Fifty-Three Chosen For Men's Glee Club Group Formed After 13 Year Lapse ...three members of the new-1 Baritone- Walt, cl.-ji nftv-three members w formed University Men's Glee rlub were announced Tuesday by nale B. Ganz, assistant professor voice, who will direct the new Mr! Ganz said the Glee Club is .omposed of men students who are Li-music majors but are inter ested in singing. Members will meet Tuesdays and Thursdays each week, starting Teb. 8, and will re vive' one-hour credit. The Glee club has been formed after an absence of 13 years from the University campus. Two hun dred twenty-five men took part In editions which were held last week in the Music building. During the coming year, the Glee Club is expected to perform for both campus and off-campus .vMits. Ganz said. Members selected after a try out are: First Tenor: William Raecke, Edward Kemble, Dennis Coleman, John Chappell, John Nelson, Jay Coffin, Steve Simmons, Richard Hill, Richard Farner, John Coover, Marx Peterson, Bruce Martin, Jim Feather and Jim Jacques. Second Tenor: Richard Lannon, Donald Fitzgerald, Dale Lewis, Tom Olson, Jim McGath, Gerald Rounsborg, Gene Hiatt, Jerry Swncer, Scott Beadle, Larry Ep stein, Parker Shipley, Don Chil coat 'and William Harris. Air Cadets To Take 2 Field Trips Air Force ROTC senior cadets will make field trips to Florida and California during Christmas vaca tion to become acquainted with the tvpe of training they will receive r ... n rc: after graduation as nymg uiuceis. Approximately 20 cadets will fly to Nellis Air Force Base at Las Vegas, Calif, and other bases near Los Angeles. Nineteen seniors will visit Bartow and Orlando training bases in Florida. The California field trip will leave Saturday and return Dec. 23. Students going are Kenneth Phil brick, Martin Nielson, Joe Kroese, Donald Summers, Charles Arm strong, Harold Salber, Jerry Fla herty, Tim Hamilton, Homer Ken nison, Charles Betzelberger. Eliot Pyle, Glenn Burgess, Philip Haas, Leonard Singer, Gordon Pe terson, Rodney Schroeder, Norman Francis, Raymond Hruby, John Jeffery, Arthur Raun, Bennett Zin necher, Gary Koberstein. The field trip to Florida will leave Dec. 28 and return Jan. 3. Seniors making the trip are: Daryl Wood, James Lowell, Allan Aden, Murray Backhaus, Charles Mar shall, Roger Richards, Gene Scran ton, Dale Nitzel, Jack Stiehl. Samuel Bell, Richard Faes, John Barkey, Norman Reed, Donavan Tadken, Donald Oden, Lawrence Ackland, Jack Geist, Duane Te Selle, Ronald Longacre. Money Given To University Memorial Fund An addition of $83,759 for the support of the William E. Sharp Memoral Scholarship Fund at the University was announced by Perry Branch, director-secretary of the University Foundation. The money was received alter the recent settlement of the estate Mrs. Lila E. Sharp of Lincoln, ho died Dec. 5, 19.")2 in Hastings. Branch said the additional money will assure an increase in both the amount and number of scholarships given each year to Vorthy students. The William E. Sharp Fund was established Feb. 26, 1947, by Mrs. Sharp in memory of her husband v'ito a gift of $5,000. irradiation Studied By JO ANN JL'NGE Staff Writer Two psychology graduates, Wes ley Blair and Sachio Ashidia, are forking under a contract with the Atomic Energy Commission to in vestigate the effects of cranial ir radiation of rats. Dr. William Arnold, associate Professor of psychology, applied .toe contract by submitting the Project plans for consideration by 80 AEC committee two years ago. ' Rats Learn Faster contract was approved and Wanted to the University psycholo gy department under the supervi- ,u oi Arnold. It is renewed on a Jearlv ho;,. j .as applied for another renewel for next year tU ? pro-'ect of investigating the ects of cranial irradiation in w insists of many different ex tents. One of these experi n. conducted by Blair, found Baritone: Walter Schmidt. Mar. von Gilman, James Shook, Bob Knapple, Jim Kane, Jim Carson. Frank Tirro, Allan Schmid, Jerald Hurtz, Will Else, Richard Stopher, Charles Hitt and John Noble. Bass: Frederick Stelling, Bill Alexander, Dean Davison, Peter Anderson, Charles Thompson, Bob Hinman, Alan Anderson. Jim Hof stetter, Lonnie Bayer, Nathan Mil ler, Alien Ackerson, Chuck Hood ana tsryce Johnson. Symphony To Feature Eugene List The annual University Symphony Concert will be presented Jan. 9 in the Union Ballroom at 8 p.m. Ticket distribution will begin Jan 3 at 10 a.m. Due to the limited seating capacity of the Eallroom, admission to the concert will be by ticket only. Tickets may be ob tained by students at the main of fice of the Union upon presenta tion of ID cards. Tickets are lim ited to two per student. The symphony concert will fea ture Eugene List, nationally-known pianist. He will present a solo, "Piano Concerto In C Minor, No. 2 " by Rachmaninoff. A duet by' List and Emanuel Wishnow, symphony conductor, will be "concerto in F Major For Vi olin and Piano," by Haydn. Other numbers on the program will be: "Overture to Russian and Ludmilla," by Glinka; "A Night on Bald Mountain," by Mous sorgsky and "Prelude, Choral and Fugue," by Bach-Abert. IFC Schedules Yuletide Party For Orphans Eighty-three children from White hall Orphanage will be entertained at a Christmas party sponsored by the Interfraternity Council Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. A chili feed will precede a visit from Santa Claus, who will pass out presents donated by IFC mem ber organizations. Entertainment will be furnished by the Trend Four combo and Jan Harrison, vocalist. Each fraternity will send ap proximately five members to the party so that each child may be entertained by one or two men. Members of the D?C will also at tend. In previous years individual fra ternities planned parties to enter tain the orphans in groups. By having one big party the IFC hopes, to contact more children and to give each child more attention, ac cording to Tom Woodward and Walt Wright, co-chairmen of the party. Dick Reische is in charge of en tertainment. Santa To Attend Builders Banquet The first Builders Christmas Din ner will be held Wednesday at 6 p.m. in the Union Parlors XY. President Muriel Pickett will be toastmistress. Tickets, at $1.50, are being sold in a Union booth and by Board members and representatives in or ganized houses. The program will include a short talk by Andy Smith, Builders treasurer-elect, and selection by the Lin coln High Boy's Octet. Each per son .attending will bring a 25-cent gift, and Bill DeWulf, vice-president-elect will act as Santa Claus to distribute the presents. Cathy Olds, president-elect, and Judy Joyce, membership chair man, are in charge. that irradiated rats learn faster and retain the knowledge longer than common rats. This effect was obtained from the maze learning and retention pro cess which contains 14 units formed in a pathway to the food with side branches in the wrong direction.' Half of the rats were normal and half were irradiated. Hair Falls Out The irradiation process exposes only the rat's head to the x-rays, by placing the animal's head in a lead form called an exposure cyl inder. The x-rays cause the hair on the rat's head over this area to fall out, and the rat becomes sick for a week so that he does not eat or drink much water. About two weeks after the irradi ation process, the rat becomes normal again and will be sold for breeding purposes. The electrical engineering department helps the Vol. 55, No. 36 Army ROTC Seniors Assured Commissions Army ROTC cadets who complete their advanced ROTC traininz and receive diplomas before April 30, 1956, will be assured of commis sions, Col. Chester J. Dieste, pro fessor of military science and tac tics, announced Tuesday. According to present plans, seven Army ROTC cadets are expected to receive commissions in Febru ary and 112 in June. Before the Department of Army decision, cadets had received no positive assurance that they would receive commissions, Col. Diestel said. It depended on the number that the Army could absorb on active duty, he explained. February graduates will be or dered to active duty prior to June 30, and those graduating between May 1, 1955, and April 30, 1956, will be ordered to active duty be tween July 1, 1955, and June 30, 1956. While newly commissioned sec ond lieutenants can expect to be Union Seminar Five-Professor Panel To Speak On Turkey The recent trip to Turkey to or ganize a new university will be discussed at the student-faculty seminar on Wednesday at 4 p.m. in the Union faculty lounge. A panel discussion by five men who participated in the organiza tion of Ataturk University in east ern Turkey will be featured. The men are Dr. A. T. Anderson, associate professor of history; Dr. K. O. Broady, director of Extension Division; E. L. Lambert, dean of the College of Agriculture; Dr. El vin J. Frolick, chairman of the agronomy department, and Dr. Carl Olson, professor of animal pathology and hygiene. The faculty committee worked for six weeks assisting in the es tablishment of a university similar to American land grant colleges. The group toured eastern Turkey and decided on the best site and form for the new university. The project of locating the university in the eastern section of the country Scholarships For Summer Study Offered British Universities in England and Scotland will offer American students an opportunity for study during the summer ot 19o5. Fields of study are Shakespeare and Elizabethan Drama at the University of Birmingham to be held at Stratford-On-Avon; art, lit erature and music in England 1660-1780 at University of London; nolitics and literature on the 20th Century, University of Oxford, and European Civilization, a Historical Survey, University of Edinburgh, firaduate students or qualified juniors or seniors are eligible to apply fr admission, expenses xor the six weeks of study will aver age approximately $200 and travel from $340 to $470. A few scholar ships are available which provide for the remission of a part of the tuition fees. Further information may be se cured in the Graduate. Office, Room III, Social Science. Philosophy Club Philnsonhv Club will hear Keith Rrheer. graduate student in phil osophy, speak on the subject. "De terminism or Libertananism. The meeting is scheduled for Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Room 118, Burnett Hall. The meeting U open to all interested students. phsychology department in the ir radiation process. 500 Rats Used Two kinds of rats are used in the experiment. These are white rats and black and white mixed variety. The two kinds differ only a little in temperment. ' During the two years, 500 rats have beeen used by the psychology department because rats of the same age, three months old, are used in all experiments. Blair, a part-time assistant, de votes between 12 and 15 hours a week to his experiment, although on some weeks there is more work. Even though he is working in the experimental phase of psychology, he some day wants to participate in the academic side Blair commented that the area of irradiation was new compared to other areas in psychology. Also, he said, there are few publications dealing with this subject. ordered to active duty in the Army, those individuals who have had prior military service can qualify for draft-deferred status, Col. Dies tel added. Graduates will be permitted to volunteer for the particular month of entry to active duty within quota limitations, Col. Diestel said. "Last year some ROTC graduates received commissions in branches of the Army other than those in which they had been enrolled for ROTC training," Col. Diestel stated. Whether this will be necessary for current graduates will not be known until mid January 1955. Although the Department of the Army has not announced a def inite policy, it appears likely that students now enrolled in advanced Army ROTC who normally would graduate in June, 1956, or Febru ary, 1957, will be commissioned and ordered to active duty as officers, Col. Diestel added. in Turkey has been in considera tion since 1929, when Memal Atta turk, then ruler and after whom the new university is named, first introduced the idea. The establishment of a univer sity in Turkey patterned after American colleges will be a new development in the new East. Most of the other universiites in the area are patterned after European uni versities. Instructors will have to be trained in the United States. AUF Donates Drive Funds To 4 Charities All-University Fund's $9,840 col lection this fall has been distribu ted to the Lincoln Community Chest, the Mental Health Associa tion, Cancer Society and World University Service. Thirty per cent of the total, or $2,952, has been given to the Com munity Chest. Approximately 29 organizations, including University YWCA, receive support from the Chest. The Mental Health Association will receive $2,460, or 25 per cent of the total. The Cancer Society will receive $1,968, 20 per cent. World University Service an in ternational student-supported organ ization, will receive $1,968. The remaining 5 per cent will be used by AUF for campaign ex penses next year and kept as an emergency fund. Character Building Navy Program Described As 'Experimental1 F. a. wintersteen, curt, unapiain Corps USN, spoke Tuesday after noon on the Navy's Character Build ing Program to University NROTC members. The Navy's Character Building Program, a program instituted at the request of the Secretary of Defense, is only in experimental stages now, said Chaplain Winter steen. but it has been highly suc cessful in its uses so far. The purpose of the program is aimed at helping men to think clearly when making decisions which involve moral issues rather than telling them what to do. Approval for this program has been expressed by parents of boys entering the service. Parents seem more satisfied to know that the Navy is helping to build the char acter rather than destroying their sens' morals, according to Winter- j steen. 1 Chanlain Wintersteen has spoken I to University NROTC Midshipmen three times within the past three years,- He is connected witn tne 9th Naval District in the Great Lakes area. NU Radio, TV Honorary Initiates 7 Members Alpha Epsilon Rho, radio and television honorary, initiated sev en members Monday, according to Ingrid Swerre, vice-president. Janice Carmen, Barbara Clark, Beverlee Englebrecht. Jack Hale. Margo Hunt, Joan Knudsen, and Jane Lasse are the initiates. Active members presiding were: David Chapman, president; Miss Swerre, Leigh Cartwright, secretary-treasurer and Gail Katskee. Christmas Services Christmas services will be held Thursday at 7:15 a.m. by the YWCA at Ellen Smith Hall. Services have been held every morning this week. Mary Lou Lu ther is in charge of the services. Breakfast is served after the services. Lincoln, Nebraska Group To Record Thursday NlaiHioBiial Broadcast" T luicSy The Madrigal Singers have been asked to appear by tape recording Christmas Day on the, Columbia Broadcasting System. James Fasset, program director of CBS and master of ceremonies for the Phila delphia Philharmonic Orchestra, issued the invitation to the University group. The Madrigals, under the direction of Dr. David Foltz, chairman of the department of music, will give a 30-minute presentation of Benjamin Britten's "Ceremony of uarois. Elaine Barker will be harp solo ist and Bill Bush and Ernest Har rison, pianists. Vocal Soloists Miss Barker is a junior in Teach ers College and a member of Al pha Phi. Harri son is an asso ciate professor of piano in the School of Mu sic. Bush is a sophomore i n Teachers C o 1 lege. Vocal solo ists will be Shirley Alpuer to, sop r a n o; Nancy Nor Courtesy Sunday Journal and Star Foltz man, soprano, and Imogene Davis, contralto. Madrigals were the only college group chosen to appear on the CBS annual Christmas broadcast. The group was chosen because of a performance of the work five years ago, according to Dr. Foltz. "Ceremony of Carols" is a new work of a noted young British com poser who also wrote the opera "Peter Grimes." At present, Brit ten has a new opera opening on Broadway, Foltz said. Thursday Program The work was originally written for treble voices, but Madrigals will use an arrangement for mixed voices. Part of the work will be sung a cappella. Madrigals will tape the program Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Howell Theater Auditorium. The group will sing traditional carols before they make the tape recording. Limited seating capacity for the performance will be available. The performance will be piped to local radio stations for broadcast Thursday night. Last year Madrigals appeared on an American Broadcasting Com pany presentation. Members Madrigal members are Shirley Alpuerto, Elaine Barker, Marilyn Blackburn, Nadine Bosley, Imo gene Davis, Delores Garrett. Charlotte Hervert, Barbara Jones, Frances Leacock, Sandy Lowenstein, Joan Marshall, Carol Newell, Nancy Norman, Muriel Pickett, Jeanine Schliefert, Patri cia Syfert. Roger Brendle, Bill Bush, Den nis Carroll, Jack Chedester, Don Goodrich, Morgan Holmes, Bruce Martin, John Poutre, Dan Rasdal, Wes Beist, Gary Renzleman, Jack Rhoden, Phil Robinsc-n, Stan Shumway and Bob Van Voorhis. Madrigals are selected on the basis of musicianship, voice qual ity, personality and intense inter est in detailed musical work, Foltz said. Applications Due Dec. 17 For Builders Applications for Builders Board must be submitted before Christ mas vacation, according to Cathy Olds, Builders president-elect. Positions open are: two assist ant treasurers, one in charge of advertising and one in charge of sales; First Glance. Special Edi tion, New Student Handbook, Cal endar, Student Directory, tours and conventions, high school relations, art, 'office manager and publicity. Ag campus positions are: Ag tour membership and publicity. Interviews will be Jan. 8. Appli cations may be turned in to the Builders office, Union Room 308. Library To Open Part Of Vacation Saturday noon, the Union will close for Christmas vacation. The Union will remain closed until Monday morning, Jan. 3. The Ag Union will close Friday afternoon at 5 p.m. and will also open the morning of Jn. 3. For the benefit of students who will remain in Lincoln over the holidays, Love Library will re main open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Wednesday, Dec. 20 to 22, and Monday through Fri day, Decv 27 to 31. Opera Crew Crews are now being organ ized for ."The Consul," an opera by Gian Carlo Menotti, which is the next University Theater production, in cooperation with the Department of Music. It will be presented Feb. 15-19. Students interested in working on one of the crews should contact John C. Tolch, technical director of University Theater, in Temple Building, Room 8. a i . , nwm ii'in I i Mad Georges Rene k i 'West-West Issue Must Be Dissolved' By BEV DEEPE Staff Wrifer Before settling the East-West conflict, the free world must dis solve the West-West issue, a direc tor for political activities for the European Youth Campaign, said in a Nebraskan interview Tuesday. Georges Rencki, active in the free Polish resistance movement during the war, was brought on campus to address the Christmas meeting of the Nebraska Univer sity Council on World Affairs. "A Western Europe divided into 18 little countries cannot resist com munism effectively," he said. "It is unable to do so not only for military reasons but also because economic and social problems pre vent the creation of a large single French Offer 30 Graduate Fellowships The French government is offer ing 30 university fellowships and 40 teaching assistantships to Amer ican graduate students. Assistantships will afford lan guage teaching experience and an opportunity to become better ac quainted with France. Recipients will teach conversational English in secondary schools, teachers' colleges, and universities in France. These posts are intended for future teachers of the French language. Graduate fellowships are open to students in all fields of study. Fel lows will study in French univer sities and other state institutions. Students interested in further in formation should write Kenneth Holland, President of the Institute of International Education, 1 East 67th Street, New York City. Follies Traveler Acts A meeting for all coeds interested in t.rvinir nut for Coed Follies Trav eler Acts will be held Wednesday at 7:15 p.m. in Union Room 31o. The Outside World By FRED DALY Staff Writer 'No Deal' For Prisoners The United SSates ruled out any "deal" with Red China to ex change 35 Chinese civilian students in America for the 11 U.S airmen imprisoned inside China. State Department Press Officer Lincoln White told newsmen: "There will be no deal." The comments came to questions about a Peiping broadcast which alluded to the 11 airmen held as "spies" and said he United States would be flouting international law if it held the 35 Chinese students in retaliation for the jailing of the airmen, 'ine oroaacasi cameo me broad hint that the Communists were trying to coax the U.S. into a deal. . , White said the airmen and the Chinese students were in entirely different categories. The airmen, shot down and captured two years ago during the Korean War, are legally prisoners of war entitled to full international rights as such, he said. The students are civilians under study, he added. Ike To Consult Democrats President Eisenhower intends step-by-step consultation with con gressional leaders of both parties on problems of foreign affairs, national defense and mutual security, the White House said Monday, alter a conference of Republican and Democratic leaders. After the conference it was announced that the President will deliver his State of the Union message to Congress, in person, on January 6 the day after the new 84th and Democratic-controlled Con gress convenes. In advance of the meeting. Sen. Russell (D-Ga) said he will oppose any administration program of dollar economic aid for Asia "or any where else." Russell is in line to become chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee when the Democrats take over control of Congress next month. Shah Visits Washington The Shah of Iran called on Western nations to "lend a helping hand" to assure political stability and economic recovery in his oil rich homeland. The Shah made the appeal in an address prepared lor a lunch given by capital newsmen and photographers. "Iran is of such importance to the general role of covilization and global strategy," he said, "that her physical strength must not become flaccid lor want of timely help." The Shah arrived in Washington for a three-day visit. After leav ing the capital, he will fly to San Francisco and later will visit Sun Valley, Idaho, and Florida. He expects to return Feb. 3 to New York City where he Lgan his visit The Shah said Iran's dispute with Britain over nationalization of the nation's oil industry resulted from efforts of "subversive elements . . . to establish chaos and mob rule." He said the plot failed and Iran is now making steady progress toward modernization. Labor Merger Predicted David J. McDonald, head of CIO United Steel workers predicts that in 1955 members of CIO and AFL will merge in a "New United Labor Union." He said: "We can work all our problems out, every single one of them, as men of good will, as men believing in one another, as men believing in the fundamentals of American trade unions." . The steel union head also said Uat his hope of an early merger oi the AFL and CIO was based on "many factors, the first and most important of which is that the people want labor unity." Wednesday, December 15, 1954 ncialls market," Rencki brought out. Rencki commented on the Eur opean concept of American domes tic policies. "The average man in the street knows America by two men President Eisenhower and Sen. Joe McCarthy," he brought out. "Overwhelmingly Europeans art opposed to McCarthy," Rencki said, "not because of his anti-communist measures, but because of the way he applies his measures." Europeans would not favor an American blockade of China, Rencki said, because the risks of European occupation are greater. They do not believe a blockade would produce the results the Americans seek, anyway, he added. "I was amazed to see American students so interested in general international affairs," Rencki said, "but they do not know enough about European unity." Members of the European Move ment suffered a major defeat when the French Parliament voted down the European Defense Community, the Polish-bora internationalist said "When the West substituted the Western European Union for EDC, the integration of a supranational system was replaced by a military alliance of states which retain their sovereignty," Rencki said. The European Movement had hoped to establish a unified Europe with a federal government patterned aft er that of the United States. AWS Tells House Rules For Closing All organized houses and resi dence halls for coeds will be closed by 2 p.m. Saturday and will open at 2 p.m. Jan. 2. The Associated Women Students Board, who announced the rules for coeds concerning Christmas vaca tion, said that special permission must be obtained from the house mother if a coed wishes to leave before Friday. Special permission ; den nopriprl if a resident plans to return later than the regular closing hour on Jan. 2 or earner than 2 p.m.