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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1955)
PD1 TM1 JVI Vol. 55, No. 80 University of Nebraska Friday, May 6, 1955 Unterseher, Shugruo Chosen O ail it 3 ky App toted n n r""i n n ii it i 1 1 w n aflSKir' sJDifr Paul Scheele Selected Year's Top Army Cadet Cadet Col Paul Scheele. senior in Arts and Sciences, was named outstanding Army ROTC cadet of the year at the annual Federal Inspection Parade Thursday. Maj. Gen. Guy Henninger, ad jutant general of Nebraska, pre sented the award to Scheele. Scheele also received an award for being the outstanding senior mili tary police cadet from Dr. James Reinhardt, professor of criminology The Pershing sword for the outstanding member of Pershing Rifles was presented to Cadet Lt. Virgil Holtgrewe by J. P. Colbert, Biz Ad Elects 1955 Council Business Administration Council members have been announced. Senior members are Phil Patter son, Mary Alice Ostdiek and War ren Burt. Junior members are Rich ard Swanson and Marilyn Staska. There was a tie between John C. Morrow and Richard Walker, and the representative win be chosen 'next falL Sophomore members are "Louis Lenhar and Robert Schuyler. The Council has 14 voting mem bers which consist of three senior, three junior and two sophomore representatives, three carryovers and onC delegate each from the professional business fraternities. dean of student affairs. Holtgrewe, Ag senior, also re ceived an award for the outstand ing senior engineering cadet from Roy Green, dean of the College of Engineering and Architecture. Lee Chatfield, assistan dean of student affairs, named Cadet Lt. CoL Valjean Anderson, Biz Ad sen ior, as the outstanding Infantry senior. Cadet Lt. Col. Carl Mammel was recognized as the outstanding sen ior Ordnance cadet. Mammel, Biz Ad senior, received the award from Dr. Floyd Hoover, director of regis tration. Cadet Capt. Dwight Jundt, Ag senior, was named outstanding sen ior artillery cadet, an award which was presented by Dr. Franklin 1 dredge, instructor in economics. Dean Green also announced Cadet Master Sgt. Barry Larson, junior in engineering, as the outstanding junior engineering cadet. Five coeds named as honorary cadet batallion commanders march ed with their batallions in full dress uniform. They are Gail Drahota, junior in Teachers, ordnance; Nan cy Hemphill, Ag senior, artillery; Mary Gattis, senior in Arts and Sciences, engineer; Betty Kruger, Ag junior, infantry; and Peggy Larson, Teachers junior, military police. Muriel Pickett, senior in Teachers, participated as honorary cadet regimental commander. John Gourlay, junior in Arts and Sciences, was appointed editor of the 1955-56 Cornhusker by vote of the Board of Student Publica tions. Carol Unterseher was named associate edit- Mike ( 4 , 4 3 ' ' 'J"r "- ' i '' ' ' ' v 4 K V mw I h i r i f mum-- . i 1 1 -" t ; -1 i Glassford Coaches Innocents Going through "spring trair," some members of Innocents get advice from Coach Glassford on the finer techniques essential to good tackling. Left to right, are Manr Stroroer, president; Dor an Jacobs; Coach Glassford; Walt Wright, treasurer; Len Barker, secretary; Brock Dutton, Marv Friedman, and Junior KnobeL vice president UiL Gonrlay The layout editor or and Shugrue was named business manager. The Pub Board a p pointed Gene Spence and Dick Odum as assistant busi ness managers of the Corn husker for the coming year is Bernice Howland. The three new managing editors of the Cornhusker are Linda Buth man, Janet Kuska and Don Bucy. Gourlay, who was a managing editor of the yearbook this year, is also a member of Corn Cobs, Kap pa Tau Alpha, Vice-president of IFC, secretary of Sigma Delta Chi, vice-president of Beta Theta Pi and treasurer of Student Council. Miss Unterseher, a junior in Teachers, also a. managing editor of the Cornhusker this year, is a member of Student ; Council and vice-president and pledge trainer of Delta Gamma. Shugrue, junior in Arts and Sci ences, is a member of Corn Cobs, Newman Club, served as an as sistant business manager of the Cornhusker and is presently re cording secretary of Phi Kappa Psi. Spence was in Moot Court, and is a member of Phi Kappa Psi. Odum was an assistant business manager of Cornhusker and is a Sigma Chi. Spence is a freshman in law school and Odum is a sopho more in Business Administ ation. Miss Buthman is a sophomore in Home Economics, a member of AWS board, and belongs to Kappa Kappa Gamma. Miss Xuska, also in Home Economics, is a sopho more and a Delta Gamma. Bucy, a sophomore in Engineering is rush chairman of Phi Kappa Psi. AH three served this year as section heads of the Cornhusker. Miss Howland is a sophomore in Arts and Sciences, belongs to Alpha Lambda Delta and was named an outstanding coed counselor. Ivy Day Schedule 9 a.m. University Band concert. 9:15 a.m. Mortar Boards and Innocents enter. 9:25 Chancellor Clifford Hardin will give a welcome. 9:30 Ivy Ray history read by Don Olsen. 9:40 Ivy and Daisy Chain proces sional and presentation of May Queen. Planting of Ivy. 10:30 Recession of chains, Mortar Boards and Innocents. 10:40 New members of Tbeta Sigma Phi announced. 10:45 Sorority Sing. 11:50 Court recessional Afternoon 1 p.m. University Band concert. 1:10 Court processional. 1:20 Fraternity Sing. 2:20 Presentation f scholarship caps. 2:25 Winners of Sorority Sing an nounced. 2:35 Presentation of Mortar Board and Innocent caps. .";:45 Winners of Fraternity Sing an nounced. 2:55 Court Recessional. 3 p.m. Masking of mew Mortar Boards. 4 p.m. Tackling of Innocents. Saturday May Quae em, TappiuHg Li Gn i - - Git ivy The planting of the ivy, announce- j Ivy Day 1955, io be held Saturday, ment of the coed May Queen and The day's festivities will begin at selection of next year's Mortar 9 a.m., and end with the tackling Boards and Innocents will highlight ' of the last Innocent in late after- Fraternity Sing Planned For Ivy Day Afternoon Men's groups will compete be ginning at 1:20 p.m. Saturday in the Ivy Day Fraternity Sing. Slections and directors are: Acacia, "Sweetheart of Acacia, Edwin Snyder; Alpha Gamma Rho, "AGR Razz Song," Doyle Hulme; Alpha Tan Omega, "Girls of Gold and Elue," Gerald Rounsborg; Be ta Sigma Psi, '"The Sweetheart Song," Harry Geisselman. Delta Tau Delta, "My Delta Queen," Dick Farner; Delta Upsi lon, "Come Raise a Glass," Nick Johnson; FarmHouse, "Faith of Farm House," George Hart man; Phi Delta Theta, "Drums of Phi Delta Theta," Ron Smith; Phi Gamma Delta, Tiji War Chant," Charlie Ferguson. Pi Kappa Phi, "Pi Kap Boogie," Charles Wright; Phi Chi, "Phi Chi Fraternity Song," Charles Curtiss; Phi Rho Sigma," A Medical Stu dent's Prayer," Duane Young Ca nister; Sigma Alpha EpsHoa, "Lar go," Jerry Cox; Sigma Alpha Mu, "When Day is Done," Marv Fried man; Sigma Chi, "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi," Jon Dawson. Sigma Nu, "White Star of Sigma Nu," Eugene Ballard; Sigma Phi Epsilon, "Sig Ep Creed," Bill Hatcher; Theta Chi, "Song of The ta Chi," Robert Patterson; Tbeta 23, "Hail to Theta Xi," W e n d e 1 Friest; Zeta Beta Tau, "My Broth er, Here s My Hand," David Solz- man. f WIT'S wmt.i Pafewtac I tmmtmia Irr Itmr -"netec tors. U u fMUMl i4 twar to Thr 4vm1mw m m mirtwi rf -ltl,-k Junta MaOrato will k HUM r tax ftw Murx.ur hw luunat, m lr iHtt, Thr "turnr" la aw tmem to taw iwma ri ttw "tut-" to ttw few mtck whit tor h nmriml; fuy nay immg i-orm Mir rimnrrtt. r1 ttw "'Mnianil awirllmi cor MttinttMi IMarr it ctw ran It um. 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Mara Uiaa rhrttiia ooK tawa toelvoa . tourw tntt aicturr A aa aratoar uM toa taaaral Uia fMlj-'. chtancra. HMck frwia kawa irta, aaa ka toaj aaadr taai la Mara tataaaara MvliiUat aaj mm tmm wf fe fcwlaaa. tdtrac vaatdi aa w traa aaar ton ttmm arvai Mara aaaHHi tratataa arauM luwt ra a tMitar atHwax la r sua cana auar a amtt nut kurar a ckawm. auMaawaaat un taa war i liU'a rtcta atrac tU N. 4arzaw a fcwtur anda aaataraa aouald a Kaltwl to CwM. faRKHMMaua ia tmmt Mwnataaa aa aaaf ton man I mm4 aarkhurac Mutt aiurta wa mit tinfm aaat4uia an ananuaa. Thm mm miu4 la tha ttoal ctratek. M k Ml rvit awl mt flat Haeawarr anar aarlawk aiiahl awl tor aaaaak r ti.-uar. tntracalaaa ftaMa will tor ami man Iaa- final racuauHMia. mt llaiaa aHVM a a Itcuar awalaattaa ( flk to to ateM. attr. noon. Ivy Day celebration will be held just north of the Admini stration Building at 12th and R streets. In case of rain, it will be held inside the Coliseum. The day begins in the morning and the afternoon with short con cert by the University Band, under the direction of Don Lentz. This year's Mortar Boards and Innocents senior honor aries which sponsor the annual Ivy Day, -will enter and handle the day's program. Donald Olson, assistant profes sor of speech, will serve as master of ceremonies during the day. After the entrance of Mortar Boards and Innocents, be will introduce Chan cellor Clifford M. Hardin, who will give a short welcoming address. Olson will then 'elate the history of the Ivy Day proceedings at the University. A traditional feature ot the morning's schedule is the processional of Ivy and Daisy chains, and the introduction of the Ivy Day Court. Members of the Ivy Day Court are selected on a basis of scholar ship, leadership and service to the University by the Mortar Boards, according to Mimi Hamer, Mortar Board. The chain leaders, six junior women and six seniors, are selected on the same basis as mem bers of the Court. iAt r Ar Coed Houses To Compete The Ivy Day Intersorority Sing will begin at 10:4S a.m. Saturday on the lawn north of the Adminis tration Building. Names of the selections and di rectors lor each women's group en tered in the Sing are: Alpha Chi Omega, "A Toast," Joan Marshall; Alpha Omicron Pi, "Over the Rainbow," Dee Garrett; Alpha Phi, "Memories of Alpha Phi," Barbara Jones; Alpha Xi Delta, "Sweetheart Song," Jeanine Schliefeit. CM Omega, "I Lore life," Alice Logic; Delta Delta Delta, "When in the Night," Carol Newell; Delta Gamma, "Delta Gamma," Carol Unterseher; Gamma Phi Beta, "Bound Firm Ey," Margie HaHas. Kappa Alpha Theta, "Theta Lip," Mary Jo SLhakjiioltz; Kappa Kappa Gamma, "Kappa Blue and Elue," Jan Eea!; t'l Beta Phi, "Heather on the HiH," Ellen Svo bodn; Sigma Delta Tau, "DT With Torch So Eright," Ruth Cbud ooff; Sigma Kappa "Softly fes in the Morning Sunrise," Marly a Herse. Residence KaHs, "American Lul laby," Marilyn Blackburn; Ter race KaH, "The Lilac Tree," Lau rel Morns; Town Gub, "Black Is the Color of My True Lore's Hair," Hanna Rosenberg; University Hos pital Nurses, The Night Has a Thousand Eyes." Janice Htmel; Love Memorial HD, "I Talk to the Trees," Jan Liiidquisi. Elections for Student Council will be held Monday from 7:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. in Love Library and Ag Union. Students may vote for rep resentatives from their own col leges. Candidates running from each college: Agriculture: Sara Jane Alexan der, Stanley .Tens?v Sis Matilce, Mervyn Scliefert, Mary Sorenson, Arley Dean Waldo and Charlie Trumble. Arts and Sciences: Bruce Brug mann, Beverly Deepe, Edward Kemble, Janice Kraus, Richard Lynch, Nancy Person and Sam Van Pelt. Business Administration: James Boling, Sarah Gaughan, Marvin Mc Neice, Benjamin Neff, John N. Nel son and Richard Remington. Dentistry: Harold Roseman, and Robert White. Engineering and Architecture: Roy Boyd, Donald Bucy, John Fa gan, Wayne Hays, John Kinnier and James Souders. Law: Marshall Becker 4nd Da vid Erickson. Pharmacy: James Arntzen, Rod ney Einspahr and Barbara ShulL Teachers: Annabell Blincow, De lores Fangmeier, Melva Fahrn bruch, William Goodwin, Helen Gourlay, Vernon Hall, Rita Jelinek, Jo Ann Junge, Cynthia Lonsbrough, Sally Laase, Janice Schrader and Kenneth Vosika. To Students: Monday you will have the op portunity to elect members from colleges to Student Council. When casting your vote, consider a per son qualified in both interest and ability to serve you and the Uni versity. I am sore you will profit by being at the polls Monday. JACK ROGERS, Council President NU Union Is 17 Cut Prices, Dance Featured At Party The Union is returning to the "Good Old Days" Friday while it celebrates its 17th birthday. Pre-war food prices, sijent mov ies, free juke-box music and a street dance highlight the day's fes tivities. During intermission of the dance, the Union's five-layered birthday cake will be cut. Each jar since its opening on Ivy Day, 1938, the Union has given a birthday party the first week in May. From 38 to 1947, the cele bration centered around open house and an all-campus dance in the Coliseum to a name band's music. Then, from 1947 to 1950, the birth day party was an inside open house celebration. In 1950 the present cus tom of holding a combined street dance and open house began with a lawn party on a vacant lot east of the Union. In 1953 the Union burned bonds to celebrate being free of indebtedness. Prices in the Crib are cut to 1938 levels: coffee is five cents; hamburgers and footlongs, 15 cents, and double-dip ice cream cones, five cents. The Main Hall is decorated to re semble an 1890 concourse. It has a barber shop, corset shop, opera house and candy shop selling penny candy. The lobby is transformed into the main street of a not-so-peaceful western town. . Beginning at -1 p.m. - "Snicker Flickers" will be shown continu ously in the Maia Lounge. The Delta Upsilon quartet will sing forth barber-shop songs in the Crib on the hour. The quartet will also sing during the intermission of the street dance. The celebration will conclude with a street dance to'the music of Cliff Dudley's orchestra from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Intermission festivities will in clude a performance by six can can girls, Mary Mong jumping out of an artificial cake, the real birth day cake which the Union Board will cut and pass and announce ment of winners of the chess, ping pong trophies and regional winners of the National Intercollegiate. Bridge Tourney. SC Abolishes CoII-Agri Fun Organization The Coll-Agri Fun Board, Ag campus organization which spon sored an annual Coll-Agri Fun Night, was abolished by Student Council Wednesday. The Council committee which in vestigates overlapping activities presented the resolution for discon tinuing the Board. The resolution said that the majority of Ag or ganizations thought Coll-Agri Night should be abolished. The committee recommended that in case the Faculty Senate should desire to reinstate the Board, the question be placed oa the 1956 Spring Election ballot. RegentsToHear Appeals From Expelled Students The Board of Regents will meet Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. with, par ents and students, who requested the Board bear appeals from dis ciplinary action taken after the April 14 riot. Regents said five requests have been received and none have been denied. Hearings will be in the Ad ministration Building. Coffee Hours A graduate coffee hour will be held Friday from 4 to 6 p.m. ia the Union Music Room. A coffee hour will be held Tues day from 4 to 6 a.m. in Parlors B and C for two visiting editors from Lebanon. The coffee is spon sored by Cosmopolitan Club and NUCWA. The Outside World' Occupation Ends By DICK RALSTON Staff Writer German occupation ended Thursday with brief diplomatic cere monies in Bonn, Paris, Washington and Brussels. There was no rejoic ing in Germany over the newly won independence, chiefly because the country is still divided. The Paris Pacts which granted independence also gave Germany the right to raise a military force of 500,000 men and admitted Ger many to the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and the Western European Union. Diem Gains Support Support for Premier Ngo Dinh Diem and demands for the ouster of ex-Emperor Eai Dai are growing in Saigon, South Viet Nam. A "National Political Congress," the nearest thing to a popular national congress the country has ever had, thunderously demanded the ouster of Bao Dai and the dissolution of the present government. Bao Dai was stripped of power in the recent short-lived civil war, but has remained the titular head of state. The assembly also de manded that Premier Diem be empowered to form a provisional gov ernment which would hold national elections soon. a S y I ' i MB's Practice Masldnq Jo Knapp (standing, right) drmoraarstes the sacred Mortar Board art of nmkicg which win be used BulaTday tl ivy Day ji-s-tivihes. Seated are Jo Mrytrs, vise preiudetA; tad E2eea lu!&r ky, fcitftorian; ssd 3.ard:rg t.-m V! artel Pickett, secrtijsry, Jj.- Steffan, publicity cfcalrmara; &1 Muss Kflip, yrMiiciX f V. !" - Xr V. i: is 'v r. r. t 4 r -; ' t ' 1 s -V ' i;-