Corn Cobs Workers If Sixteen new members of Corn Cobs, men's pep organization, were revealed by Cobs officers Monday. May 3 Pre-Law Students Plan Club An organizational meeting for a pre-law club will be May 3 at 7:30 p.m. in Room 101 of the Law Build ing. All men and women students at the University, Wesleyan and Un ion College interested in entering the College of Law are urged to attend, said Gerry Fellman, Law Association representative. Invi tations have been sent to all known pre-law students. At the meeting Dean David Dow will speak on the scholarships available to law students. Other topics will include entrance require ments, law as a profession, job op portunities for graduates and the law curriculum for the three ana four-year programs. The faculty, student leaders and presidents of law fraternities will be introduced. A coffee hour in the law Asso ciation lounge will follow the meet ing. Students will have a chance to meet the professors and will be encouraged to ask questions, Fell man said. The organizational meeting will be the only one this spring. Next fall the new club will hold regu lar student-planned meetings. Pro grams will include films and spe cial speakers on various phases of law. James Lake, professor of law, is in charge of organizing the club. Three Groups Meetings Planned By AWS Three discussion groups will be held for the AWS workshop, Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. Time elements, preliminary judging and limiting backdrops and and costumes will be discussed by the "Coed Follies" group. "Mak ing the Most of Our College Op portunities" will consider stan dards of school conduct and school activities. A discussion of rules, AWS court and the point system will be in cluded by the group, "AWS and Its Responsibilities to the Cam pus." Ag Awards Forjudging Announced Gerald Schiermeyer, junior in Ag College, received a wrist watch as winner of the senior division of the Block and Bridle judging contest. Other senior division winners were Stanley Eberspacher, second, Allen Trenkle, third; Charles Thonven, fourth, and Dwain Tren kle, fifth. Don Beck won the junior division followed by Paul Yeutter, Dick Deets, Jack Todd. The Cy Winkler trophy for the high junior division team went to the Alpha Gamma Rho team com posed of Beck, Deets) Hagemeier, Rathjen and Bob Clock. Ray Kelly was announced as winner of the merit trophy award. Summary Of Year Meet Af Oklahoma Ends Debate Season University debaters won 67 per cent of their contests in the last debate season, according to Donald 0. Olsen, debate coach. "The outstanding thing about this debate team is that the members are active in all phases of Univer sity life," Olsen said. "Most are involved in a number of activities and are also good students." The Delta Sigma Rho regional congress at the University of Okla homa wound up debate for the ' forensic season. The debate team participated in 233 debates in the past season. Nine contests were audience de bates and 224 were decision de bates. The team won 149 of the decision debates and lost 75. In all events the team ; won 28 superior ratings. University de baters participated in 11 intercol legiate debate and discussion con ferences. Many schools only use their best debaters,' but the University de bate team has a policy of giving as many interested and capable students a chance to participate as possible, Olsen said. "We feel debate is an education adventure," he said. To Initiate Banquet The new members, chosen from the top workers of this school year, will be formally Initiated at a Corn Cobs banquet Wednesday. The sixteen new Corn Cobs are: Tom 'Olson, Alpha Tau Omega; Don Beck, Doyle Hulme, and Harv ey Jorgenson, Alpha Gamma Rho; Mervyn Schliefert, Alpha Gamma Sigma; Delmar Hahrt and Rod Einspahr, Beta Sigma Psi; Leo Pamkroger, Bill DeWulf, and Char lie Trumble, Farm House. Larry Hanson, Sigma Chi; Jerry Nissen, Sigma Phi Epsilon; John Nelson, Ron Blue, and Vernon Hall, Theta Xi; Dick Fellman, Zeta Beta Tau. Formal inititation of these new actives will be held Wednesday evening at a banquet in the Un ion. The inititation will also be the occasion for the announce ment of the new Corn Cobs offic ers, selected each year by the out going officers. This year's Corn Cobs officers are: Junior Knobel, Farm House, president; Leonard Barker, Theta Xi, vice-president; Phil Shade, Sig ma Phi Epsilon, secretary; and Vol.. 55, No. 75 qv Wafer Ballet Aquaquettes spring water ballet will be presented Thursday and Friday at 7:45 p.m. in the Coli seum pool. The theme selected for the show is "Aqua Daily," with the numbers depicting the various aspects of the day's news. . Aquaquettes presented its first spring water ballet in the early 1940's. The production has become an annual affair. This year's show will feature members of the men's swimming team for the first time. Special lights will be used to il luminate swimmers in "Stormy Weather," the local weather re- port. The pool will be completely blacked out and the lights will be taped to the arms and legs of the swimmers. An aquatic rendition of "Dry Bones" will represent the obituary column, and "Street Scene" will portray the national news. Aquaquettes' rendition of "Lili" will be used as a typical movie ad- Lady" will represent the women's vertisement and. "Sophisticated pages and fashion news. "John and Marcia" will be the group's interpretation of a love lorn column. Society' news will be "Bell of the Ball," and news of Chess Tourney Set Tuesday The annual chess tournament sponsored by the Union will begin Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Parlors Y and Z. The tournament will be contin ued Thursday at 7 p.m. in Room 315 and Saturday at 2 p.m. in Room 315. Bill Steen will super vise the tournament. A trophy will be presented to the winner. Diane Knotek, Union recreation committee chairman, urged all interested students to enter. The team also has a policy of preparing debates for any organi zation with two weeks notice, 01 sen added. This year the team debated four separate questions, while some schools limit their arguments to the current national college de bate question, he said. Debaters are not enrolled in any one college as a rule, but come Yrcm all colleges on the campus, Olsen said. There are 26 debaters on this year's roster. They are Norman Alexander, Richard Andrews, Rog er Berger, Bruce Brugmann, Larry Carstenson, Ernest Enke, Dick Fell man. Robert Frank, Russell Gutting, Diann Halm, Connie Hurst.Gerald Igou, Homer Kenison, Sharon Man gold, Jere McGaffey, Allen Over cash, Ken Philbrick, Sandra Reim ers, Jack Rogers. Barbara Sharp, Kenneth Sieman, Darrina Turner, Joan Becera, Rog er Wait, Kay Williams and Robert Zaber. . Olsen coached the debate team and Bruce Kendall, assistant pro fessor of speech and dramatic art, had charge of individual events. Sixteen Wednesday Doran Jacobs, treasurer. Zeta Beta Tau, New Corn Cobs are selected on the basis of work done for the or ganization during their sophomore year. Workers sell N flowers at football games and handle all ar rangements for the annual Home coming dance. This includes not only selling tickets, but making decorations and advertising the dance. The card sections at the football games are composed of Corn Cobs and Tassels and fresh man pep organizations. Corn Cob workers sell Corn huskers throughout the year, and this year they sold tickets to the Chancellor's dinner. Each member is required to attend . all sports rallies and to handle arrangements for those rallies. This year about 31 students en gaged in Corn Cobs activities as workers. There are sixteen ac tives and four officers now in the organization. During the three days preceding the Corn Cob initiation, all new members are required to wear red sweaters and tiny corn cobs on ribbons around their necks. At the dinner Wednesday, all Junior members of the Corn Cobs will be presented special keys. Show Set Thursday the music world will be represented by "Jazz Pizzacato." Interpretations of the internation al scene and foreign dispatches will be portrayed by "In a Persian Market." Tickets are 50 cents and will be for sale at the door. Officers of the group are: Ann Kokjer, president; Nan Engler, vice-president; Mary -Clare Dod son, secretary; and Mary Gattis, treasurer. " . Beverly Becker, instructor in physical education for women, is adviser for the group, which is sponsored by WAA and depart ment of physical education for women. TMl JJ Bok To Discuss Criminal Law In Roscoe Pound Lectureship Curtis Bok, presiding judge in one of Philadelphia's Courts of Common Pleas, will deliver the second and third lectures in the Roscoe Pound lectureship Tuesday and Wednesday at 8 p.m. in Love Library Auditorium. He will discuss the human and legal side of many problems in the administration of the criminal law. Judge Bok will lecture Tuesday on "The Substantive Law" and "Penology and Treatment" Wed nesday. He lectured on "The Trial" Monday. The Outside World' Chou Stymies Talks By DICK RALSTON Staff Writer The recent offer of Red China's Chou En-lai to confer with the United States on easing tension in the Formosa area seems to have reached a stalemate. The United States is insisting that Nationalist China would have to be a party to anyasuch negotiations, and Chou reportedly refuses any negotiations with the Nationalists present. The offer to" negotiate the Formosan problem came during the closing session of the Afro-Asian conference in Bandung Indonesia. The conference ended with the adoption of a communique condemning colonialism "in all its manifestations," appealing for an end to racial ism, asking world disarmament and prohibition of atomic and hydrogen bombs and their tests, and promising closer cultural and economic ties. Pro-Western powers at the conference won major victories when the conference approved the formation of defense alliances under the United Nations charter, and when they won Red China's willingness to approve such principles as the United Nations definition of human rights and self-determination. Block, Bridle Horse Classes Selected For Annual Club Show Six classes have been selected for the 21st annual Block and "Bridle Livestock and Horse Show to be held Saturday at 7:30' p.m. in the State Fair Grounds Coli seum. Classes for the horse show are parade, palomino pleasure, ' five- gaited, three-gaited, fine-hamass and Tennessee walking horse. Judge for the horse show will be John Dean of Glenwood, la. Bob Plumb of Omaha will be master of ceremonies. Participating in the opening cere mony and tne nag presentation will be Governor Victor Anderson, Amnnmo Hi First Ribbon Sold Chancellor Hardin bought the "E Week" ribbon Monday after- noon from Dan Rasdal, senior in electrical engineering and chair- University of Nebraska Annual Tea Twenty-six coeds were chosen as Tassel pledges at the annual formal Tassels tea Sunday. New pledges must accumulate ISO points before initiation next spring by selling Cornhuskers, bal loons and tickets; participating in rallies and pep skits; attending games; helping with University novelties,, and ushering at Univer sity funtions. Pledges are: Mary Laura Prather, Alpha Chi Omega; Nancy Tucker, Alpha Phi; Donna Sawvell, Delta Delta Delta; Kay Gleason, Gamma Phi Beta; Judge Bok handed down a deci sion in 1949 which protested nine American novels from charges of obscenity. Some of the authors involved in the case included Wil liam Faulkner, James T. Farrell and Erskine Caldwell. Judge Bok's decision was later upheld in the Pennsylvania Su preme Court. The lectureship is sponsored by the Committee for the Roscoe Pound Fund and the College of Law. Chancellor Clifford Hardin. Major Clark Jeary and Ag College Dean W. V. Lambert. The show will include a potato race between representatives of Denton and Plattsmouth. Lincoln businessmen will participate in a musical chair contest. In the showmanship contest in dividuals will show sheep, cattle and hogs. Admission is il for adults, 75 cents for students and 50 cents for children. Tickets are available from any Block and Bridle member. rmA(?prjt siD u . 7 I man of the ribbon committee. Rib- bons went on sale for 15 cents apiece and will be sold throughout the week. Sandra Kadlec ek, Kappa Alpha Theta. Holly Hawke, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Barbara Millnitz, Kappa Delta; Janice Shrader, Pi Beta Phi; Ruthann Chudacoff, Sigma Delta Tau; Elaine Sackschewsky, Love Memorial Hall. Laurel Morris, Terrace Hall; Janet Felt,- International House; Mary Fritts, Loomis Hall; Patricia Schaller and Shelia Scott, Alpha Xi Delta; Marylan Zulke, Adelphi. Pal Gillespie, Mary Jane Phelps, Shirley Hornby, Marilyn Waechter, Women Ivy Day Directors To Meef Directors for the Ivy Day Inter Sorority Sing will meet in the Un ion Friday at 5 p.m. Each house must be represented and bring a copy of their music to the meeting. Important announcements con cerning Ivy Day will be made and if the director is unable to attend, another representative should at tend, Jan Yost, Ivy Day Sing Chair man, announced. Names of the selections and di rectors for the Sing are Alpha Chi Omega, "A Toast," Joan Mar shall; Alpha Omicron Pi, "Over The Rainbow", Dee Garrett; Al pha Phi, "Memories of Alpha Phi" Barbara Jones; Alpha Xi Delta, "Sweetheart Song," Jeanine Schlie feit. Chi Omega, "I Love Life," Alice Logie; Delta Delta Delta, "When In the Night," Carol Newell; Delta Gamma, "Delta Gamma," Carol Unterseher; Gamma Phi Beta, "Bound Firm By," Margie Hallas; Kappa Alpha Theta, "Theta Lips," Mary Jo Shainholtz; Kappa Kap pa Gamma, "Kappa Blue and Blue"', Jan Beal. Pi Beta Phi. "Brigadoon," Ellen Svoboda; Sigma Delta Tau, "S.D.T. With Torch So Bright," Ruth Chu dacoff; Sigma Kappa, "Softly as in the Morning Sunrise", Marlyn Herse; Residence Halls, ' "Ameri can Lullaby," Marilyn Blackburn; Terrace Hall, "The Lilac Tree," Laurel Morris. Towne Club, "Black is the color of my True Love's Hair", Hanna Rosenberg; University Hospital Nurses, "The Night Has a Thou sand Eyes," Janice Hensel, and Love Memorial Hall, "I Talk to the Trees," Jan Lindquist. NROTC Presents Middies Awards Twenty University midshipmen will receive proficiency awards at the Naval ROTC Corps annual awards program Tuesday at 3 p.m. in Love Library Auditorium. Byron Dunn, Lincoln banker, will deliver the address. Capt W. O. Gallery, professor of naval science, will make the acknowledgement to the 1955 donors and Comdr. J. M. Bowers will introduce the donors. Midshipman Walter Wright Jr. will present the battalion. Donors of the proficiency awards are Lincoln business firms and r)l r patriotic organizations. , lf u InJ mi E Week To Begin Thursday Displays and exhibits showing the role of engineering and archi tecture in modern living will be featured at the 43rd annual Engi neer's Week open house from 2 to 10 p.m. Thursday in all engineering buildings. An electric chair that passes half a million volts through a man without harming him is one of the displays featured in the electrical engineering exhibit. Color televis ion will be on exhibition. Persons may hear their voices over the telephone at the audio sound display by the electrical en gineering group exhibit. The civil engineers will explain and illustrate the O Street viaduct which is under construction Underwater welding and flowers frozen in liquid air will highlight the mechanical engineering dis play. In the department of architec ture, the "Living Cube," recently reatured in a national magazine, will be the principal display. Tuesday, April 26, 1955 Caroline Gay Boswell, Janis David son, Sharon Toner, Joan Kluge and Jackie Kilzer, independents-at-large, and Sue Petersen, Ag-at-!arge. Auditions Open NU Film To Dramatize Pershing Rifles History Auditions for parts in a "dra matic documentary" film on the history and present-day activities of Pershing Rifles, national ROTC honorary are open to all men stu dents from 3 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday in the photograph ic productions office in West Sta dium. The tentative title of the film is "The Highest Ideals," writer-director Anthony Groslein said Mon day. Groslein, University motion pic ture production supervisor, said the film will be distributed nation ally. "We feel this .offers student ac tors a rather unique opportunity to participate in a professionally produced motion picture. It pre sents a definite challenge to ac tors' acting abilities," he contin ued. In order to try out for parts in the movie, men students need not be members of Pershing Rifles, experts in military matters, or have had previous movie acting experience. Research and writing of the script for the film began in Feb ruary. Shifting of its scenes will be completed by the end of the semester. Editing and final pro cessing of the movie will occupy the summer. The plot of the film will revolve around portrayals of men of the Population Up Growing Merits Bia The University's enlarged pro posed budget for 1955-57 is due in part to a recognition that the Uni versity is growing with the state, Chancellor Clifford Hardin said in a Nebraskan interview. The budget which the University has requested is $18,830,000 $3, 830,000 more than the budget for the .present two year period. The University budget is taken from the state's General Fund and is part of the total appropriation that the Legislature must make for every two year period. The Budget committee conducts hear ings for other institutions of the state and then decides the amount that it will recommend to the Unicameral later in the year. Two and one-half million dollars of the proposed increase would be used to support the existing pro gram at the University, and the remaining $1,300,000 of the pro posed hike would be used in the development of new activities. tos Displays of corn harvesting, soil tillage and irrigation will be fea tured by the department of agri cultural engineering. Emphasis will be on advances made in the field of agriculture by engineering. Precision measuring, such as de termining the width of a human hair, will be included in the de partment of engineering mechan ics display. Various procedures for soften ing hard water will be demonstrat ed in the chemical engineering dis play. Overall chairmen for E. Week are Roger Whitmer and Edward Doll. Co-chairmen of the various engineering societies include: Wayne Wolf and Verne Dvorak, agricultural engineering; Alan Pet erson and Bill Rudd, architectural engineering and architecture; Jack Stiehl and Tom Tillman, chemical engineering. Pete Schmitt and, Charles Wrobleski, civil engineering; Glen Norris and Gene Yost, electrical engineering, and Tom Smith, en gineering mechanics. Committee chairman are: Barry Larson and Kazys Alminas, pub licity; Paula Broady, banquet; Daryll Wood, contest; Bob Dostal, convocation; Frank Sazma, field day; Murl Maupin, inquiries; Bill Nagorian, photographer. Roger Berger, program; Dan Rasdal, ribbon sales; Bill Neef, sledge; Ken Philbrick, traffic; John Fagan, window displays, and Wade Dorland, guides. The Engineers' banquet will bs Friday at 6:30 p.m. A convocation for all engineering sudents and the public will be at 11 a.m. Friday in Love Library Auditorium. Engineering classes will be dis missed all day Thursday and from 11 a.m. on Friday. Students should consult their instructors about dis missal from classes not in the Col lege of Engineering, Barry Larson, publicity chairman, said. Faculty advisers for E Week are Bruce Meier, assistant professor of civil engineering, and Donald Pierce, instructor in engineering mechanics. different eras of Pershing Rifles history. The society was founded at the University in 1894 by then 2nd Lt. John J. Pershing. The ROTC hon orary, whose headquarters are at the University now has 130 chap ters in 43 states. Technical advisors for the film are Col. Chester Diestel, chair man of the department of military science and tactics, Lt. Col. Ernst Liebmann, associate professor of military science and tactics, and Virgil Holtgrewe, national student commander of Pershing Rifles. Paper, Yearbook Filings Announced Students wishing to apply for paid staff positions on The Nebras kan and Cornhusker for next year may obtain applications from the Public Relations Office, 1127 R St. Coriihusker applicants will be interviewed by the Board of Stu dent Publications at the Union May 5 beginning at 4 p.m. Corn returned to. Public Relations by pleted application forms should be April 29. Interviews for Nebraskan posi tions will be May 24. Business staff applicants will be interviewed first, beginning at 4 p.m. Appli cations must be returned by May 18. University Budaet Thirty-six per cent of the pro posed development fund, Hardin said, would go to the University Medical center in Omaha for more adequate staffing, promotion of closer relations by the Mtdical College with Lincoln and (hnaha hospitals and expansion of tne out patient department. The Chancellor told the commit tee that approximately 1000 addi tional students might be attending the University in 1957. Although no formal study has been undertak en, he said, a higher percentage of high school graduates, are going to college now and fewer students are dropping out of school. Merit increases for faculty ac count for $1,200,000 of the proposed budget. Hardin said that the pay increase would not be of the blank et type and would go to those fac ulty members who have done and are doing "meritorious work." The increase is aimed at retaining key members of the staff, both aca demic and non-academic.