Wednesday. September 28, 1955 Poae 4 THE NEBRASKAN r V' 1 I t I v " I i Trailer Bows Out Hungry coeds on the way home from afternoon classes stopped for the last time this week for a snack at the trailer at its former location across the street from the girls' dorm. Mrs. Laura Ger- Tradition Moves: flUCIC I i QS By ARLEVE HKBEK Staff Writer The rumor started on the first crisp autumn day. It spread through the girl's dorm, then fell on the questioning ears of fratern ity brothers and sorority sisters. The stand is gone!" Unbelieving eyes turned to the vacant lot that will be the future home of a fraternity, looked away, and glanced back, hopeful that the white and red trailor would be in its familiar place. The lot con tained only excavating machines, cold and unfriendly creatures of this era tk toi mnfmnofl wWic ! of progress again struck tradition j - rmiin,, w, with -it mnnth I ,nn;n, -ffiri-nt meth-! ods, the cruel emancipator was j rolling on to an organized society. The simple pleasures of student life turned into occasional luxuries over night. Students tried to con vince their sweet tooths that soda, popcorn, and candy aren't neces sary to brighten up tedious study periods. The stand had been moved to 17th and R. Tradition isn't a graceful loser, the popular stand, fought back. ! She knew she would have to find a new location for the between- meals trailer but didn't fully real- ize It until in her own words, "A bulldozer came in and started digging. Then I had to make up my mind in a hurry." She chose, or rather accepted, the location at 17th and R. Ac cepted, because it was the nearest campus location where she could be permitted to carry on her trade with fewer limitations. Because of an agreement with the owner of the property, Mrs. Gerheardt can not sell cigarettes. This may seem a small matter, but while this reporter was talking ...fh un P-orhnarHt fnnr Rt.lifipntR i asked for a pack of their favorite brand and were turned down. "It hurts me terribly when the fellows and girls come so far and 1 don't have things for them," said Mrs. Gerheardt. "I hate to disap point the students who still remem ber me." During the eight years Mrs. Ger- Griswold Wills $5,000 Gift To Foundation The University Foundation re ports the receipt of $5000 from the estate of the late Sen. Dwight Gris wold of Scottsbluff for the support of the Dwight Griswold Memorial Scholarship fund. Perry Branch, secretary-director, said the fund was initially estab lished in 1954 by Sen. Griswold with gift of approximately 3000. The scholarship was set up in memory of his son, a graduate of the class of 1950, who died of polio in 1951. Under the terms of the scholar ship, any male student may apply. The committee will consider schol arship and need in making its selection with preference being giv en to members of Alpha Tau Ome ga in close cases. Both the sena tor and his son were members of that fraternity. The donor who served as gover nor, U.S. Senator, member of the Board of Begents and head of the American MiBsion for aid to Greece, died April 12, 1954. Cosmopolitan Club A coffee hour will be held by the Cosmopolitan Club Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in Union Parlor C. American and international stu dents are invited, according to Ma rina Wishnewshy, Cosmopolitan Club secretary. ATTEND A NATIONWIDE EADIO BROADCAST wbn 1CT8ASXA WE5IXYAN UJCVEESITY WIT WWW rjsa'STOivnriETinsd ib lb Sundsy, Ocf&ber 2-5:30-7:03 p.m. Ire J. Taylor Gymnasium Admission .$1.00 per person Call 8-2371 fat iicfcst information. Treducod by EFOR lor th ABC Network 4 1.4 heart, owner of the stand for eight years, was moved fcom the empty lot to a new location at 17th and R by construction fn the new Kappa Sigma house. The snack stand sold soft drinks, candy, popcorn and cigarettes. mm FOE f QF i? ILOf Q heardt has operated her stand, she recalls only one break-in, and it was not serious. "People never bother my stand," she continued. "Even during the panty raid my trailer wasn't damaged." Mrs. Gerheardt is trying to get permission to put her stand on one of the vacant lots on 16th Street where she could better serve the students. The zoning board turned her down because of one com plaint. One complaint amidst the cheers of hundreds of students was enough to eliminate the stand from the roster of campus customs. The gaps in the weu-Daiancea oorm meals will no longer be filled with appetizing snacks from the stand. Students will have to satisfy their ewm.B thoughts of what used to be. Ag Union Sets Mass Meeting The annual mass meeting of the Ag Union committee workers will ; be held Oct. 4, in the Ag Union, i HiehliEht of the meeting will be ! free chili feed served at 5:30 P - m. The supper will be served in the Dell. A program in the lounge will follow. The mass meeting will climax the membership drive for Ag Un ion committees. At xnis amt com- mittee chairmen are introduced and new members are signed up. Present committee chairmen are Charlie Trumble, Student-Faculty; Leo Damkroger, Publicity; Mary Alice Keller, General Entertain ment; Bill Spilker, Dance; and Genelle Jensen, House Committee. All ag campus students interest ed in joining a Union .committee are invited to attend. Freshmen girls may attend but will not be Signed UP Until Oct. 19. University Names Research Assistant Dr. T. J. Thompson has been appointed a part-time University assistant research administrator, the University announced Monday. Dr. Thompson will also be secre tary of the University Research Council. The visiting lectureship program will come under his con trol. This program is designed for faculty and graduate students in the form of lectures, seminars and conferences. Departments wishing to arrange for such lectures may call or write Dr. Thompson at University ex tension 4347 or 4180, and Social Sci ences Room 111. Square Dancers The flmt meeting of the Square Dancers will be held at the Ag Union on Thursday, according to Mark Clark, president. illl-llll pMMmi WORLD VHLTI NO KD&EA VFTS WOW CAM GET THE TOP 61 tOMi GtWkBAWTef OF 60 OP Toi7SOO TO BUV A FAM OH WMIOH THERE ISA HOMf -ANE 1AV PLACES SUCH 61 FACM LOANS OH THE frAME BASIS AS HOME UAN VKTKKANb ADMINlB-ritATlUN r On The Social Side: Befas Give Only Party By GRACE HARVEY Social Editor As far as society news is con cerned, but nothing happened on campi last weekend. One lone fra ternity party was held. Evidently NTJ students either went home, spent the evenings watching tele vision or just moffed around. The Saturday football game and Sigma Chi Derby Day deserve credit for raising students out of a second weekend slump. One age old campus tradition was reacti vated. Following Derby Day ac tivities freshman coeds wearing levis fell prey to gangs of fraterni ty pledges carrying cans of white goo. Beta Theta Pi held a Patio Party Saturday night. Unfortunately, and due to circumstances beyond the brothers' control, the event was renamed the Parlor Party. Approx imately fifty Betas and their dates danced to the music of the Beta Combo, directed by Al Holbert. Led by Yell King Gene Christen sen the party adjourned to the air port to welcome back the football Tuesday Deadline For Registration Registration ends at noon Sat urday Comptroller John Selleck announced Tuesday. He also said this years regis tration is up over last year's by more than 700 students. The total number registered so far is 7729 which includes a freshman class that is 10 per cent larger than last year's. This is considerably below the all time high regis tration recwd of 10,153 set in 1947. Woman Wills 'Generous Gift1 To Foundation The University of Nebraska Foundation has received $192,378 in securities after the partial dis tribution of the estate of the late Mrs. Margaret DeBord of Omaha, Perry Branch, director - secretary, announced today. Branch said an addition of ap i proximately $25,000 in cash is ex- pected from the -estate after pay- ments of attorney and executor fees, bringing the total to nearly 5220,000. Mrs. DeBord, widow of the prominent Omaha attorney Wil liam DeBord, stated in her will that the income should be used for aiding needy students and for as sisting faculty members. The Uni versity Foundation's share of the estate approximates 60 per cent, Branch said. Branch said the late Mrs. De Bord wished to leave the majority of the estate to an institution in Nebraska, where her husband had accumulated his wealth, and she chose the University as that insti tution. Commenting on the beouest Chancellor Clifford Hardin called it "a most generous and worthwhile gift. This bequest will assist in providing an education for many college-calibre students who other wise might not be able to obtain one because of the lack df financ es. If v I 1 !!! i 1 I III I ':'m " Hi t ; v I . -I E imw -n, - " i-' L"h i 1 1 team. In charge of the party was John Fagan, social chairman. Engagement Mary House , Gamma Phi Beta senior from Grand Island, to Tom Hawke, Sigma Chi senior from Lin coln. Pinnings Carol artels, freshman from To bias, to Ron Holtmier, Pi Kappa Phi senior, also of Tobias. Phyllis Chard, Alpha Xi Delta junior from Superior, to Henry Blanker, Delta Kappa Pi from Gen eva, graduate of Doane CoT.ge. Pat Coonan, Kappa Kappa Gam ma senior from Des Moines, la., to Bob Chubbuck, Kappa Sigma senior from Lincoln. Joyce Johnson, Pi Beta Phi jun ior from Omaha, to Mike Edwards, Alpha Ta Omega junior from Lin coln. Mary Knorr, Kappa Kappa Gam ma senior from Lincoln, to Joe Carter, Phi Delta Theta freshman in Law College, also of Lincoln. Ann Lindley, Kappa Alpha Theta senior from Lincoln, to Gene Spence, Phi Kappa Psi senior from Lincoln. Peggy Mathers, Pi Beta Phi jun ior from Lincoln, to Jerry Miller, Beta Theta Pi junior Jrom Grand Island. Marflee Newell. Alpha Chi Ome ga junior from Tekemah, to Hank Hemes, Delta Upsflon junior from Pawnee City. Sue Pettijohn, Delta Delta Delta senior from Oregon, Mo, to Sam Gow, Sigma Chi at the University of Illinois from Mt. Vernon, m. Inxie Swerre, Kappa Alpha Theta senior from Omaha, to Max An drews, Beta Theta Pi senior from Lincoln. Helen Weir, Alpha Phi junior from Lincoln, to Dick Pickett, Beta Theta Pi senior from Cheyenne, Wyo. Social Calendar Friday Alpha Xi Delta Fall House Party. Delian Union Fall Party, Tem porary J. Saturday Sigma Alpha Epsilon "Western Party. Alpha Gamma Sigma Pledge Party. Alpha Phi Omega Leads Scout Tour Alpha Phi Omega, national scout ing fraternity, sponsored 980 Ne braska Boy Scouts on a tour of the campus, to the Hawaii football game and a box lunch at the Un ion. Gilbert Thomas was in charge of the group's first pro ject of the year. Alpha Phi Omega is made up of college men with scouting exper ience. They have also given vol untary help during registration. University Dames Plan First Meeting Thursday The University Dames, an organ- ligation for all University married women win now weir iirsi meet ing of the semester Thursday at 8 p.m. at the Foods and Nutri tions Building on the Ag campus. . The council members are hos tesses. All students' wives are in vited to attend, Mrs. I. L. Eno, publicity chairman, announced. Ted and Martha have 4goae to blazers55 TUghe! Ted Nittler, like -most of the lellai?' . . . has "gone to blazers. Here Ted bas chosen a Harris Tweed Sportcoat with the TOUCH OF TVT (the straight, natural look ... three buttons, natural shoulder) Irom Ben Simon's X3B.50). He's also sporting the slim-looking Ivy Slacks. (Plain front, ...strap in back). Admiring Ted's new look is 'Martha Hunter, clad in an Ivy Blazer coordinated with those ever popular Bermuda shorts by Chestnut Hill (Blazer 14.85. . .Shorts 5.95) Go with it Go with Ted and Martha Your Regular Nebraskan Feature KEW CHANCIER OU Cftf CACTUS Pictured above are the many characters which regularly ap pear on the editorial page of The Nebraskan. The cartoon drawn by Dick Bibler had it beginnings Worthal And Snarf: Bibler's Campus Characters Satirize University Routine By FRED DALY News Editor Imagine a little man, here at the University, who is constantly badgered by the Administration, hounded by his professors, snowed by his homework, scorned by his Light of Love, poisoned by his dormitory or co-op or fraternity house meals and slightly mysti fied by it all. Imagine this little man who is always a little late to English, be hind in his biology lab work, and who burns his fingers with acid in chem lab. He also gets up too late for his eight-o'clock classes and last semester slept through eight consecutive meetings of Po litical Science. He is constantly being attracted by girls, although this attraction seldom gets beyond great leers on his part, and cold smiles on the girls' part. His dates -often con sist of cruising out to the "Woods to enjoy nature, the stars, and the scientific wonder of the sneak at tack. He is forever borrowing cigarets, cheating in tests, slavering at the co-eds, and stealing pencils. He is in a constant utuc danger of flunking half his cours es. He is "Worthal, the Little Man on Campus, creation of Dick Bibler, campus cartoonist extraordinaire. Worthal, perhaps the most fam ous of today's college students, was conceived by Bibler in 1946, when the cartoonist answered an ad lor !:::!:!:: IVY Headquarters almost 10 years ago on the cam pus of the University o. Kansas where cartoonist Bibler was an undergraduate. Today, Bibler is an instructor of art at a small coastal college, but his many a cartoonist for the college news- paper at the University of Kansas. He has since expanded to papers all across the country Bibler was originally an artist and writer for several service pa pers during World War XL includ ing Stars and Stripes and Yank. He comments that although car tooning for a college paper is no way to make money, it is a good way to take up time. Bibler also did some work for the Sour Owl, a campus magazine. Since his nation-wide appeal has developed, Worthal has found some new friends to leer with him from the pages of college papers. Join ing such old favorites as Professor Snarf, Elsie Mae and BurwelL are Bolivar Q. Shangnasty, HI,- McGif ford, Louise Lush, Penrod and Dean Bellows. There is also an as yet unnamed, but very striking coed, a prototype of the countless university coeds who roam every campus, sending little flutters up the spines of red blooded men. Bibler 's characters are some times embarrassingly similar to one's friends on campus. In Wor thal, he has portrayed every col lege student with his desires, fail I KNOW WHAT A UJ V ft imMBaffHi TO OTH ER WOMEN ... AN D WHAT YOU WILL DO TO ML BUT I DONT CAREI-SOUNDS EXCITING, DOESNT IT? BROTHER IT IS ... 96 M1NUTE5 OF SUSPENSE AND SIZZLING ROMANCE! i XZ .. . I ' i i f - i " l I ' I jT ' ' i v-v " ' rt mini tfliifin'iV -mmmi iair'"l f M-rfr fi .TirtiiiiiiwiiMiiwMlinim l JEFF Gffilll ill r (lift ill well known . characters continu to amuse and entertain students through out the country. "little Man on Campus has been a regular Nebraskan f eaturt for several years. ings and stumblings, perhaps aggerated, but none the less real His coeds are either beautiful, slim-waisted apparitions, or else the type Worthal dates. All are interesting. His men, the students in particu lar, are shoddy, careless folk, who smoke pipes and have rumpled sweaters. Their hair is never combed. Professor Snarf, almost a legend in some quarters, is what every student secretly thinks of his pro fessors. Bigotted, stern, with a cruel turn to his lip, be keeps his classes rigid with fear and bur dened with textbooks. Every year he writes a new set of six books for each of his courses, so students will go bankrupt paying for them. He grades his papers with the aid of marijuana and a long candle. He also kicks dogs. Such is Bibler's college world. What strange characters! What odd clothesl What stupid situations'! Why, we arent like that at aE. Because, according to the catalogs, we are Young Men and Women, who have a responsibility to home, motherhood and the flag. Sure we are! By the way, have you looked in the crib lately? 0e Then 71 YOU HAVE DONE 1J i 1 n JAN STERLING S, CECIL KEUAWAY CHARIIS IRAIC ' i J . -2. 1 t ----- 1 tit U 1 Tore h Beciiiiunir! 4 J xHliin: it itMt-ll:ltt.r, aim K:il f .H. "Shake, Rattl and Roll" Cau'o linr m a MuBioal -that's "ROUNDUP xA TSLKL CEAZY, MAW OlAZT!" Vx "HOT 'a COU) J'EWSUTKr Color toon. Bool Cool!! .:,.Lk...- ft 5W i WxMwusdew.