The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 28, 1954, Page PAGE 4, Image 5

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    PAGE 4
Speech, Hearing Labs
Services Renewe
To Aid Handicapped
The University Speech and Hear
ing Laboratories Monday began
its 12th year of services to the
public and students.
The daily pre-school for chil
dren with speech and hearing dif
ficulties began with groups meet
ing from 9 a.m. to noon under the
instruction of Miss Georgia Dan
dos, instructor, who this year re
places Mrs. Madge Miller,
THE SATURDAY morning class
es for children of school age will
start Oct. 2. Special corrective
work for children affected by cere
bral palsy will be offered by Dr.
Lucile Cypreansen, associate pro
fessor of speech and speech cor
rection.
Mr. Ernest Burgi, instructor, will
gain be in charge of the testing
of the hard of hearing and the fit
ting of hearing aids. He will be
Faculty Dinner
University
To Honor 9
For Service
Nine faculty members who have
served the University for 25 years
will be honored at the annual fac
ulty homecoming dinner Tuesday.
Those being honored are: O. S.
Bare, associate professor of ento
mology; Arnold E. Baragar, assis
tant professor of borne economics;
Dr. Ray W. Frantz, professor and
chairman department of English;
E. J. Marmo, professor and chair
man, department of engineering
mechanics; Rose Reynolds, asso
ciate in anatomy.
Eliza E. Gamble, assistant pro
fessor of secondary education and
supervisor of social studies at
Teachers College High School,
Lewis F. Boyden, assistant exten
sion agriculturist; Clara C. Noyes,
associate extension home econo
mist; and Florence J. Atwood, ex
tension borne economist and state
home extension leader.
RECOGNITION WELL also be
given to the following faculty mem
bers: Roscoe Abbott, associate pro
fessor of chemistry, emeritus; C.
J. Frankforter, associate professor
of chemistry, emeritus; Alice H.
Hupp, instructor in English, emeri
tus; Bess Steele, associate pro
fessor of home economist, emeri
tus; Dr. G. E. Condra, dean and
professor of Conservation and Sur
vey Division, emeritus; C. C. Min
teer, associate professor of voca
tional education, emeritus; Maude
E. Wisherd, acquistions librarian;
wniard E. Lyness, associate agron
omist and Dr. S. W. Alford, as
sociate extension animal patholo
gist. Chancellor Clifford M. Hardin
will be the speaker at the dinner.
It will be held at the Union.
NU Students
Serve Library
As Assistants
Having trouble finding that all
important library book?
Any one of 56 students working
in all departments of Love Me
morial Library this semester are
available to help students. They
include:
Alice Anderson, Janet Berggren,
Karen Boning, Marie Duerr, Nancy
Davidson, Nancy Dickinson, Itha
Frost, Mildred Hansen, Judith
Harrington, Gloria Harris, Shirley
Hornby, Mary Hathaway.
Janice Kossey, Hazel Isaac, Ge
nelle Jensen, Helen Kreucb, Nancy
llayborn, Doris Miller, Marilyn
Mills, Adora Millstead, Verna
I loss, Fatra Nelson, Elizabeth
Roedeg, Rene Rohter.
Margaret Samani, Peggy Sand,
Gladys Schumacher, Patricia Scud
tier, Kathryn Severens, Martha
Etamm, Donna Swain, Donna Tup
per, Lorain Valasek, Joyce
Wamsley,
Patricia Weinberg, June Woer
er, Duane Acklei, Bruce Berg
gren, John Copenhaver, Ira Ep
stein, Gerry Fellman, Raymond
Gerger, Wflber Hats, Leon
Xroenke, Willis Luedke, Richard
Mohrbacher.
Robert Moses, Raymond Rice,
Richard Rowen, James Souders,
Donald Striker, Charles Thomp
son, James Windeshausen.
Pootry Contest
Entries Accepted
Entries of original verse to be
submitted for possible publication
in the Annual Anthology of Col
lege Poetry are now being ac
cepted. Deadlines for entering poems is
Nor. 5. All manuscripts ir-ist be
sent to the National Poetry Asso
ciation, 3210 Sejby Avenue, Los
Angeles.
Students may submit a many
xnanuacripts as they wish to the
twelfth annual competition. Any
theme or form may be used, but
shorter poems are preferred.
All entries must be typed or
written in ink on one fide of a
abeet. In the past 10 years, ap
proximately 4,000 college poems
have been accepted for publication.
assisted by Mary Janet Reed
graduate assistant.
Every Wednesday from I to
p.m., diagnostic services in speech
and hearing will be conducted by
appointment by a member of the
Speech Department.
THE NEBRASKA Society for
unppied Children will give finan
cial assistance to the speech lab
oratories for the children's serv
ices, and the Lincoln Red Cross
will continue its volunteer serv
ices in providing transportation fa
duties,
In addition, University students
needing speech or hearing reha
bilitation and training will be serv
iced during the afternoon hours.
Special groups are open to for
eign students needing speech help
and to adult stutterers wanting
corrective speech training. Other
special classes will be open to stu
dents with voice and articulation
problems.
THE DEPARTMENTS of psy
chology and education psychology
and measurements assist the
speech laboratories in psychologi
cal evaluations. The College of
Dentistry and department of perio
dontics co-operate in checking
cleft-palate children and in cases
of defective detention,
Dr. William Brill of the depart
ment of mental hygiene co-oper
ates as psychiatric consultant for
University students, and the de
partment of audio visual aids pro
vides equipment and materials
needed for special training in the
laboratories
Three-Day
Tax Meet
Scheduled
A three-day Federal Tax Insti
tute will be held at the University
in Love Library Auditorium start
ing Thursday.
The Institute, which will discuss
changes resulting from the Reve
nue Code of 1954, will cover federal
income, gift and estate taxes.
Corwin D. Moore of Lincoln,
chairman of the Institute commit
tee, said the Revenue Code of 1954
is the "mose radical revision of
our tax code since inception of the
federal income tax."
CHANCELLOR CLIFFORD M.
Hardin will open the Institute
Thursday at 10 a.m.
Three of the speakers are mem
bers of the committee on federal
taxation of the American Institute
of Accounts, which assisted in re
vising the tax code.
Everett C. Johnson of Chicago
will discuss "Partnerships" at 7:30
p.m. Thursday.
Gerhard Mayer of Chicago will
speak on "Gains, Losses and Ba
sis" at 9 a.m. Friday and will con
duct a question and answer period
at 11:30 a.m.
JAMES E. PITT of Minneapolis
will discuss "Returns, Payment and
Adninistrative Problems" at 3:30
p.m. followed by a question and
answer period at 4:15 pjn.
Other speakers will be Eldon
H. Giants of Detroit; John P. Beg
ley, professor of accounting at
Creighton University; Paul Cross
man, professor of accounting at
Omaha University, and Earl S.
Fulbrook, dean of the College of
Business Administration at the
University.
NU Offers Language
Courses For Children
University romance and Ger
manic language departments are
French, German and Spanish to
children of elementary school age.
Classes are taught at 10 and
11 a.m. on Saturdays at Hunting
ton School. The plan has been in
operation for three years. When
it started there were 10 students
taking French. The enrollment for
this session is expected to reach
150.
Charles Colman acting chair
man of the romance language de
partment, explained the course as
"part of a national re-awakening
of interest in languages. It is part
ly due to the influence of the
United Nations and the feeling that
we can cooperate more with for
eign peoples if we can speak their
language."
-COLEMAN WENT on to say that
"nationally the movement has
mushroomed in the last few years,
so that probably well over 200,000
elementary school children will
be studying foreign languages in
the. United States, whereas several
years ago there were only a few
hundred."
The chief problem has been to
find enough qualified teachers to
handle the classes. A combination
of accurate pronounciation, flu
ency and an elementary school
certificate are required.
"One of the r asons it is so im
portant to start a child early," said
Colman, "is that they have no
difficulty imitating a foreign ac
cent, whereas adults have already
KEN EDDY'S
DRIVE IN
(Jualily-Cleanlinet
Sertire
48th and "O"
NUers Celebrate Half time Lead
Cruising in a five passenger
Sesna 190, Gene Christensen and
Danny Fogel became the first
cheerleaders in the history of
Nebraska to fly to a football
game away from home. Celebrat
Summer Changes
University
Announced
During the summer, the Board
of Regents approved many new
appointments, changes in title,
resignations and leaves of absence.
New appointments include:
Extension division assistants:
Harold Van DeRiet, Paul Guyer,
Pearl Linde, Daryl Bohl, Delbert
Lane. Margaret Slattery, Harry
Stokely and Ronald Stoller.
Chemistry: Eugene Nightingale
Jr., Jay Taylor, instructors. Bio
chemistry and nutrition: Arthur
Speece, assistant. Dentistry: Dr.
Elvin Wilkinson, instructor, part &
pedodontics.
ECONOMICS: WILFORD Wort-
man, instructor; ur. u e r a l a
Thompson, assistant professor;
Seneca Eldredge, instructor; Rob
ert Bingham, instructor.
English: Dr. Dudley Bailey, as
sistant professor; Robert Hard-
Lake Renamed
Regional Union
Representative
Duane Lake, manager of the Un
ion, has been renamed regional
representative for student unions in
Kansas, Iowa, Missouri and Ne
braska by the Association of Col
lege Unions.
Lake, president of the Associa
tion in 1950-1951, was reappointed
as regional representative to the
Association's Board of Advisors
by current president William E.
Rion.
UNDER THE guidance of Willie
Hoppe, the Association of College
Unions has promoted intercolle
giate activities such as billiards and
bowling. While union manager at
South Dakota State, Lake sponsored
two national championship teams.
After Lake's term as Association
president terminated in 1951 be was
presented with a solid ivory gavel
made from billiard balls Hoppe
used in winning his third national
billiards championship. The pre
sentation was made by the National
Billiards Congress.
formed their speech habits."
In order to help meet the short
age of teachers, the language de
partment is planning a workshop
for four weeks during the 1955
summer school session for ele
mentary school teachers. It will
give the teachers intensive prac
tice in conversation, phonetics and
methodology.
Instructors for the elementary
course now in session are Leon
Rottman, Stephanie Sander and
Margaret Dolezal, German; Denise
Nordon, Bridget Watson, Mrs.
Cook and Mrs. Ferraris, French;
Mrs. Robinet, Mrs. Severn and
Chincon-Bustos, Spanish.
COLEMAN, Dr. Robert Carter,
Mrs. Nordon, Lloyd Teals and Mrs.
Robinet have compiled a textbook
based on their experiences in the
course. It includes language exer
cises, games and songs for stu
dents. The program was aided by the
Rockefeller Foundation investi
gation. The Foundation gave a
grant of $120,000 to the. Modern
Language Association to make a
study of the status of foreign lan
guage teaching in the United
States. The conclusion reached
was that there is a need for ex
pansion at the elementary school
level.
OPENINGS
For male students interested
14 sating at the Baptist Co
op. Food costs bar averaged
about $25 per month for the
last 3 yrs. Come to 315 N
Street at 12 noon or 8 PM for
further information.
THE NEBRASKAN
' tZZ? j t i
ing the short-lived, half-time lead
of the Cornhuskers are NU stu
dents, left to right, Christensen,
Jo Johnson, Dick Rice, Barb
Medlin and Larry Rose. Two
Faculty Appointments
By Board Of Regents
wick, Eva Michel-Lewinson, Wini
fred Hunt, Joan Kulgren, Frank
Thompson Jr. instructors.
Home economics: Dr. Helen
Linkswiler, associate home eco
nomist and associate professor;
Mrs. Donna Geshwender, techni
cian; Opal McCullough, instructor.
College of Agriculture: Kenneth
Scheer, instructor, social sciences
and assistant coach; Thomas
CBoyle, instructor and assistant
coach.
Industrial arts: Gerald Parks,
instructor part time.
Law: Phillip Holm, Charles
Gromley, teaching associates; Wil
liam Samore, instructor; Emory
Burnett, associate director, Legal
Aid Bureau.
Library: Gerard McCabe, as
sistant librarian with rank of in
structor; Keith Warne, senior as
sistant librarian with rank of in
structor Janet Schmidt, educa
tional librarian.
MATHEMATICS : Dr. Fred An
d r e w s, assistant professor of
mathematics and assistant statisti
cian, College of Agriculture; Dr.
Frank Anderson, instructor.
Physical Education for Women:
Beverly June Becker, Dorothy
Maxwell, instructors; Ruth Lev
inson, assistant professor.
Physical education for men:
Jerry Lee, track coach and asso
ciate professor; Donald Strasheim,
wrestling coach.
Prosthodontics: Jack Knedle, in
structor. Mechanical engineering : Richard
Dudek, assistant professor.
Guidance consultant: Lyle Ed
mison. Political science: Arthur Winter,
assistant professor.
Romance languages: Denise
Nordon, instructor part time.
Secondary education: Dr. Gold
enstein, assistant professor.
Sociology: Mrs. Norma Ver
Maas, visiting instructor, one se
mester. Speech: John McGee, instruc
tor; Carence Denton, speech and
dramatic art instructor.
University Health Services: Ber
nice Carlson, office manager.
Florence Morri.s psychiatric so
cial worker.
Assistant to Dean of Women:
Mr Frances Vogel.
AGRICULTUaiL EXTENSION
division assistants: Char lan Graff,
Gary Boyne Carey, Eleanor Stev
enson, Maxine Ann Patterson,
Mary Margaret Muir, Louis Dag
ger, Ralph Hild, Philip Sutton,
Charles Martin, George Sundstrom,
Gladys Fossum, Paul Swanson,
Morris Hemstrom, Thomas Hruza,
Bernard Wallman, John Robertson.
Agronomy; Herman Gon, re
search association; Marvin
Rhodes, assistant: Wayne Hansen,
assistant.
Animal husbandry; William Te
ter, assistant.
Home economics: Mrs. Irmel
Sheffrey, Dorothy Larery, instruc
tors. College of Arts and Sciences:
Thomas Wikstrom, assistant pro
fessor in music; Phillip Febl, as-
TURHPIKE
RALLY! RALLY!
Donee To
BOB C A LAME
Orchestra
Friday, Oct. 1
Dancing 8:30-12
Admission: 1.50 per couple
Come dreed
at you are
Friday, Oct. 8 Ray Anthony
Courtesy Sunday Journal and Star
cheerleaders will accompany the
team on all games away with
the possible exception of Hawaii.
All yell kings will migrate to
Colorado by train.
sistant professor of art; Georgia
D a n d o s, pre-school children's
speech clinic teacher; Robert
Beadell, music instructor; Stanley
Pincelt, Jr., instructor in history.
Business administration: John
Minick, instructor; Richard Harns
berger, part-time instructor in
business law; Robert Bingham,
economics instructor; H. Robert
Dodge, instructor.
Mechanical engineering: Morris
Schneider, instructor.
EXTENSION DIVISION: Harrell
Bassham, part-time instruct o r;
Roscoe Shields, assistant coordin
ator of art in extension.
Library: Wayne Collings, Ag
College librarian; Bernard Kreiss
man, assistant director of Humani
ties Libraries; Nelson Piper, Rob
ert Myers, Clara Meckel, assistant
librarians.
Public relations: Maritherese
Sellers, secretary-assistant.
Radiology and physical medi
cine: Dale Henley Davies, instruc
tor. Teachers College: Robert John
son, instructor.
Television: Robert Schlater, as
sistant in educational television.
Psychiatric training: William
Brill, assistant professor, part
time, Robert Dickinson, assistant
professor of neurology and psy
chiatry; Robert Ellingson, medical
psychology associate; Walter G.
Klopfer, assistant professor, part
time; Floyd O. Ring, instructor of
neurology and psychiatry. .
COLLEGE OF . MEDICINE: Dr
Joseph Gardner, assistant profes
sor of anatomy; Dr. Gordon Gibbs,
associate professor of pediatrics;
Dr. Arthur Bennet, professor of
physiology and pharmacology and
assistant chairman of department;
Shirley Jack, assistant dietitian in
hospital; Dr. Merle Musselman,
associate professor of surgery; Dr.
Franklyn Arnhoff, medical psy
chology instructor; Theresa Mid
ler, nursing professor; Dr. Arthur
Dunn, assistant -professor, bio
chemistry; Dr. Charles Vacanti,
student and personnel health in
structor; Dr. Frederick Ware;
physiology and pharmacology in
structor; Dr. Harold Martin, neu
rology and psychiatry, assistant
professor.
The Foundation
and Scholarship
4
VI
Lev
The U of N Foundation is now
writing scholarship and fellow
ship checks to over 200 students
at the University of Nebraska.
These checks will help pay for
tuition, fees, and books for these
students of the many Foundation
Scholarship Funds.
The Foundation is doing an
important job for our youth in
helping them obtain an educa
tion at the U of N.
U of N
Foundation
106 Love Library
Lincoln 8, Nebraska
Queen Of Hay Days
Mflson Sophomore
Meets Atovie Stars
By GRACE HARVEY
Staff Writer
Another beauty queen has been
added to the campus roster.
Blonde, brown-eyed Fran Got
schall, a sophorriore in Arts and
Sciences, won a week's all-expense-paid
trip to Hollywood when
she was chosen Queen of Hay
Days, an annual fall celebration
at Atkinson, Nebr.
Miss Gotschall competed with
twenty other women to win the
title of Miss Atkinson and the op
portunity to participate in the
Hay Day contest. She was chosen
Queen of Hay Days on the basis
of poise, personality and appear
ance in a bathing suit and formal.
She said, "We had to come out
on a stage individually and walk
up and around a long ramp and
back again. When it was my
turn, I was so frightened I thought
I couldn't move!"
Miss Gotschall added that the
three judges, one of whom was
Miss Bette Bonn -f the Bette Bonn
Schools of Modeling reviewed
the girls by number instead c' the
community they represented. "I
was never so thrilled in my life
as when they announced that my
number, No. 3, was the new Queen
of Hay Days!"
"As queen I reigned over the
festivities wearing a big crown
and fancy robe." she added.
Miss Gotschall and her mother
flew to Santa Monica and stayed
at the Hotel Miramir. Their plane
was met by the publicity chairman
of the Santa Monica Chamber of
Commerce. She ;aid, "He drove
us all over town in the prettiest
white convertible!
Each day of her visit was filled
with surprises and meetings with
Hollywood stars and dignitaries.
The day after she arrived Miss
Gotschall met the sheriff of Los
Angeles County and the mayor of
Santa Monica. She gave the may
or her calling card, a miniature
bale of hay.
Of all the important people she
met, she said, "Everyone was so
friendly and easy to talk to! They
would just come up and shake my
hand and say he"". I thought all
the movie stars would just be up
in the air above me, but it isn't
hard to meet them and talk to
them they're just like anybody
else."
MISS GOTSCHALL said, "That
first day was just full of exciting
things! Lawrence Welk, Roberta
Lynn and I were guest stars on
the radio program, "Matinee."
Then I had dinner at the Brown
Derby with Groucho Marx. -
The next day Miss Gotschall and
her mother toured Catalina Island.
They visited Seal Rock and took a
trip on a glass-bottomed boat.
MISS GOTSCHALL said that she
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ANNE FRANCIS
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Tuesday, Sept. 28, 1954
had the most fun of all when she
toured Universal-International stu
dios as the guest of D-nny Thorn
as. She said, "When Danny took
m- to lunch in the studio cafe, 11
these movie stars were sitting
around in costume the studio
was shooting two pictures at the
time. It gave me a thrill to see
the stars just relaxing and talk
ing and eating just like anyone
else on their lunch hour. And then
Danny introduced me to Mala
Powers, Tony Curtis and Jose
Ferrer!
Afterwards we visited all the
U-I buildings. In one they were
shooting "Lady Godiva in Coven,
try," and I was introduced to the
stars, Maureen O'Hara, Victor
McGlaphlin and George Natar.
When George came running up and
put his arm around me and said,
"Hi, Fran,' I almost fell through
the floor! Then he and I had our
pictures taken he was all dressed
up in his costume for the l ovie."
She said, "The next set we visit,
ed was "The Looters," with Julia
Adams and Rory Calhoun. I was
sitting by the director watching
when Rory turned around and
picked up a large rock in the scene
he was rehearsing and said, 'Here,
take it for a minute, Fran, It's
very heavy.' When he put it in
my hands, I discovered that it was
just a fake and as light as a fea.
ther."
THE NEXT DAY Miss Gotschall
attended the University of South,
em California Washington State
football game. She said that she
was impressed most by USC's
lighted student card section. That
evening she went to Ocean Park
on the pier and danced to the
music of Lawrence Welk and his
orchestra.
On the last day Miss Gotschall
and her mother visited Nott's
Berry Farm and Will Roger's
Ranch. She said that since she
lives on a ranch at home, she
wanted to see what a real Calif,
ornia ranch would be like.
THAT EVENING she attended
the Colgate Comedy Hour at the
Hollywood Bowl where she met
Eddie Fischer, Louie Armstrong,
the Vagabonds, Peggy Lee, Rocky
Marciano and Debbie Reynolds.
As to the looks of Hollywood
men, Miss Gotschall said, "Movies
and television just don't do jus
tice to Eddie Fisher , Rory Cal.
houn and Tony Curtis. They act
young and gay and funny and
friendly."
University Dames
University Dames, organization
for wives of University students,
will held its first meeting of the
year Thursday, September 30 at
7:3 in Ellen Smith HalL
President Beverly Sprague urges
everyone to come.
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