The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 03, 1955, Image 1

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0 itq3dti PlatmsT Hef yrim
Crib Prices To Be Sashec To 1938 teve
Vol. 55, No. 78
University of Nebraska
Tuesday, May 3, 1955
ft i)MmbAMK
With "the Good Old Days" as
its theme, the Union will celebrate
its 17th birthday Friday.
Old-time prices and "flickers"
will highlight the days festivities,
and an evening street dance will
conclude the celebration.
Prices in the Crib will be cut
to the prices "of 1938 when the
Union opened. Such prices will
include: coffee, five cents; ham
burgers, 15 cents, and footlongs,
15 cents.
Free juke box music will be
played throughout the day. The
middle back booth will be substi
Candidates Named
iz Ad Council Election
Planned For
Biz Ad Council elections will be
held Wednesday belween 7:50 a.m.
and 5 p.m. in Social Sciences 212.
Write-in votes will not be al
lowed. To be eligible to vote, business
administration students must be
carrying a minimum of 12 semes
ter hours. For balloting purposes,
they have been divided into class
es by hours: sophomores, 12 to 35
hours; juniors, 36 to 70 hours, and
seniors, more than 71 hours. Jun
ior Division students who have
completed 12 semester hours will
Parade
Inspection
For Army
ROTC Set
Federal officers will conduct an
nual inspection oi the University
Army ROTC Thursday.
The all-day inspection will be car
ried out by Col. Otto Cloudt, pro
fessor of military science and tac
tics at North Dakota Agricultural
College, and Maj. Theodore Capka
oi Kansas State Teachers College.
The inspection will be concluded
with a parade of the entire Army
ROTC Cadet Regiment at 3:15 p.m.
on the Memorial Mall at 14th and
Vine Sts. During the parade awards
will be presented to outstanding
senior cadets in ar'illery, engineers,
infantry, military police and ord
nance. The Pershing Rifles mem
ber who is selected the group's
best student soldier will be award
ed the Gen. John J. Pershing
Medal.
Army ROTC cadets and Band
members have been excused from
classes meeting between 8 and 5
p.m. Thursday so they may take
part in the parade.
Cadets' uniforms will be pre
pared for the federal inspection
Monday through Wednesday. Col.
J. Diestal, chairman of the military
science department, said ROTC
students will not be required to
wear uniforms on those days.
Final Theater
Ticket Sales
Begin Tuesday
Tickets for "Shoemaker's Holi
day," last University Theater pro
duction of the season, may be ob
tained between 12:30 and 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Friday at the
Theater box office in Temple
Building.
"Shoemaker's Holiday" opens at
8 p.m. May 10 and runs through
May 14.
General admission tickets are
$1.50 each. All seats are reserved.
Season ticket holders should ob
tain reservations as soon as pos
sible, Theater Business Manager
Mrs. Delia Kinney said.
Summer In England
Wfislh)raw T Study
lady Mamusenpfrs
Emmanuel Wishnow, conductor
of the University orchestra, will
attempt this summer to uncover
previously unpublished pieces of
early chamber music.
The professor o violin, who re
ceived a travel grant from the Uni
versity Research Council, said be
will look for early examples of
chamber music of the 10th and
17th Centures with the thought that
possibly some may be Bdapted for
performance by string quartets or
string orchestra.
Wishnow will conduct his re
search in the British Museum in
London and the libraries of Oxford
and Cambridge Universities He
termed his search theoretical in
nature, but he hoped he can bring
the results down to practical level.
Wishnow s investigations will be
complicated by the fact that the
musical manuscripts be will look
Bridge lessons
The last advanced bridge lesson
will be held Tuesday in the Union
at 5 p.m. James Porter is the
instructor for the lessons.
tuted with a player-piano, and the
Delta Upsilon quartet will sing
barber shop songs each hour. Dec
orations will include swinging
doors, can-can girls and tavern
menus.
Beginning at 1 p.m. old-time
movies will be shown in the Main
Lounge every half-hour.
Evf n A Corset Shoppe
The Main Hall will be decorated
as a main street of the 1890.'s with
a barber shoppe, corset shoppe, op
era house and candy shoppe featur
ing penny candy.
The lobby will be decorated with
Wednesday
vote for candidates for sophomore
Council posts.
The Council has 14 voting mem
bers. It consists of three senior,
three junior and two sophomore
representatives and three carry
overs and one delegate each from
the professional business fraterni
ties, Alpha Kappa Psi, Delta Sig
ma Phi and Phi Chi Theta.
Candidates for senior posts on
the Council are Warren Burt, Al
len Hesson, Mary Alice Ostdiek,
Allen Overcash and Phil Patter
son. Two men and one woman
will be elected.
Competitors for Council junior
positions are Marilyn Staska,
Richard Walker, John Carroll Mor
row and Richard Swanson. To be
elected are two men and one
woman.
Running for sophomore positions
are Louis Lenhart, Patricia Mc
Millan and Robert Schuyler. Two
candidates will be elected.
Ex-officio members of the Coun
cil are Dean Earl Fullbrook and
Dr. Curtis Elliott, professor of eco
nomics. Alderi, Morris
Professors
To Receive
Fellowships
Two University professors are
among 248 recipients of 1955 Gug
genheim Fellowship awards, grant
ed to "persons of unusual capacity
for scholarly research."
The two faculty members are:
Dr. John Richard Alden, profes
sor of history, who is planning
studies in the history of the South
during the period of the American
Revolution.
Dr. M. Rosalind Morris, asso
ciate professor in agronomy, who
will continue studies of the use of
various types of irradiation for in
ducing beneficial mutations i n
crop plants.
Dr. Alden also has been granted
a one-semester lesve of absence
beginning next fall to visit a num
ber of libraries and archives be
tween New York and Savannah,
Ga. He also is a recipient of the
Frank H. Woods Fellowship for
Scholars in Humanities, which he
received this month in connection
with his studies.
Dr. Morris is studying irradiation
of plants. The research was or
iginally initiated in 1951 by Dr.
Elvin Frolik, associate director
oi Agricultural Experiment Sta
tions. Dr. Morris came to the Uni
versity in 1947 as assistant in
agronomy.
The Fellowships are granted by
the Guggenheim Memorial Founda
tion, established ir 1925 by the late
Senator from Colorado Simon Gug
genheim, and fcy Mrs. Guggenheim
in memory of a son, John Guggen
heim, who died as a young man
in 1922.
at follow many different methods
oi musical notation.
"You have to work it out," he
said, adding that "some of it is
really weird."
v
Cmiriwr Lincoln Journal
WISHNOW
a jail, livery stable and horse,
stage coach office and Wells Fargo
office. The "Silver Dollar Casino"
will form the entrance.
Cliff Dudley and his Orchestra
will play for the street dance from
8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Colored lights,
a white picket fence and conces
sion stands will decorate the front
of the Union.
Those attending the dance may
be photographed behind a bill
board flat painted with figures in
old-fashioned bathing suits.
Free Cake
During intermission of the dance,
the Union's birthday cake will be
presented with free cake for all.
There will be a can-can chorus
line.
Ping-pong tournament play-offs
will be at 7:30 p.m. Trophies for
ping-pong and chess winners will
be presented at the dance.
During the week coeds in old
fashioned costumes will tour the
campus on the Alpha Chi Omega
bicycle built for three. A 1910
Ford, which recently won first
place in the Omaha Antique Car
Show, will be on display Thursday
and Friday.
All Union committees are help
ing with the birthday party. Tom
Olson, chairman of the special
activities committee, is in charge.
Jcyce Stratton is publicity chair
man. I
Loomis Hall Wins BMW
Plaque for Top Average
Thirty-six coeds were recognized
Sunday for outstanding initiative
and work in campus activities at
the annual Barb Activities Board
for Women Recognition Tea.
Marion Janda, BABW vice presi
dent, presented the scholarship
plaque for to Loomis Hall for the
highest scholastic average among
women's independent organized
houses. Verna Searl, Loomis Hafl
president, accepted the award.
Independent coeds honored were:
Joyce Benge, Doris Frank, Doro
thy Frank, Marie Gerdes, Eleanor
Guiliatt, Dorothy Hamilton, Mary
Sue Herbek, Phyllis Hershberger,
Professor
To Lecture
On Sweden
A public lecture, "Sweden Be
tween East and West," will be
delivered Wednesday at 8 p.m. in
Love Library Auditorium by Dr.
William Wiliiam-Olsson, holder of
one of the chairs of economic geo
graphy at the Stockholm School of
Economics in Sweden.
Dr. Wiliiam-Olsson is at present
visiting professor of geography at
the University of Minnesota. In
1952 he was official representative
for Sweden at the International
Geographic Conference in Wash
ington, D. C, and served for sev
eral years as secretary in the
Swedish Geographical Committee.
A major undertaking by Dr. Wiliiam-Olsson
was The Economic
Map of Europe. He received co
operation in the work from a score
of European geographers in var
ious countries.
He will visit the University
Wednesday and Thursday. His visit
is sponsored by the departments
of history, political science and
geography and the University Re
search Council.
Cosmopolitan Club
Paul Meadows, professor of
sociology, will speak on the "Sat
isfaction of Prejudice," at Cos
mopolitan Club Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. in Room 316 of the Union.
No man, Wishnow said, would
hope to investigate all existing
examples of chamber music.
Therefore, he said, "I'm going to
limit my search this summer to a
few composers."
The English composers he will
study are William Byrd, Thomas
Morley, John Dunstable, Thomas
Dowland and Orlando Gibbons.
They wrote music for voices and
instruments, but "did not always
specify whether for voices or in
struments," he said.
In investigating the works pf
these men, Wishnow said, "I hope
to satisfy my curiosity I have re
garding the English period of early
chamber music.
"I have always been interested
in this period of music. But we
do not know just what was the
essence of their writings" which
he termed "an intimate form of
music for strings."
Chamber music of early English
composers is relatively simple,
Wishnow declared. That, however,
"does not rob it of its effective
ness or possibilities on the con
cert stage," be said.
Stoner To Assist
W k Soft
Religious Emphasis Week, gone
from the campus for three years,
will return next year sponsored
by the University of Nebraska
Council on Religion.
The return, according to Glenna
Berry, secretary of the executive
council for Religious Emphasis
Week, is due to "more of a re
ligious motivation on the campus"
than in previous years when the
project was dropped because of
lack of student interest.
James Lloyd Stoner, director of
the University Christian Mission
of the National Council of the
Churches of Christ, came to the
University Tuesday to help organ
ize plans for the Week.
These missions were organized
by the Department of Evangelism
Betty Hrabik, Ellen Jacobsen,
Marion Janda, Joan Joyner, Janet
Lindquist, Doris Mach, Barbara
Pape, Virginia Reeves, Twila Ri
ley, Hanna Rosenberg, Charlotte
Sears, Arlene Selk, Marian Sokol,
Joyce Splittgerber, Winifred Stolz,
Lucigrace Switzer, Madaline Wat
son and Carol Andersen.
The annual tea was held in Ellen
Smith Hall. Annie Laurie Smith
BABW housemother, and Mrs.
Warner, Loomis Hall housemother,
served. Marion Sokol was chair
man. Block And Bridle
Merritt Named Grand
Champion At Ag Show
Del Merritt, Ag College senior,
was grand champion showman at
the 21st annual Block and Bridle
Livestock and Horse Show held
last Saturday evening at the
State Fair Grounds Coliseum.
Willard Waldo of DeWitt was
judge of the grand champion show
manship event. Rod Swanson, Ag
College sophomore, was selected
as the reserve champion showman.
The grand champion showman
received a plaque and his name
engraved on a traveling trophy.
The reserve champion showman
received a ribbon and a medal do
nated by the Block and Bridle
Ciub.
Winners of the hog showman-
Panel!
NUCWA
o Meet
Tuesday
Global hot-spots will be reviewed
by an all-student panel at the bi
monthly NUCWA meeting Tuesday
at 7:30 p.m. in Union Parlors B
and C.
Paul Scheele will discuss Israeli
Arab relations; Claus von Schu
man, the Russian change of pow
er; Roger Berger, the Formosan
cease-fire; and Don Rosenberg,
the significance of the British elec
tions. AWC-UN is the theme of the
meeting which suggests the three
phases of United Nations funcltons
argument, work and co-operation.
AWC-UN represents NUCWA
spelled backwards.
Four members of the NUCWA
board will explain the functions of
their committees, future plans
for committees and the work mem
bers would be doing during the
year.
Board members explaining the
four types of committee work are:
Jean Knudson, foreign student re
lations; civic discussion events,
Sandra Mahaffey; publicity, Bev
Deepe; posters, Ron Blue, and
membership, Mel Fahrnbruch.
Rag Application
Deadline May 18
Applications for paid staff po
sitions on The Nebraskan may be
obtained at The Nebraskan office
or Public Relations, 1127 R St.,
and must be returned by May 18.
Nebraskan interviews will be
May 24, starting at 4 p.m. Business
staff applicants will be interviewed
first.
Cornhusker applications were due
Friday at Public Relations. Inter
views will be held Thursday at 4
p.m.
of the Federal Council of Churches
ia 1938 and have continued on cam
puses ever since.
Stoner is an ordained minister of
the Disciples of Christ and spends
much time traveling through the
United States and abroad visiting
church leaders and student lead
ers in churches.
A banquet has been planned for
him Tuesday evening on the Ag
campus by the Council on Religion
Religious Emphasis Week will
be March 4 to 8 next spring. The
Council on Religion consists of the
City Campus Religious Council,
the Ag Religious Council, the Re
ligious Workers Association and
the Council on Religion Advisory
Board.
Purposes Told
The purposes of Religious Em
phasis Week include promotion of
religious growth and analysis of
religious beliefs, Miss Berry said.
All campus religious groups are
to participate.
Included in plans are some speak
ers outstanding in religion, she
added. A retreat for leaders of
the Week has been scheduled to
precede it by three weeks.
Members of the executive council
for Religious Emphasis Week are:
Executive secretary, Rex Knowl
es; chairman, Dr. Herbert Jehle;
vice chairmen, John Nelson, CCRC,
and Russel Lang, Ag Religious
Council; secretary, Glenna Berry,
and treasurer, Sandra Reimers.
Committee chairmen include:
Arrangements, Sandra Reimers;
assemblies, Sharon Mangold; book
display, Duane Furman; breakfast
and retreat, Ramona Kasdan; class
ship contest were: Del Merritt,
first place; Dick Deets second
place; Larry Robinson, third place;
Val Markussen, fourth place; and
Jim McLean, fifth place. Val
Markussen was superintendent
and Paul Guyer, judge.
Beef showmanship winners were
James Svoboda, Shirley Halligan,
George Hartman, E. J. Piatt and
Jim Peters in that order. Tom
Dowe was judge and James Svo
boda, superintendert.
Sheep showmansh.p winner was
Rod Swanson, followed by Dwight
Tremble, Willa Waldo, Bill Spilker.
and Allen Trenkle. M.A. Alexan
der was judge and Stan Eberspach
er was superintendent.
The winner of the coed horse
back riding contest was Carolyn
Lee, Arts and Sciences junior. Oth
er winners were Judy Oeltjen, Flo
rence "Lee, Sally Berg, and Lora
jean Baskin in that order. Co
chairman of the contest were Kay
Don Wiggins and Kay Knudson.
The team from Plattsmouth won
the potato race and received a
trophy provided by the Block and
Bridle Club.
Special events included a fine
harness horse class, palomino
pleasure, open class, three gaited
class, Tennessee walking horse
class, parade class and five-gaited
class.
Don Beck was last year's grand
champion showman and Beverly
Putrnan was winner of the coed
riding contest.
Records Available
Cases of 50 popular dance rec
ords may be checked out from the
Union for dances and parties.
Reservations should be made a
week in advance with Mrs. Gager,
Union reservations secretary, at
the Union Main Office. A refund
able deposit of $3 will be charged.
-The Outside World'
Diem Victorious
By DICK RALSTON
Staff Writer
Premier Ngo Dinh Diem emerged as victor in Saigon, Vietnam,
after a hectic struggle for power. An attempted coup by a backer of
chief of state Bao Dai collapsed Sunday, leaving premier Diem stul
head of the government of South Viet Nam.
Diem is vigorously anti-communisi, strongly nationalistic and has
American backing. Bao Dai, however, has strong French backing,
and has been described as a French "puppet." The United States has
appealed to the French to switch their support to Premier Diem in
the hopes that a recognized strong government will be able to with
stand threatened Communist subversion and conquest from the North.
Occupation To End
International legal authorities are studying a curious situation
which win arise at the end of this week, when Allied military occupa
tion of Western Germany comes to an end. While West Germany wfll
become a soverign and independent nation at that time, she will not
have control or rearmament and defense arrangements.
Treaties call for a four-power agency of Western allies and Ger
man representatives to control rearmament during the transitional
period, but no moves have been made to establish this agency.
Present plans cell for the Allied High Commission, which has super
vised occupation, to meet for the last time Thursday and decree it
self out of existence.
lowdh
J
F IT
room, Marv Breslow; publicity,
Bev Deepe; seminar, Dick Steffan;
worship, Ron Blue.
Faculty, Rev. Richard Nutt; fi
nance, Andy Smith; hospitality,
Spring Dance
May Band To Make
Second Appearance
The reorganized Billy May band
will be making its second local
appearance May 11 when the group
will play for the Spring dance.
May's band played for the Inter
fraternity Council Ball at a local
ballroom last year.
Sam Donahue, who is currently
directing the band, replaced May
in 1953 when May signed an ex
clusive contract with Capitol Re
cording Co.
May still does all the arranging
for the band in addition to his
arranging work for Capitol Rec
ords, which necessitates his per
manent residence in Hollywood.
Donahue was selected because
of his extensive and varied back
ground, according to May. Dona
hue is also noted as one of the
nation's leading tenor saxophone
players.
The band first attracted public
attention 22 months ago and has
risen to become highly ac
claimed in the field of popular
music. The group has been dis
tinguished for its "fresh approach"
to popular music and also the
famous "slurping saxes."
Donahue formed his first band
while attending high school in De
troit. The group played for nearly
two years in local ballrooms and
then split to gain experience. His
group" later was the nucleus of
future bands which Donahue con
ducted. In 1938, Donahue took a job with
Gene Krupa, one of the nation's
foremost jazz artists. In 1940, he
worked with the Harry James
group for a short period and joined
Benny Goodman later that year.
Donahue toured with his one bana
until he was drafted. In the Navy
he continued his musical career
playing on the armed services net
work. After the war, Donahue reformed
his own band which toured the
country successfully. He was re
called into the Navy when the Kor
ean War broke out and arranged
for Navy bands.
In 1951, Donahue accepted a po
sition as Tommy Dorsey's assist
ant leader. He stayed with Dorsey
until he took over the May band
in 1953.
The Spring Dance will be held
Ag Union Sets
Pie Contest
The annual pie eating contest, a
special event held during Farmers
Fair Week and sponsored by the
Ag Student Union, will be held im
mediately foDowing the Fair par
ade on Saturday, May 14.
Letters will be sent to all organ
ized houses including both Men's
and Women's Dorms explaining the
contest. Deadline for contestants
entering the contest will be
Wednesday, May 11. AD entries are
to be turned in at the Ag Union
Activities Office.
Committees for the event are El
len Jacobsen and Rogene Lees,
publicity; Carol Palme and Bill
Spilker, arrangements; Lorajane
Baskin and Gertrude Sokol, prizes;
Nancy Woodling and Walt Schmidt,
procurement of judges.
Charles Anderson; organized hout
es Dale Knotek; and personal con
ferences, Marv Green.
Honorary chairman will be Chan
cellor Clifford Hardin.
in the Coliseum May 11 from 8:39
to 12 p.m., according to Junior
Knobel, president of Corn Cobs.
Tickets are still available from
members of Corn Cobs, in every
fraternity, sorority and dormitory
house, in both city and Ag Unions,
They are 50 cents.
"The price has been kept down
so that everyone who wants may
attend," Knobel said.
Women's hours have been ex
tended to 12:30 p.m. to allow coeds
to attend the dance.
Dress will be informal, Knobel
said.
Ticket Sales
YWMay
Brealcfas
Planned
May Morning Breakfast tickets
will be on sale until Wednesday
i.i Union booths and from YWCA
representatives in organized hous
es. Ticket price is SO cents.
The annual Breakfast win be
held May 8 at 9 a.m. in the Union
Ballroom to honor mothers of YW
CA members and faculty members.
"The Future of Women" is the
theme. It will be illustrated
through hat fashions of the 1800 's,
1920's and the 1950's.
Mrs. David Dow, former lawyer
and member of the Lincoln City
Council, will be guest speaker.
Sharon Mangold, YWCA president,
will act as toastmistress. Marlene
Hutchinson and her mother will
give the Mother-Daughter address.
Outstanding senior women in the
University YWCA on city and Ag
campuses win be presented at the
close of the program.
Hanna Rosenberg, chairman of
the May Morning breakfast com
mittee, said "Since this is Ivy Day
week-end, our committee feels the
breakfast win be a fitting ending
to the festivities."
AUF Gives
To Special
Riot Fund
The AB University Fund voted
Thursday to give $50 to the Ne
braskan Special Fund.
The contribution win come from
ALT's expense and emergency fund
which composes five per cent of
ALF's annual bget. Sam Ellis,
AUF treasurer, said that usually
only three per cent of the AUF
funds are used for actual expenses
and the remaining two per cent is
used for emergencies such as flood
and disaster relief.
Checks for the fund should be
made out to the Nebraskan Special
Fund and mailed to the Student
Activities Fund in the Administra
tion Building.
The Fund was established to co
ordinate giving to relieve the ef
fects upon persons hurt materially
during the riot of April 14. The
RAM, Residence Association for
Men, has given (ISO.
Mendelssohn
Oratorio Set
For May 15
Mendelssohn's oratorio "Elijah
wfll be presented by the depart
ment of music at its annual spring
choral program at 8 p.m. Sunday,
May 15.
A 600-voice massed chorus under
the direction of Dr. Arthur West
brook, professor of voice, w3 pre
sent the concert. The maia role
wiU be sung by bass baritone Don
ald Gramm, radio, television aid
concert star.
The public is invited and the
is no admission charge.
Last year, the department pre
sented "King David" featuring
Basil Pthbone and the massed
chorus, under the direction of Dr.
David Foltz, chairman of the mu
sic departmcai-