All-School Scheduled! Eledrioiu the m a a UMOC, Honorary Commandant Vote Set An all-University election will be held Tuesday to' select the Ugliest Man on Campus and four finalists for Honorary Commandant. Voting will take place in Ag and city Unions from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Stu dents must present ID cards to vote. 1 Candidates for UMOC are Al Convocation Speaker . Gen. Romulo Former Editor, Ambassador Gen. Carlos P. Romulo. United Nations Chairman for the Phih pines, will speak on "America's Stake in Asia" at an all-Univer sity convocation in the Coliseum, Wednesday at 11 a.m. All 11 a.m. classes will be can celled so that all students and faculty will have the opportunity of hearing the General. Gen. Romulo has represented the Philippines in the U. N. almost Biz Ad Executive To Speak At Banquet W. Wallace Keenan, Omaha ad vertising executive, will speak at the annual BizAd Honors Banquet Tuesday at 6 -.m. in Parlors XYZ in the Union. Senator Sam Reynolds, Nebras ka Senator originally scheduled to speak, notified the Business Ad ministration Student Council that he will be unable to appear. Keenan is well known as an ed ucator and a businessman. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree and a Bachelor of Law degree as well as a Master of Arts. He has taught at Creighton Uni versity in Omaha, has had exper ience as a special agent for FBI and has served as trust officer for an Omaha bank. He also has had much speaking experience as rep resentative of the Dale Carnegie Courses. Jerry Jensen, president of the BizAd Student Executive Council, will be toastmaster for the evening program. Ten Gold Key Awards will be presented to outstanding freshmen in the college of Busi ness Administration by William Gold. Homer B. Kenison, president of Beta Gamma Sigma, will present the new members of the national honorary fraternity of business ad ministration. Dr. Earl S. Fullbrook, dean of the college will make awards to scholarship winners in the college. Tickets are now on sale for $1.50 by all members of the Biz Ad Student Council, by Dean Full brook's office and in the Biz Ad office, room 210 in the Social Sci ence building. Tickets will also be available in the Union ticket booth and at the door. 'Mainstreet, USA' Theme Of '55 Follies The theme for the Coed Follies, which will be presented Feb. 23 and March 1 at the Nebraska The ater will be "Mainstreet, U.S.A.," it has been announced by the AWS Board. Paula Broady, chairman for the show, has announced committee assignments. Skitmaster, Courtney Campbell; Publicity, Kathy O'Don nell and Line a Buthman; Notifi cations, Clare Hinman; Typical Nebraska Coed, Mary House, chair man, Kay Skinner and Marty Mor rison; Lighting, Doris" Frank. Tickets, Mary Domingo, chair man, Beth Keenan, Charlotte Ben son, Betty Hrabik; stage Man ager, Carole Link; Programs, Nan cy Hemphill, chairman, Kay Nosky and Linca Buthman; Judges, Ann Skold; Ushers, Joyce Bennington; Flowers and Cups, Marilyn Brew ster and Eileeen Mullarky; Trav eler Acts, Marial Wright. Scripts are due Nov. 30. x Cornhusker Rated All-American Book An All-American rating, the highest rating awarded to college yearbooks by the National Schol astic Press Association, was given to the 1954 Cornhusker. Only three yearbooks in the school classification of 7,000 or more received the top rating. Of total 232 yearbooks judged, nine per cent were awarded All American ratings. Barbara Adams Noble was edi tor of the 1954 Cornhusker. Mid-Year Graduates All students who plan to receive oachelor or advanced degrees or Caching certificates at the close f this semester should apply for them by Nov. 1, 1954, if they have nt yet done so. Applications should be made at the Senior Checking Office, B-9 Administration Building, between the hours of 9 a.m. and '4 p.m. Monday through Friday, or 9 a.m. to 12 noon Saturday, Holbert, Beta Theta Pi; Andy Loenr, beieck Quadrangle; Bruce Martin, Sigma Chi; James LaRue, Beta Sigma Psi; Doran Jacobs, eia Beta Tau; Eob Hofacre, AL pna Tau Omega; Gene Welch, Phi Kappa Psi; Don Glantz, Delta lau Delta; Bill Harmon, Delta Upsilon. Dick Coffey, Phi Gamma Delta; continuously and was former sec. retary of foreign affairs and am bassador to the United States. Having a varied career as pub lisher, editor, University profes sor, author, playwright and United States Army officer, he has trav eled extensively in Asia. In 1941 Gen. Romulo won a Pulit zer Prize for his news stories on Japanese aims in the Orient. In San Francisco in 1945, Gen. Romulo was present when the charter for the United Nations or ganization was drawn up. He thought each meeting of the General Assembly should have a reverent moment of prayer before staring its business. Several ob jections arose so the final decision was for "a minute of silence" be fore the meetings. Gen. Romulo was elected presi dent of the Fourth General As sembly in 1949 and helped make the moment of silence more signif icant with these words: "Let us pray to Almighty God to give us courage and the vision to face our awesome responsibility." He served as Gen. Douelas Mac- Arthur's aide-de-camp on Batan, Corregidor and Australia during World War II. Staying until all the forces had left Batan, he was the last one to depart. He accom panied General MacArthur and the liberating forces in the invasion of Leyte and in the recapture of Manila. . Gen. Romulo himself is an ex ample of his thesis that the Fili pino is the composite of the Orient, the product of three influences: the basic Malayan, Spanish, and American. His extensive knowl edge of existing conditions in Asia will prove of value to all Univer sity students. Second Film To Feature Toll, Curtis The second film in the monthly Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., in Love Library Auditorium. The series are sponsored by the departments of history and political science, the Union and Bureau of Audio Vis ual Instruction. The film, "Do Security Regula tions Hamper Science?", featur ing Thomas B. Curtis (R-Mo) and Dr. John S. Toll, department of physics of the University of Mary land, will open the program. A panel dixcussion will follow the film with Dr. Carl J. Schneid er, associate professor of political science, as moderator. The other members cf the panel are Prof. Norman Cromwell, department of chemistry, and Lincoln attorney, Roy A. Sheaff. Mitchell Named New Nebraskan Copy Editor Marilyn Mitchell, junior in Arts and Sciences, was appointed copy editor of The Nebraskan by the Board of Student Publications Fri day. The copy editor vacancy was caused by the resignation of Har riett Ruegg. i r f i m - ' , ',-r - f - rill. . K-ttt- Cixk A It may have been the cause c! worth it. The pictures above Husker and Buff fans above are haggard faces, bleary looks and speak for themselves. The puzzle a prediction of the Huskers over empty classrooms Monday mor- posed by the picture on the left joyed attack on the gaal posts ning but to the several thous- is a real .teaser; which students after the final gun, before a mob and students who migrated to are from Nebraska? The reac- of Nebraskans swooped down up clrado last weekend, it was tions registered on the faces of on the luckless posts, and the Herb Meissner, Phi Delta Theta; jjod amitn, Kappa Sigma; Bob Brum, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Fred Longacre, Theta Xi: Norm Veitzer. Sigma Alpha Mu; Willard Fagler, H C Candidates Candidates for Honorary Com- manaant are Agnes Anderson, Joyce Bennington, Marilyn Brews ter, Sherry Clover, Phyllis Colbert, Delores Carag, Rita Dorn, Mimi DuTeau, Marilyn Eaton, Marion Kstrom, Terry Fitch, Judy Flans- Durg, Mary Fuelberth, Delores Urarrett. uarol GUlett, Marilyn Hamer, Jan Harrison, Nancy Hawkins, Nancy Hemphill, Martie Hill, Lynn noiiana, Jo Johnson, Marilyn Johnson, Joan Joyner, Katy Kel ley, Jo Knapp, Ann Kokjer, Joyce Laase, Barbara Leigh, Helen Lo- max. Janey Mapes, Mitzi Marquesen, Barbara Medlin, Jo Meyers, Eileen Mullarky, Chloryce Ode, Nancy Odum, Dottie Orchard, Marilyn Pelikan, Muriel Pickett, Marian Scott, Ann Skold, Jean Steffen, Winnie Stolz, Bridget' Watson, Norma Westcott and Kay Yeiter. Down Rules Reviewed By AWS Since downs are beine sent out this week, the Associated Wo men Students Board reminds wo men of the rules on downs. If a woman receives a down in two or more hours, she may not go out after 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday until the down is re moved. Downs are effective im mediately after a woman receives them and remain in effect until the next down list is received bv the housemother or until the down is removed. The procedure for removing a down is as follows: Talk to the in structor of the course in which the down was received. If the down is removable, complete the work and get a slip from the instructor in dicating that the down has been removed. Second, record the removal of the down with the Associate Dean of Women in Ellen Smith Hall. Third, file the removal with the house mother. If is no longer necessary to have a down removed through the Dean of Student Affairs, If the down is a mistake, it is still necessary to follow the above rules to have it removed. NU Summer Fellowships Research Council Seeks Applicants For Grants The University Research Coun cil is accepting applications for faculty fellowships for the summer of 1955. Granted on a competitive basis and judged by the merits of the Handicraft Class To Begin Tuesday Handicraft lessons begin Tues day in the Handicraft Shop of the Union from 7 to 9:30 p.m. under the supervision of Miss Verna Snell. Among the various crafts offered are leather, woodcarving, metal work, textile painting, making stuffed animals, Swedish weaving, gimp (plastic work), self -hardening clay, bead work and coiled wire jewelry. The series of lessons, sponsored by the Union House and Office Committee, consists of six free lessons and will continue every Tuesday night through Dec. 7. irti-iiM ii. M-r-'--i ,.........- 1,1 Huskers Celebrate As Vol. 55, No. 16 Pleasure Time, FRED 'Death Of Salesman' Theater To Present Honorary Producers Two Honorary Producers and four runners-up will be formally presented before the raising of the curtain on "Death of a Salesman," Tuesday night in the newly-dedicated Howell Memorial Theater. The candidates of the organized houses in men's and women's di visions which sold the most season tickets to University Theater pro ductions will be named Honorary Producers. A trophy will be presented to the winning organized houses with the proposed research and the qualifi cations of the staff member, the fellowships are designed to encour age the faculty to engage in pro ductive research. The fellowships will provide op portunity to carry out such pro ductive research either on the Uni versity campus or elsewhere, de pending on the nature of the prob lem. Fellowships will not be grant ed for work to be used as theses for advanced degrees, and ordin arily staff members who have one or more years on the faculty at the time of application will be giv en preference. The scholarships will amount to $850 and will be tax exempt. Ap plications may be obtained in the office of the Graduate College, Social Sciences Room III, and should be submitted in duplicate no later than November 15. Season Tickets On Sale For Fine Arts Ensemble The seventh season of chamber music by the Fine Arts Ensemble has been announced by the Friends of Chamber Music. Con certs are scheduled for Union Ballroom Thursday, November 4, and Thursday, April 21 at 8 p.m. Season tickets of $3.60 for adults ai;d $1.80 for students may be ob tained by writing Friends of Chamber Music, 1200 South 49th, Lincoln. ,-f Boulder Buffs F- .1 V .Vt m 'W'i M & 'BO....' JVI Lincoln, 1955 !n Hong, iemiinisyiivsiiniDS'inis WARING name of the house (not the win ning candidate) and the year en graved on it. The trophy will be kept by the winning house during the 1954-55 school year and the 1955 Rush Week. Complimentary Tickets Awarded The six candidates for Honorary Producer have received compli mentary tickets for the Tuesday night performance of "Death of a Salesman." The two Honorary Producers will be given two com plimentary tickets for the remain ing University productions. Individual portraits of the Hon orary Producers will be displayed in the Theater lobby and will be given later to the individuals. The Honorary Producer tradition began in 1948 when representa tives of Kappa Delta, Margy Zel lers, and Zeta Beta Tau, Byron Krasne, were given the title in the old Temple Theater, the remodel ed Howell Theater. NU Students To Debate Policies, Views A debate on issues in the cur rent congressional campaign will be sponsored by the Nebraska Uni versity Council on World Affairs. Participating in the debate will be Allen Overcash, junior in Business Administration, and Dick Fellman, sophomore in Arts and Sciences. The debate will be held in Ellen Smith Hall at 7:30 p.m. Overcash and Fellman will give a general review of policies and attitudes of Nebraska congression al candidates. Overcash will de fend the Democratic Party stand, and Fellman will defend the Re publican Party point of view. Issues to be discussed will in clude farm price supports, public and private power, UMT, trade policies, and the relationship of congressional policies to the Eisen hower program. After the debate, which will in clude a speech by both Overcash and Fellman and a short rebuttal, an open question period will be held. a i y. "a Bow proud markers were reduced to various sized souvenirs to be carted home and posted on bul letin boards and dorm walls be side the memorandums of other colorful weekends. (Nebraskan Photo by Maynard Small.) Nebraska Fred Waring and his Pennsyl vanians will present their new musical theater show, "Pleasure Time, 1955" Sunday, Nov. 21, at 7:30 p.m. at University Coliseum. This production is being spon sored by the Union Board of Man agers. A special student section on the main floor will be reserved for students. Tickets for this see tion are $1.50. Advance sale of tickets for stu dents only will begin Nov. 1, 2 and 3 in both the Ag and City Unions. Sales will reopen Nov. 10. Regular tickets sales will start Nov. 8 at Walt's Music Store and the Union with prices at $1, $1.50, $2, $2.50 and $3. Electronic Innovations The presentation here is part of a 29-week road show by Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians and will feature special electronic innovations by Waring himself, Both young performers making their first nation-wide tour and many old-favorites from the glee club and orchestra will appear with the featured soloists in what Waring has called "the most grati fying sound I've heard." Parents who wish to write in for tickets should make checks pay able to the Student Union and en close a self-addressed, stamped envelope. The Pennsylvanians were organ ized first in 1916 by Waring and his brother, Tom. Beginning as a four man group, it later grew to 11 and was known as "Waring's Tewlve Collegians," In 1927 they were selected as the outstanding American dance band. Group Played In Paris The organization went to Paris to play at the Cafe des Ambassa deurs and upon returning appeared in the Broadway musical "Hello Yourself." The Waring group, in cluding the glee club, was first in troduced on radio in 1933 and in 1949 Waring began his television series. - inrougn nis interest in music education Waring has received the Lowell Mason award. Waring is a trustee of Penn State, his alma mater, and is an active member of the Lambs Club. vThe Fred Waring Show commit AUF Applications Due Wednesday All University Fund executive board filings are due Wednesday, Phyllis Colbert, AUF president, has announced. Miss Colbert said that anyone who has worked in AUF is eligible to apply and board experience is not necessary. Applications for president and vice-president in charge of publicity, vice-president in charge of solicitations, secre tary and treasurer may be filed in the AUF office, Room 306 of the Union. Applicants should also sign the list for an interview time. The present executive board will in terview applicants and a slate will be presented to AUF members at the Nov. 11 meeting when voting for next year's officers will be held. The Outside World By FRED DALY Staff Writer Cabinet Makes TV Debut The first nationally televised and broadcast cabinet meeting in history heard Secretary of State John Foster Dulles report on the West European defense agreement Monday. President Eisenhower dramatized the importance of the agreement by arranging for the televised meeting. He went to the airport to greet Dulles who spoke of "a new era in Europe." It was the first time Eisenhower had turned up at the airport to greet a returning cabinet official. Dulles expressed an optimistic feeling for the beginning of a "new era" in a short speech at the airport. He then gave Eisenhower a typewritten document of some 40-50 pages presumed to be a confi dential report of the meeting. K. Of C. Action Condemned A brother of the late Msgr. Edward J. Flanagan, founder of famed Boys Town, has asked that Father Flanagan's name no longer be used to identify a Knights of Columbus Council which refused the entry of three Negroes. The request was in a letter from Msgr. Patrick A. Flanagan to John F. Krecji, a grand knight of the Father Flanagan of Boys Town Council of the Knights of Columbus. Three Negroes were rejected when their application to join the council was voted down five to seven by the Council's 2000 mem bers. National K. of C. rules say four "no" votes are enough. Nebraska Population Up Nebraska's population gain sirice 1950 has been four times that of the previous ten years. The population reached 1,350,000 by last July 1, a gain of some 36,000 since the last official census in 1950: While the increase was nearly four times the growth the state had in the decade from 1940-1950, it still was only half the average growth enjoyed by the nation as a whole. The national gain was 6.3 per cent from 149,643,000 in 1950 to 162,414,000 at the present time. Only three of the 48 states had a iecrease in population during this time. Nevada, with a 33.1 percent increase, led all states in percentage of gain. Psychiatrist Says McClelland 'Sane' Dr. F. L. Spradling, superintendent of the Nebraska State Hospital, testified Monday that Charles Edward McClelland, prison inmate on trial for murder, "has been sane at all times in his life." McClelland, on trial for the first degree murder of a prison guard, has pleaded not guilty bp reason of insanity after signing a confession of the crime. Dr. Spradling, a psychiatrist, said that, in his opinion, McClellarsd had not be;n temporarily insane on April 16, the date of the murder. He said as near as he could determine the defendant knew right from wrong and knew the "nature and quality of his acts." UVi Tuesday, October 26, 1954 Spimsir o tee consists of Ann Skold, co ordinator; Ralph Hayward, Coli seum; Lois Simmerman, tickets, and Shirley Jesse, promotion. 'Hello Hardins' AIM Mumnus To Relate Stale History Ellsworth DuTeau, past president of the Alumni Association and Lin coln business man, will speak at the "Hello Hardins" dinner in tht Union Sunday evening. DuTeau, said that he would talk on the story of Ne braska and the University. He said that he believed his speech would be of interest to stu d e n t s, faculty and the cha n c e 1 1 o r since many of Courtew Sunday Journal and Star the facts he will disclose are un known to native Nebraskans. "Every creed, every nation and every state has its story," DuTeau said, "and I believe Ne braska has a story. -The story of the University is one of which every citizen, student and alum nus C2.1 be proud. The story shoi'ld make students proud to be students and proud of their degrees." Tom Woodward, Nebraskan edi tor, said, in connection with the selection of Duteau, "I think we are more than fortunate to. have Ellsworth DuTeau as the speaker for the dinner. I have beard him speak before student audiences twice before and believe the spirit and interest he shows in the University has done much to change even the most lackadaisi cal attitude." "He seems to know more about this school's history and out standing accomplishments than anyone I've heard," Woodward said. DuTeau was graduated from the University in 1927. He was a member of Innocents Society, Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He was also a member of the Nebraskan staff. DuTeau was secretary of the Alumni Association from 1939 to 1946. He is immediate past presi dent of the Alumni Association. DuTeau recently wrote a book entitled: "How to Succeed Through Speech." He is president of The University Club and ac tive in many other affairs, espe cially the Chamber of Commerce. Tickets for the banquet may be purchased from Corn Cob and Kosmet Klub workers and Ne braskan staff memhers for $1.60. 'The dinner will begin at 5:30 p.m. """""' "