The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 22, 1955, Page 4, Image 4

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    Tcrfce Ton1 Tralala
e . n
By I"ED T)ALY
Copy Editor
Ah, spring, with its fresh blush
f tiny flowers, its rain-washed blue
skies, its pale green cast
of budding trees and its cheerful
chlrping of freshly-migrated birds
Athletic Program
WAA Officers Announce
12 Council Appointments
Positions on the WAA Council
were appointed by the WAA offi
cers Friday.
The twelve positions are: intra
mural co-ordinator, Shirley Ba
lant, Kappa Delta sophomore; as
sistant intramural co-ordinator,
Jan Lidstrand, freshman in Un
ion, Builders, and Gamma Phi
Beta; social and publicity chair
man, Sarol Wiltse, Chi Omega
Bophomore and YWCA treasurer,
and office manager and co-rec
chairman, Margaret Edwards, a
sophomore in Coed Counselors,
Home Economics Club and Coun
cil, YWCA Council, and Chi
Omega.
Freshman soccer baseball and
table tennis, Barbara Holmes, Kap
pa Kappa Gamma freshman in
Builders, Red Cross, and NUCWA;
archery and duckpins, Shirley
Swanson, junior in Chi Omega,
Coed Counselors, and YWCA; soc
cer baseball and golf, Janet Mc
Clung, sophomore in Red Cross,
and Delta Gamma social chair
man; tennis singles and doubles
and Nebraska ball, Jean Craig,
Kappa Kappa Gamma sophomore
in Red Cross, Builders, and Aqua
quettes. Plaster
The "Union showcase in the
lounge is exhibiting several sculp
ture pieces made by the beginning
sculpture students.
Students begin sculpture pieces
by first making a form of the sub
ject from clay. When the clay
is shaped like they want it. a
cast is made from plaster. The
plaster cast is taken from the
clay mould in several pieces and
the clay that comes off with the
cast is scraped off. The pieces are
assembled and are held together
with plaster and pieces of paper
put over the cracks.
The plaster cast is well soaped
on the inside to prevent the plaster
from sticking to the cast when it is
poured inside the cost. After the
plaster is poured and allowed to
dry, the cast is chipped off, as the
plaster cannot be used again. It
takes about a semester to com
plete one piece.
Love Hall Wins
'Pixie Pranks'
tiOve Hall won first place with
their booth "Pixie Playground"
at th annual Estes Carnival last
Friday evening in the Ag College
Activities Building.
Farmhouse won second place
and Loomis Hall third in the an
event. It was sponsored by the Ag
YMCA and YWCA to raise money
to send delegates to an annual
conference In Estes Park, Colo
rado, next June.
The booths were judged on orig
inality, audience appeal, attrac
tiveness and organization. Judges
were Mr. and Mrs. Chast Allred,
Dr. and Mrs. T. H. Goodding and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Read.
A waffle dinner and dancing
were other features of this year's
carnival which included 13 booths
from organized houses, departmen
tal clubs and the city YWCA. Co
chairman of the carnival which
featured as It's theme "Pixie
Pranks" were Twila Riley and
Charlie Trumble.
Alpha Epsilon Rho
,ig
Alpha 'Epsilon Rho, national pro
fessional radio and television hon
orary, pledged nine new members
Uonday.
Joyce Knerl, Martha Morrison,
f ry Lou Pittsck, Hazel Eedfield,
Ijtfloy Rockwell, Howard Vann
s rd r'ferse Welsirt were pledged.
crrieers of the Nebraska chapter
ere Dare Chapman, president; In
i r'J Cwerrt, vice president; Joan
ir.'.uen, sscMary.
?v?r"ilreients for pledging are
; -':.o.:'s crfdit in radio and TV
'i n f- c of not less than 6.
T , n r quirements are six
s i r .:o and TV with a mini
i r r-'e of nix.
ii m stated that the local
-r is p!;mning on sending
Sculpture
Exhibited
.
Grog
who are too chicken to stf k ' out
the winter.
Spring, with the laughter of lit
tle children throwing mudballs at
passing cars, the slosh of ROTC
students cutting across the mall
to class, the whirring cf a hun-
dred hydralic top-lowering mechan-
Basketball, Delores Wertz, fresh
man member of Kappa Delta and
P. E. Club; bowling and softball,
Cathy Hodder, Kappa Alpha Theta
sophomore on the Red Cross
Board; volleyball and badminton,
Pat Mulligan, Alpha Omicron Pi
freshman in Red Cross, Union,
and P. E. Club, and rifle club,
Cis Lonsborough, sophomore in
Gamma Phi Beta and Aquaquettes.
Assistants chosen were Janice
Shrader, office manager, and Joan
Huesner, cc-rec assistant and bas
ketball assistant.
New WAA officers are Dorothy
Frank, president; Shirley Jesse,
vice-president; Phyllis Cast, sec
retary, and Jane Jeffrey, treasurer.
Year's Activities Reviewed
Yell Squad Creates Confusion
Dressing As Referees, Team
By MARILYN MITCHELL
Copy Editor
The past football season saw the
University's Yell Squad members
as flappers, African hunters, ref
erees and even as the football team
itself.
These home game extras were
performed by the squad during the
two-minute lull between the Na
tional Anthem and the entrance of
the football team, to create, Yell
King Dan Fogel said, additional
pre-game spirit and enthusiasm.
General confusion was created at
one game by cheerleaders dressed
as referees striped shirts, whis
tles, and red flags. Members mea
sured everything from goalposts to
the field itself.
Scout Takes Part
The third game stunt was 'our
best" said Fogel. The squad caused
"utter confusion and bedlam" in th
stadium as it ran out from the field
house dressed, including the coed
members, as the football teams
starting lineup. They performed
routine exercises, and then ran
through two tricky plays.
Fogel said the spectators were
fooled until the real team came
onto the field.
Fiji "natives," Frank Buck and
a Boy Scout were featured in the
one game stunt. Dressed as hunters
the squad appeared and spotted a
Missouri tiger in the middle of the
field.
After the squad shot the tiger, the
Fijis carried it away.
The tiger was played by a Boy
Scout usher. Fogel said that short
ly before game time, the squad dis
covered the tiger costume was too
small for any member. The Boy
Scout finally consented to partici
pate in the skit.
Team of 79
Dressed as college sheiks and
flappers of the Roaring 'Twenties,
the Yell Squad saluted the Team
of 29 at the fifth home game. The
Charleston, Beta Band and old
time truck added to the stunt.
Guest cheerleaders were another
Innovation of the 1954-55 Yell Squad.
Governor Robert Crosby lead sev
eral yells and ex-football player
Jerry Minnick led a yell at one
game.
For the first timi, Fofcel said, the
Athletic Department is setting up
a special budget for tho 'squad be
cause of the successful innovations
of the past season.
Fogel thought up the Orange Bow
crusade a year ago and asked
Coach Bill Glassford his opinion..
Glassford agreed the University
should set goals high and Miss
Miami Beach made her appear
ance at University rallies.
Each rally presented a different
lio-TV Honorary
its
12
delegates to the national conven
tion of Alpha Epsilon Rho In Co
lumbus, Ohio, April 13, 14 and 15.
APRIL FOOL
Send a friend a
Funny April Fool Card.
On display at the
Jtotel fKH Pft; 4
215 North 14th St.
CTPa
rt3
Hoy
nn nn
isms in a hundred convertibles and
the soulful sigh of a student with a
three-o'clock class on Friday after
noon. Ah, Spring, with its Hell Week.
Hell Week? Good Grief!
Day of Great Ax
The scourge of a thousand
pledges, that is Hell Week. The
River Styx is nothing compared to
that doomful day when the great
ax descends on scores of cringing
necks, and another batch of apple
cheeked pledges is whirled into
deep, black void, smelling a little
of Dante's Inferno and a damp
day at the skunk works.
Hell Week is the end, the fin
ish, the grave.
"Report at noon tomorrow in
work clothes," given in a Slightly
harsh tone is the first sign of Hell
Week for most pledges, starting
off on what they expect to be a
cross between Devil's Island, a
Alabama chain gang and a good
month at Quantico.
First, there are a few things to
do, like painting every flat surface
in sight, refinishing floors, repair
ing woodwork, fixing electrical
wiring and messing around 'with
the plumbing. Sometimes this might
last well into the wee small hours of
the mysterious night.
Work For Underprivileged'
There are also projects outside
the walls of the house, where pledg
es are put to work doing things of
coed as Miss Miami Beach who, In
turn, presented the game captain
with a good-luck kiss.
This year two cheerleaders were
Tryouts
Tuesday is the las day fresh
men men with a 4.5 average and
freshmen women with a 5 aver
age may sign up for Yell Squad
tryouts which will be held on the
Coliseum stage March 31 at
7 p.m.
Practice sessions will be con
ducted In the Coliseum from 4 to
5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday
by 'the present squad members.
flown to each out-of-town game ex
cept Hawaii. The entire squad mi
grated to Colorado.
Four Fry To Miami
Four members were elected by
the Squad to attend the Orange
Bowl game at Miami: Fogel, Tom
Olson, Doris Anderson and Marilyn
Eaton.
Fogel said they were expecting
a four-hour layover at the Chicago
airport, but due to a tie-up, they
left Chicago, 15 minutes after ar
rival there. Only nine were aboard
the 88-passenger plane.
When they left Chicago, they left
10 below zero weather. They ar
rived in Miami, put their coats on
and stepped out into 88 degree sun
shine. Police as excorts, the Alumnae
Association, the Orange Bowl Com
mittee and even a sightseaing tour
leader all honored the Yell Squad
with gifts and dinners.
Fogel related a before-game in
cident of a humble Miami news
W
When you're flat broke
and feeling kind of mean .
For more
y
THE NEBRASKA
fl
general benefit to the community
like repairing residences of the
underprivileged or doing vast am
ounts of yard work for those who
cant do their own.
There are also games designed
to develop physical prowess and
muscular coordination. These are
greeted with shrieks ot gaiety by
participants and spectators, alike.
Sometimes the pledges are given
a friend, usually of the animal
gender, to keep them company and
share their quarters during their
hours of stress.
In going to classes, pledges are
encouraged to dress their best and
to keep a lively pace when going
from building to building, giving
the campus a holiday atmosphere
as staunch young men are seen
trotting briskly along, ties flapping.
Actually, Hell Week is harder on
fraternity actives than on pledges.
Things are often turned upside
down for a good while, and who
can sleep when boisterous and
slightly punchy singing is heard
from a group of hardy workers
ripping old boards out of the wall
next to your room.
Things don't smell too nice
either.
And the best part of the whole
thing is when you go to bed, fully
expecting to sleep until Ivy Day
Eve.
Yes, sir, Hell Week certainly is.
Ask any pledge.
paper photographer who asked to
take a picture of the squad. He
had Fogel to perform a flip in
back of the other three.
In Sunday's paper the picture
appeared with the headline, "Ne
braska Cheerleaders Topsy-Turvy
Even Before Game Starts.
Thanks To Sponsor
Fogel, who is a three-year mem
ber of the squad, labeled this year's
the "finest -working squad" he
has known. Marilyn Eaton was al
so a three-year member.
Other squad members were Joan
Pollard, Doris Anderson, Carolyn
Elliott, Tom Olson, Gene Christen
son, Don Beck and Ron Green.
Alternates were Norm Vietzer and
Charlie Trumbla.
Fogel expressed the gratitude of
the Yell Squad to Bill Orwig, ath-let-c
director, and Jake Geier,
gymnastics coach and squad spon
sor, for their loyalty and coopera
tion during the past year.
Fogel said a constitutional am
endment has been made to allow
only nine cheerleaders, two of
which will be alternates. Four men
and three women "'ill be chosen.
Two of the men will be from the
retiring squad, one to be Yell
King and the other, assistant. Two
women will be retained from this
uear's squad.
Last year's squad numbered 12,
two of which were alternates.
Cliff's Smoke Shop
(Fornmrty "Bi Wolf)
121 N. 12th
CIGARS FOR PINNJNGS
Uehter Ttepair Pipe Repair
pure pleasure..
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former Communist Prisoner Expresses
'Mo Sympathy' For Confessed Soldiers
Frank Austin Tells Of Experiences
I have no sympathy for pri
soners who confess everything to
Communist interrigaton in an ef
fort to get better conditions for
themselves, a former prisoner of
war said Monday.
Meetings
Committee
Jobs Open
For Ag Y's
Students may still sign with com
mittees of Ag YWCA and YMCA.
Individuals interested may sign
up by contacting Marlene Hutchin
son at 6-2243, Marv Coffey at
6-2436 or in Ag Union, Room 10.
Committees and their chairmen
are: Worship, Gladys Evans and
Ed Stoller, Ag Student Centerj 4
p.m., Thursday; Live Y'er, Nancy
Wilson and Jim Dunn, Home Eco
nomics parlors, 4 p.m. Monday;
publicity, Ruth Fisher, and Stan
Margleroad, Ag Union, 1 p.m. Sat
urday; Bible Study, Beverly Bunch,
Ag Student Center, 4 p.m. Tues
day, and Centennial, Ruth Ernst,
the time yet to be set.
Provost Corps Meeting
Meeting of the Provost Corps
will be held Wednesday at 7:30
p.m. in 'the Military and Naval
Science Burilding.
Lt. Hennenger, of the Lincoln
Police Department, will demon
strate a lie detector and other
crime detection equipment.
Nu Med Meeting
A Nu Med meeting will be lield
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Bessey
Hall Auditorium.
Dr. Frederick Webster will speak
on "Orthopedics" and show slides.
The meeting is open to the public.
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Gnema!5gQPi,
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AlDO WONA
HERMMttBl
NANCY JAMES RAYMOND
OLSON-WHITMORE-MASSEY
TAR DOROTHY ANNfc
lam-
And Pop comes through with
some spending green...
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P.S. No other brand has ever been
blend of costly tobaccos one of the
M. Sgt. Franfc Austin, now an m -
ta !Ht.r nce at the
aaa riAnr
l:J.:ZZyr:rtmt Austin explained. Russia
tainly were men."
Commenting on "'We Can Baffle
the Brainwashers" an article in
the Saturday Evening Post by Rear
Admiral D. V. Gallery, Auston dis
agreed with Gallery's opinion that
those lads accomplished nothing
by their heroism."
But Austin agreed with Gallery's
estimate of what Communists want
from prisoners: propaganda, pri
marily, tiot military information.
Austin, who was imprisoned by
the Germans for more than two
years, declined comment, however,
on Adm. Gallery's proposal to "'give
the Reds anything they want for
propaganda purposes and defy the
to use it"
Austin was captured by the Ger
mans in North Africa on Feb. 22,
1943. From there, he was transport
ed to a prison camp near Fuersten-berg-an-der-Oder,
approximately 60
miles east of Berlin.
Americans in the camp were not
maltreated, Austin said. "1 -never
saw any" physical violence done to
American prisoners, he added.
"Russian prisoners, be s a i d,
nhey treated them like hell."
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With dark suiting the big campus preference, Arrow introduce
its new Softone shirts with harmonizing ties soft mated color
to blond naturally, easily, with darker fabrics. Tbey grueyoo the
look of a man who waara his clothes wetL
See your rampm Arrow dealer for these fine -colored shirts.
You'll find a wide range of checks, stripes and solids. Best A
aH, Arrow Sof tones are priced Tight. Yoo can own one (or
several), and still 1m e money left o eat on. Tbere Iwt
tSM the shirt.
4. ...v 'A V
ft
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M-m-man,
that's
tm'
vin
lr. 1 I f I I I Si A:
able to match the pore pleasure in Camel's exclusive
reasons why Camels are America's most populd cigarette!
Tucsdov, Morch 22, 1955
Under Germans
j fnmw n
M Pied the Geneva Convekt,on
prohibiting physical torture of pri
had not signed it, however.
Food rations were slim the first
six months, Austin said. But then
they improved, he added, after U.S.
government food parcels began to
arrive.
"Unless youVe been hungry,
Austin pointed out, '"you cant un
derstand" what it is like to eat
practically nothing for four or five
months in succession.
Because of Russian advances on
the eastern front, Austin said, be
and his fellow prisoners were
marched in February, 1945, to a
camp southwest of Berlin,
They were liberated on April 22,
3945, by the Russians, who intend
ed to repatriate them through a
port on the Black Sea. But after
about three days, Austin said, sev
eral hundred prisoners drifted
through the fence and away wt
m-ent."
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Rmoniib wt, ExprlnoJ. Phona
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Room for rinl. 8211 8trr. mpiy1
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