who spoke at an Ag
College convocation Monday.
Andrews spoke on the prob
lems of Agricultural communica
tions on both the individuc and
international scale. He attended
a debate between Dulles of the
United States and Molotov of
Russia. They could not come to
any definite terms because they
understood nothing in common
except power. (
The United States is in the
greatest era of productivity, as
American farms have increased
production 40 per cent within the
last ten years. "We should not
increase our surpluses one
pound," Andrews said, "but we
should be glad that we have
Biz Ad Council To Hold
Annual 'Gripe Session
The Biz Ad "Gripe Session,"
which is sponsored by the Busi
ness Administration Council,
will be held Thursday at 11 a.m.
in Room 209A in Social Science
Building.
The session is being held for
the purpose of discussing pos
sible improvements. This is an
opportunity for students to offer
ideas or criticism of the College
of Business Administration. Stu
dents are invited to attend.
DeLong, Columbine, and Mari
lyn Breitfelder, Margot in "The
Wonder Hat" The play is a
farce centering around love and
the confusion caused by a "won
der hat" and a magic dipper.
DIRECTOR IS Barbara Leigh.
Morse Weisgurt is production
manager.
"The Eldest" raises the prob
lem of the sacrifice required of
one member of a family when
the mother becomes an invalid.
Its cast includes Luanne Raun
as Rose; Clare Hinman, a neigh
bor; Red Holmes, Pa; Ted Mitt
ler, Al; Ann Corcoran, Floss, and
Charles Klasek, Henry. Neala
O'Deill is the director.
THE TENSE drama, "Trifles"
casts Jean Weddle as Mrs. Hale;
Valerie Hempes, Mrs. Peters;
Jack Parris, Mr. Hale; Don
Bartlett the sheriff, and Bill
Doleman, county attorney.
The play is a psychological
mystery involving the question
of whether the wife has mur
dered her husband, and if so,
why?
Morrel Clute will direct and
Charles Klasek serve as produc
tion manager.
The plays will be given April
29 and 30 at 7:30 p.m., in Room
201, Temple Building.
Tryouts Begin ,
For Final Set
Of Lab Plays
Tryouts for the last series of
laboratory theater productions
will be held Friday from S to 5
p.m., in the Arena Theater,
Room 201, Temple Building.
"A Dollar" by David Pinski
will be cast. This comedy with a
moral has a cast of five men and
three women. Director is Joyce
Fangman. Dick Marrs is pro
duction manager.
A FANTASY by Lawrence
Langer, "Matinata," will cast
two men and one woman. Anita
Daniels is director and Doris
Billerbeck, production manager.
"Interim" is a psychological
drama by Thomas Edward
CConnell. The bast Includes nine
men and five women. Charles
Klasek is director and Morrel
Clute is production manager.
Any University student who is
interested may try out Play
books may be checked out in the
theater office upon deposit of $1.
Production dates are May 12
and 13.
Cornhusker Post
Interviews Set
Applicants for positions on the
1955 Cornhusker yearbook staff
will be interviewed by the com
mittee on st ident publications
Tuesday at 6 p m. in Union Fac
ulty Lounge.
Forms for applying are now
available in the public relations
office, 1125 R St, and are to be
returned no later than noon,
Monday.
STAFF POSITIONS on the
Cornhusker include editor, asso
ciate editor, three managing edi
tors, two copy writers, business
manager and two assistant busi
ness managers.
Tentative date for applicants
for The Nebraskan staff posi
tions has been set for May 13.
Application forms will be avail
able in the public relations office
Friday.
Communication Problems
M Convocation Monday
them. Agriculture should be an
asset not a problem."
COMPENSATING TRADING
must be arranged with coun
tries such as Russia'. The West
ern Powers must have the power
to trade on their own terms. An
drews cited an example of trad
ing with Russia for food for
Western Germany.
The food supply outside of the
United States in not enough to
fight more than six months of a
world war. Since 1944, more than
18 million tons of food have been
sent to foreign countries. Europe
NU Students
To Fill Forms
For Deferment
College students subject to the
draft should fill out draft data
forms at their college dean's
office or at the office of veterans
and selective service affairs in
Room 1C9 Temporary L, as soon
as possible for draft deferment.
Deferments may be granted by
local draft boards on the basis
of student class standings for the
last full academic year.
Further information may be
obtained at any local Selective
Service Board or at the office of
Veterans end Selective Service
Affairs. The Selective Service
Board in Lincoln is in Room 202,
Veterans Building, 12 and "O"
St.
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
it happened at nu
Two students were talk
ing over their sprinr vacation
activities in front of an early
Monday morning class room.
One was overheard
com-
menting to his friend, "Boy,
am I ever glad to be back at
school. I've never spent such a
hectic week. Nowadays I
come back to school 'to get
rested up from vacations."
Kernodle To Present
Two Lectures, Critique
Festival To Feature Professor
Dr. George R. Kernodle, pro
fessor of speech and dramatic
are at the University of Arkan-
. ,
L
DR. GEORGE KERNODLE
Army ROTC
Engineers Win
Phalanx Meet
A drill team of University
Army ROTC engineers defeated
seven other teams to win the
annual Phalanx precision drill
competition.
The . inter-service contest is
sponsored by Phalanx, national
honorary ana proiessionai miu'
tary fraternity.
Teams representing Air Force
Group 105 and the Army Infan
try squad won second and third
places respectively.
LEADER OF the winning
squad is Barrv Larson. Other
members were Walter Horning,
William Kampfe, Kenneth Moor
head, Robert Falk, Jack Talsma,
Roye Lindsay, John Fagan, Al
Ford and Rodney Einspahr, al
ternate. Judges for the contest were
University faculty members Col.
James H. Workman and M.Sgt.
Howard Huibregtse, and Maj.
John Svarny and S.Sgt. Ray F.
Boehmer, both of the Lincoln
Air Force Base.
Cups were presented to the
winners by Phalanx commander,
Robert Bloomstrand.
Maj. Rodney Weibel is Pha
lanx advisor and Cadet William
Neef headed the drill competi
tion committee.
Red Cross
Student donations for the Red
Cross orphanage clothing drive
will be picked up Thursday at
organized houses. Marty Morri
son, chairman of the orphanage
committee, announced that
clothing, books and toys are
needed at the Lincoln orphan
ages. survived after the last war only
because of the aid given by U.S.
Agriculture.
AT THE present time the mar
ket will not absorb the supply in
this country and there are sur
pluses. The agricultural system
is so great because the U.S. has
invested much capital and lead
ership. Our agricultural system
must be changed to meet the
market.
"International trade must be
continued if we are to win for
eign- countries as friers," said
Andrews. Trade has been on the
decrease the past seventy years.
The U. S. is in tragic ueed of
friends to fight Communism, but
our tariff laws are knocking
down these foreign countries as
fast as we win them
A question period followed the
formal presentation. Andrews
said the situation in Indo-China
was critical and he believed that
the U. S. would have to send
cither troops to protect our in
terests or leave the country com
pletely.
,Coed Registration Open
For Life-Saving Class
Coeds interested in life-savine
classes should register at the
physical education office in Grant
Memorial immediately.
American Red Cross Water
Safety Instruction and Life Sav
ing Courses will be offered three
nights a week from 7 to 10 p.m.
during the last week of April and
the first week of May.
iiify-MiBie File
(For SC Psitiiis
Election Scheduled For May 3;
Candidates Represent 8 Colleges
Sixty-nine students have filed
applications for Student Council
positions, it was reported Tues
day afternoon.
Student Council elections will
be held May 3.
sas, will be featured speaker at
the annual Nebraska High
School Fine Arts Festival to be
held Friday.
Dr. Kernodle has taught at
Western Reserve University, the
University of Iowa, University
of Tulsa, UCLA, Colorado ana
Michigan State. He has studied
at the University of Chicago,
Carnegie Institute of Technology
and Yale, where he received a
PH.D degree.
Dr. Kernodle has taught act
ing and directing and history of
the theater for more than twenty
years. He has lectured at Co
lumbia, Cornell, John Hopkins,
Colorado, Michigan, Illinois,
Minnesota University, Carleton
College, at the Metropolitan and
Cleveland Art Museums and at
the Institute for Religious and
Social Studies in New York.
DR. KERNOLDE studied in
Europe on Rockefeller and Sterl
ing Fellowships. He has directed
more than 30 major productions,
including ten Shakespearean
plays and four original transla
tions of Moliere.
Dr. Kernodle will speak
Thursday at 8 p.m. in Love Li
brary Auditorium. His subject
will be "Beyond the Footlights.'
On Friday he will present a spe'
cial critique of a one-act play
entered in the Festival, and at
8:30 in Social Science Auditor
ium will address teachers and
students on "Acting: The Spit
and Image."
Approximately 770 students
will take part in the 13th an
nual llebraska High School Fine
Arts Festival on Friday and Saturday.
U.S. Information Agency
Described By Sorensen
6 Media Carry Out American Aims
The United States Information
Agency furnishes information to
the nations of the world on a
people-to-people level, not a
government-to-government level.
Thomas C. Sorensen, information
officer at the American Embassy
in Beirut, Lebanon, said Tuesday.
This propagation of ideas sub
mits evidence to other peoples
that the policies of the United
States will advance their interests
and attempts to counter hostile
Russian broadcasting of Commu
nism, depressions ana war.
Carrying out its responsibilities.
the USIA uses six media: press
and publication, broadcasting,
motion picture, information cen
ters, private co-operation and ex
change of persons.
THE WASHINGTON Press Serv
ice, the center of the press and
publishing operations of the USIA
sends information to field posts in
77 countries and these field posts
in turn distribute information to
75 million people. Telling of this
phase of his work in Lebanon,
Sorensen said the newspapers
there were similar to those of the
US at the end of the last century.
The USIA publishes bulletins
in Lebanon six days a week in
four languages: English, French,
Arabic and Armenian. They con
tain public events showing US of
ficials, photographs and feature
matter translated from Washing
ton. THE BROADCASTING medium
used by the USIA directs 70 per
cent of its broadcasting efforts
toward Communist-dom i n a t e d
countries. Sorensen said the USIA
projects motion pictures in 22
languages, primarily in countries
where illiteracy is high and radio
usage is low.
Information centers consisting
of halls for lectures, exhibits, and
cultural programs and libraries
throughout the world containing
200,000,000 tvxiks is anohter me
dium used by the USIA, Sorensen
said.
Business firms, professional
groups, private individuals and
groups aid the USIA in propa
gating ideas though the Office
of Private Co-operation, Soren
sen said.
THE EXCHANGE of foreign
BABW To Present
Spring Tea Friday
Barb Activties Board for Wo
men will hold its annual spring
tea Friday -from 4 to 5:30 p.m.
in Ellen Smith Hall.
The group will honor approxi
mately 25 independent women
who are outstanding in campus
activities, according to Dottie
Sears, president.
The independent women's
house attaining the highest
scholastic average will be
awarded a scholarship plaque.
All independent coeds are in
vited to attend the affair which
will be informal. They may come
any time during the tea, but the
program will begin at 4:15.
Wednesday, April 21, 1954
Candidates from each college
include:
College of Agriculture; Ivan
Althouse Jr., Carolyn Goets,
Mary Keller, Janet Kuska, Lin
da Luchsinger, Ella Matzke,
Marx Petersen, Virginia Reeves,
Katherine Skinner, Joyce Splitt
gerber, Boyd Stuhr, Joyce Tay
lor, Mary Taylor and Ardth
Young.
COLLEGE OF ARTS and Sci
ences; Mary Kay Beachler, Bar
bara Clark, Daniel Cook, Bev
erly Deepe, Richard Fellman,
Janet Gordon, John Gourlay,
Maryanne Hansen, Cynthia Hen
derson, Gail Katskee, Roy Kee
nan, Diane Knotek, John Nel
son, Catheryn Olds, Frances
Pickett and Sue Ramey.
College of Business Adminis
tration; Samuel Ellis, Charles
Ferguson, Phyllis Finke, An
drew Hove, Corliss Kruse,
Bruce Martin, James Pollard,
Richard Remington and Carol
Tremain.
College of Dentistry; John
Schreiber and William E. Shain
holtz. COLLEGE OF Engineering
and Architecture; George An-1
dreason, Paula Broady, William
Engelkemier, Barry Larson, Mi
chael and Donald Smith,
College of Law; James Han
cock and Richard Myers.
College of Pharmacy; Norman
Creutz and Edwin Mueksch.
Teachers College; Marilyn
Beideck, Marjory Chab, Wil
liamette Desch, Suzanne Good,
Mary. Harpstreith, Grace Har
vey, William Hatcher, Mary
House, Shirley Irwin, Gary Lu-
core, Carolyn Marshall, Herman
Smith, Beverly Soderberg, San
dra Speicher, Margaret Swan
son, Katharine Teigeler, Alice
Todd and Carole Unterseher.
Tassel Filings
Tassel filings for independent
freshman coeds close today at 6
p.m. Coeds with a 5.5 average
or above may file at booths in
the Ag and city Unions.
and Americans students, leader
and teachers does tremendous
good for the US in winning friends
in other lands," Sorensen said.
"The American taxpayer is
getting his money's worth by
supporting the USIA," Sorensen
declared, "but even then, only
19 of 1 per cent of the Federal
budget is spent on winning for
eign friends. "The Soviet Union,
he said, "spends more money on
radio transmission jamming the
Voice of America broadcasts than
the USIA."
Sorensen spoke in a convoca
tion held by the School of Jour
nalism at Love Library Auditor
ium. The convocation was the
third in a series held during the
current semester showing new
developments of the 20th century
in the various phases of jour
nalism which have occurred dur
ing 60 years of journalism instruc
tion at the University.
NU Geography
Students Take
Tryout Flight
Graduate students in the Uni
versity department of geog
raphy made an experimental
flight to Kansas City and Wich
ita Wednesday.
The flight was made for the
purpose of determining the feas
ibility of using the airplane as
a piece of laboratory equipment
which would provide first-hand
field experience in geography.
THE GROUP, headed by Dr.
Frank E. Sorensen, lecturer in
geography, had planned five
objectives for the trip. These
included determining how much
geography can be taught with
the use of the airplane: how to
determine the type of geog
raphy that can be taught with
the use of the plane.
They also introduced geogra
phic facts and ideas by means of
a visit to a modern aircraft fac
tory and gained experience ia
the use of aeronautic charts
which could later be used as a
teaching device in the class
room. The group, all of whom teach
geography laboratory classes at
the University, had an oppor
tunity to note the drought con
ditions of the region and the
methods used to reduce the ef
fects of these conditions, as well
as the progress being made ia
the prevention of soil erosion.
Cotton 'n Denim Vogua
Styled for Ag Ccsmpus
Cotton and Demin Week will
begin on Ag Campus Monday
in preparation for Farmers Fair.
All faculty and students are
urged to wea cotton and denim
for the entire week. The Cot
ton and Demin dance will clirnsx
the week's activities a tlsy X.