n 1? i . R 'Iff pn Pn : ir .' ill ! i Miff I Xi v VOL. 55, NO. 9K Calendar Jane 50 Golf sport reels, 11:45 a. m .-12:30 p.m., Union Lounge All State concert, Ballroom', 7 p.m. Craft Shop open, 7 p.m. All State one-act plays, Howell Theater, 8:15 p.m. Elementary science exhibit, Teachers College Room 200. July 1 All State operetta, Ball room, 7:30 p.m. 2 All State final concert, Sta dium, 7:30 p.m. S Church 4 Independence Day, holiday. 5 Phi Delta Kappa luncheon. Bridge lessons, Union Room 315, 4 p.m. Handicrafts class, Craft Shop, 7 p.m. C Pi Lambda Tbeta luncheon, Ellen Smith, noon. Inesita, Union Artist Series, Ballroom, ft p.m. 7 Sport reels, 11:45 a.m., Lounge. All-State Awards Announced Twenty-seven high school stu dents have received scholarships to attend the University All-State Fine Arts Course, now in progress, David B. Foltz, director, an nounced. - ""TV . The scholarships asI recipients MiUer and Paine Scholarship (Art. Charlene Abrams, Bonn Andrews, Melvin Flick and Jack Clark. Mabel Dow Scholarship (Speech!, Cordon Magney. Shareen Johnson, Norma Lynn Jones, Judy Bussin ger, Jerry Spain and Ron Mc Keever. Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks-Scottsbluff (Speech). An drew Backer. Nebraska Federation of Women's Clubs (Music), District I, Deanno Thomas; District H, Joyce John son; District in, Mary Rummage; District TV, Janice Dickinson: Dis trict V, Lorene Amman, and Dis trict VI, Terry Ann Smith. Lexington Women's Club (Mu sic). Mary Lou Foreman. Plattsmouth Band Parent Club (Musk), Brenda Ofe and Janis Wiles. ' Harnsberger Music Scholarship of Ashland, Avis Hooker and James Bryant. Twentieth Century Club of Mor rill (Music), Janice Borden. Seward Women's Club (Music Beverly Brust. J. M. Crook Scholarship of Ains worth (Music), Kenneth Fling. York Women's Club (Music), Yvonne Eberle. American Association of Univer sity Women, Scottsbluff Chapter, Dorothy Derington. D Students who expect to receive associate, baccalaureate or ad vanced degrees or any teaching certificate at the end of the sum mer session should apply for them at once according to Floyd Hoo ver, director of registration and records, " Checking should be done In Room t of tbe Administration Building. Office hours are 9 a.m. U 4 p.m. daily. noover said that application will he necessary before a degree will be granted.- Peterson Tiny E nemy CQSSml "Some Nebraskans are under the illusion they're safe" from any future enemy air attack, Federal Civil Defense Administrator Val Peterson told an audience of ,200 at a University convocation Mon day afternoon. , . Traditional Midwestern com placency is outmoded, he said, pointing out that bombs dropped on Offut Air Force Base at Omaha and Ellsworth Air Base at Rapid City, S. D., would expose one-third of Nebraska's population to radio active fallout, many fatally. Tbe Lincoln Air Force Base is assumed to be a primary target, Peterson added. American air defense, Peterson asserted, cannot "keep any enemy air attack from being successful" enough for an enemy's purposes. That possibility, he said, when coupled with the fact of history That diplomats have not been able to keep the peace for long periods of time, provides the necessity for civil defense. The former Nebraska governor defined civil defense as "an at tempt to minimize the effects of atomic attack." Although it may be "another nuisance of society," Peterson called it "another dinoetv Hiaa ef citizenship, smrtber require ment." Appealing for more effective civil defense organizations, Peter son said that every state, and city has such an organization. "Some are excellent," he declared, "some are putrid, and some are in be tween." He said be had gathered from newspaper accounts that "utter indifference" to the need for civil defense prevails in Lincoln. Tbe two phases -of civil defense work, Peterson said, are the post attack, or clean-up, and pre-attack phases, tbe latter involving "utili zation of space." Personality: Morrison Military Pressures !ln Effect ' At ' Yalta By ROGER WAIT At the Yalta Conference, the late President Franklin D. Roose velt thought that concessions were necessary to bring Russia into tbe war against Japan, Dr. John Mor rison, visiting professor of geo graphy at the University this sum mer, said in a Summer Nebraskan interview Monday. But, the former chief of tbe East European Branch of tbe State De partment's Division for Research on Europe argued there was "no need for concessions., he asserted. Russia would have entered the war out of national self-interest. Japan, Morrison said, had an nounced she intended to conquer Siberia up to Lake Baikal and had a large, supposedly crack army in Manchuria. But Roosevelt, the geographer said, was "under Army and Air Force pressure to get Russia into the war for sound military rea sons." Considered one of the nation's top three political geographers by Dr. Colbert Held, assistant profes sor of geography, Morrison ob served that the U.S. and its allies LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Mach tlllQUC "Every bit of evidence says that evacuation will work," he said in Mobile, Ala., where 49,000 people were moved to the city's edge" without a fender being scratched." "There is no limit to the size of bombs that can be created by scientists" and atomic manu facturersPeterson said. "There is nothing in America the Russians can't do".' They have the same "mental apparatus," he pointed out. "The Russians are training more scientists than we are in the U.S.," he continued, adding that they are better-trained. "Within 30 to 40 years," he said, Russia could "win world domination for that reason alone." W. V. Lambert m Dean Of Agriculture To Take Russian Trip Dr. W. V. Lambert, dean of the College of Agriculture, has been chosen one of 12 American agri culturists who win tour the Soviet XJntoa for one. jt&octUn this cummer to cb s e r v e Russian cultural agr- roeth- ods. Lambert was unavailable for comment Mon day. He was in W a shing ton, D.C. mak ing final ar rangements for the trip. H e - COm mented Courtew Lincoln Star previously that Lambert "Russia's research, both funda mental and applied, and their ag ricultural education will . be of have been "so successful" in "try ing to replace Western weakness with strength" that the "Russians want to call it quits." During World War II, Morrison was an official in the Office of Strategic Services, in charge of the U. S. S. R. Research and An alysis Branch, -working out Russian military and political intentions.' He was an instructor in geogra phy Et tbe University of Chicago until 1938, when he resigned to do public lecturing around the U. S. He recalled how he was made Mid west Coordinator for the national Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies. A friend told him the chairman of the Chicago committee wanted to see him. It turned out to be Adlai Stevenson, with "vest unbuttoned and coat off but with "kind of a worried look." Stevenson told bim he needed somebody to run the office. He hesitated, Morrison said, but "when Stevenson turns on the pres sure, it's hard to resist." "As I look back," be reminisced, "it looks like a "sort of a helter skelter career, but it was a lot of fun." ' J X - fm : . J :yi -! Union Appearance Inesita, pictured above, wfll ap pear at the Union Ballroom Wed nesday evening. Her program will include a variety of Spanish dances accompanied by a guitarist and pianist.. (Story at right.) prime importance to me." The 12 Americans will visit Rus sia . as part of an exchange pro gram under which m si miliar Kus mmn group win travel In the VS. to study American farming meth ods. : , The 13-member Russian delega tion will include Nebraska on their itinerary. The exchange idea was originated in an editorial in the Des Moines Register and Tribune which suggested Russian farmers should be given an opportunity to study at first hand how Iowa raises corn and bogs simultaneously. Tbe Soviet government imme diately seized on the idea and be gan negotiations to let a group of Russian farmers visit tbe U. S. Of the 12-member U. S. group, many are leaders of farm organizations. In the summers of 1952 and 1353, he conferred with tbe government of Iraq on organizing facilities for agricultural research, sponsored the United Nations' Food and Agri culture Organization. NU Summer Enrollment Shows Rise Final enrollment for the Univer sity's Summer Sessions totaled 2, 845, an Increase of 263 students compared with last year, Dr. Floyd W. Hoover, director of registra tion and records, has announced. Tbe breakdown is: undergradu ates, 11,702; graduates, 614; and Teachers College advanced pro fessional degrees, 529. On June 20, 2644 students had registered. There may be addi tional registration following the University'! post session which be gins In Ang. 8. Last year's total registration was 2,532. Bridge Lessons Set For Tuesday Free bridge lessons sponsored by the Union will be held Tuesday in Union Boom 315 at 4 p.m. The course is open- to beginners and those who desire to learn bow to play. Mrs. 'Homer Honeywell is the instructor of the course which is sponsored by the Union. Thursday, June 30, 1955 Dancer nsifo m nw at Inesita, Spanish dancer, will pre sent the second Union Artist pro gram in the Ballroom Wednesday at 8 p.m. Admission is free for the program which is sponsored by the 1955 Summer Sessions and the Union. Every facet of Spanish dance is presented in Inesita's program, in cluding the cort dances of the 18th panaderos, flamenco and farruca. Her dancing has been featured in movies, opera and television. Recently, Inesita has appeared in the Southwest and West Coast as featured performer of compan ies brought to the United States from Mexico. Inesita was the only non-Spanish national to appear at the opening of the Castellan Hilton Hotel in Madrid in 1953. She was born in New York and grew up in Los Angeles. Inesita made her first perform ance on the stage at the age of 14 as a piano accompanist for her father. ' She studied dance under Jose Fernadez, a disciple of Ar gentina. A review in the New Yt Times called IriesltaV dancing a "pleasure to watch" and also said she "plays the castanets as though they were really a musical instru ment." A New York Herald-Tribune critic said, "One sets open mouthed . . . the most amazing Spa ish female dancer I have ever seen." Inesita is accompanied in her dancing by Erwin Herbst, pianist, and Felipe Lanza, guitarist. Dances on her program include "Andaluzia Sentimental," "Polo," "Valencia," "Jota," "Farruca," "Soleares," "Zapateado," bra" and "Maria Slome." 'Zam- Trouble Spot' First Event Of Series Scheduled The first of two ."World Trouble Spot 'Forums" will be held July 7 in Love Library Auditorium at 2 p.m. - The topic of the first discussion will be Europe. The area and its background, problems and future will be discussed by three mem bers of the University faculty from the departments of economics, po litical science and geography. The program is an outgrowth of 13 radio programs which were pre viously produced by the University. Members of the panel are Colbert Held; assistant professor of ge ography; Carl Schneider, asso ciate professor of political science, and Wallace Peterson, assistant professor of economics. Jack Mc Bride, assistant television director, is in charge of the series. McBride said" that since there were only two times set aside for the forums, the topics, of necessity, are quite broad in their scope. The panel members will each discuss the phase of the problem with which they are familiar. The next forum will be held July 21 and will concern Asia. Prog i i- -