The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 14, 1955, Image 1

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    It Happened At NU
While a professor was lecturing to his science
class, he happened to turn on the water in the
small basin. Due to some defect, the water kept
on pouring. In an attempt to beat the faucet by
force, the professor wrenched off the handle.
Undaunted the professor continued the lecture
and the bell rang before the water ceased.
the
Weather 'r Not
Fair and a little warmer Friday with a high
temperature near 72 degrees. Moderate north
west winds. Low tonight abort 45.
Vol. 56, No. 12
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
Friday, October 14, 1955
Sixteen To Compete:
Pe
1 u II VC3H
pesis Tonight
Penny Carnival, will be held Fri
day at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ball
room. Tickets are 35 cents.
Sixteen houses will compete.
A committee of faculty members
will judge booths on originality,
suitability, attractiveness and aud
ience appeal. This year's judges
are Mrs. Francis Vogel, Assistant
to the Associate Dean for Women;
James Miller, chairman of the de
partment of English; and David
Seyler, assistant professor of art.
Participants and spectators will
also vote for the winning booth.
Participants will vote from 6:45
p.m. to 7:15 p.m. Spectators may
vote until 9:15 p.m. Identification
cards are necessary to vote. Stud
ents must present their ticket stub
punched by six different booths to
gether with their ID cards to vote.
Students who leave the ballroom to
vote will not be permitted to re
enter because of crowded condi
tions of the ballroom during Penny
Carnival.
Final decision of the winners will
be based on 60 per cent judges'
vote and 40 per cent student vote.
The winners will be announced a(
9:30 p.m.
The winning booth will receive a
trophy. Second and third place and
two honorable mentions will also
be given.
Farmers' Formal:
4d fij
ClffCS
Fifiolfsfs
h
SOU
Five finalists were selected for
Queen of the Farmers' Formal
dance in an Ag Campus election
Tuesday.
They are Betty Eberhart, Twila
Vilov nnrnthw TWnt.ikp Shnrnn V.P-
'Loyalties':
Pan-Hell
To Hold
Session
'Greek World Loyalties" is to
be the theme of the annual Pan
hellenic. Workshop to be held Sun
day through Wednesday.
The four-day workshop will in
clude training
groups for sor
ority officers,
z ehange
lunches " and
dinners, and
joint pledge
active meet
ings at each
chapter house
to explain Pan
hellenic organ-
tT a a Breckenridge
Dr. Adam Courtesy Lincoln Star
Breckenridge, assistant to the
Chancellor for academic affairs,
will speak to an all-sorority convo
cation Monday at 5 p.m. in Love
Auditorium. Breckenridge's topic
will be "Loyalty to the School."
Cynthia Henderson is chairman of
the coavocation.
Other events scneduled for Pan
Hell week are:
Monday, 6 p.m.; Panhellenic
night at sorority meetings. Groups
will be hostess to their alumnae
Panhellenic advisor.
Wednesday, 6 p.m.; exchange
dinners for presidents of active
chapters and pledge classes. ;
Wednesday, 7 p.m.; training
chool groups.
ger and Janet Lindquist.
Betty Eberhart is a member of
Home Ec Club, Ag Interdenom,
VHEA, Phi Upsilon Omicron, In
ter Varsity Christian Fellowship,
Love Hall and president of Omi
cron Nu.
Twila Riley is president of
VHEA, Ag YWCA District Repre
sentative, Phi Upsilon Omicron
secretary, and a member of Home
Ec Club Council, Rodeo Associa
tion, All University Square Dance
Club, Ag Religious Council and
Love Hall.
Dorothy Matzke is a member of
Home Ec Club, VHEA and vice
president of Phi Upsilon Omicron.
Sharon Egger is active as secre
tary of Activities Committee in Ag
Union, Ag Union Board of Man
agers, VHEA, Ag Builders and
Delta Delta Delta.
Janet Lindquist is Home Ec Club
president, Mortar Board treasurer,
national secretary of the College
Club Section of American Home
Ec Association, Phi Upsilon Omi
cron, Omicron Nu treasurer, VH
EA, Ag YWCA, 1954 Hello Girl
and member of Love Hall.
Queen of the Farmers' Formal
will be selected Saturday evening
by all those attending the dance.
She will be presented at intermis
sion, with the remaining four girls
as her attendants.
Bill Albers and his band will
provide the music for dancing be
ginning at 8:30 p.m. Tickets are
$1.50 per couple and will be on
sale at the Ag Union booth until
Friday, at the door Saturday, an
nounced Charlie Trumble, chair
man of ticket committee.
Farmers' Formal is under the
sponsorship of the Ag Exec Board.
All University students are in
vited to attend, Larry Connor, Ag
Exec Board president, said.
Luncheon
The first of a series of bi-weekly
Nebraskan staff luncheons will be
held Friday noon in Union Parlor
Y. All staff members business
and editorial, reporters and col
umnists may attend. Tickets will
be one dollar.
YeAH,BvT THfY Do LD An ATMOSPHERE.'
See Editorial on Page 2.
By Jack Brodle
Military Ball:
IFalSmigs
C" 'II
IF or ommamidsiiniit
Filings for 1955 Honorary Com
mandant are open from Monday
until Friday at the office of the
Dean of Student Affairs, Ellen
Smith Hall, Chuck Tom sen
AFROTC wing staff member, an
nounced Friday.
. Honorary Commandant will be
presented at the Military Ball, Dec.
2. Anv woman student is eligible
who has 77 hours, is carrying at
least 12 hours and has a 5.0 ac
cumulative average.
Four finalists will be selected
hv the Cadet Staffs of the Air Force,
Army and Navy. Interviews of all
candidates will be held at 7 p.m.
Nov. 3. Final selection will be
made by a vote of all military
students of the three branches,
after a tea for the finalists Nov.
17.
Runner-up will be selected Miss
Student Council:
Two Wee!
Discussed,
A resolution to be directed to the
Faculty Senate on reconsideration
ot the final exam period was
passed in the Student Council
Wednesday.
The resolution, submitted by
Bruce Brugmann, Arts and Sci-
Final Exam Period
Tabled In Meeting
ences representative, was passed
as a directive to the Council com
mittee on calendar and final ex
ams. The resolution stated: "Resolved,
that the Student Council commit
tee on calendar and final exams
Kosmet Klub:
Try out
Set for
Tryouts for the Kosmet Klub
Fall Revue will be held Monday
and Tuesday in the various houses,
Von Innes, KK president, an
nounced Thursday.
Judges will be Innes, Chuck
Tomsen, KK vice president; Barry
Larson, business manager; . Al
Schmidt, secretary ; Mary Jane
Mulvaney, assistant professor of
physical education; Van Westover,
assistant to the dean for men.
Harry Weaver, professor of bot
any; Andy Smith, show director;
John Nelson, KK junior member;
Marsh Nelson, KK junior member,
and Marv Stromer, KK member
at large.
Organized houses will select can
didates for Nebraska Sweetheart
and Prince Kosmet who will be
announced the evening of the show.
Interviews to select finalists will
be held Thursday in the Union.
Mortar Boards and Innocents will
judge the candidates.
Curtain act tryouts will be held
Wednesday evening. A specif
ic time and place will be an
nounced later, Innes said.
Groups to tryout on Monday and
their skit masters include: Sigma
Chi, 7 p.m., Jon Dawsn; Delta
Tau Delta, 7:0 p.m., Fred Allen;
OtQS
Skits
Sigma Nu, 7:40 pjn., Gene Bal
lard; Sigma Phi Epsilon, 8 p.m.,
Jack Lindsay; Phi Kappa Psi, 8:20
p.m., Dick Shugrue; Delta Sigma
Phi, 8:45 p.m., Jim Copp; Phi
Delta Theta, 9:10 p.m., Warren
Burt; Theta Xi, 9:30 p.m., Wendall
Friest; and Beta Theta Pi, 9:50
p.m., Roger Henkle.
Those trying out on Tuesday in
clude: Phi Gamma Delta, 7 p.m.,
John Forsyth, Beta Sigma Psi,
7:20 p.m., Don Rosenberger; Kap
pa Sigma, 7:45 p.m., Ron Becker;
and Delta Upsilon, 8:10 p.m., Marv
McNiece.
The show will be held Friday,
Oct. 28, in the Coliseum. "Leg
endary Lapses" is the theme of
the show.
Degrees
All students who plan to receive
bachelors or advanced degrees or
teaching certificates at the close
of this semester should apply for
same by November 1, 1955, if they
have not yet done so.
Application may be made at the
Senior Checking Office, B-9 Admin
istration Building, between the
hours of 9 a.m.' and 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday, or 9 a.m. to 12
noon on Saturday.
bring to the Faculty Senate com
mittee on final exams a request
to reconsider and investigate the
final exam period."
An amendment to precede the
passed resolution to state, "'Be
cause the Student Council favors a
two week examination peroid..."
was introduced by Gail Katskee
and tabled for one week.
In proposing the resolution,
Brugmann said that the exam
question was not discussed prop
erly by the Faculty Senate. Mar
vin Breslow, representative from
CCRC, said that the students
should have reasons from the fac
ulty for their objectives.
Before the resolution was intro-.
duced, Breslow made a report as
chairman of the Council calendar
committee that the committee
would meet with the faculty com
mittee Thursday on the question
of the final exam period.
After Breslow's report, John Fa
gan, representative from Engi
neering College, moved that the
council endorse a continuation of
the policy of two week exams. Fa
gan's motion was withdrawn when
the resolution introduced by Brug
mann was passed.
The main purpose behind the
resolution is that the faculty sen
ate will justify and explain to the
students why the change was
made.
Sharon Mangold, chairman of
the publications board committee,
announced that openings were still
available for interested sophomores
to apply for the sophomore posi
tion on the publications board.
President Andy Hove announced
that student representation on fac
ulty committees is arranged on a
three-year basis and must be re
newed each year. A committee of
Breslow and Brugmann was ap
pointed to see if this may be ar
ranged on a definite basis.
Qndl
jjf I
SC
Wednesday's Meeting:
Iff loll
The following chart lists the amount of oral contributions on the floor of Wednesday's
Council meeting from each member of the 1955-56 Council.
Debate has been divided into the four topics discussed for ease of tabulation. These
categories include committee reports, discussion on the length of the exam week, dis
cussion on the migration, discussion on the Council's Round Table with the Chancellor
and, finally, a total amount comments for each member.
Absent members and those who left prior to adjournment have been indicated on
Contribution
the chart. Skip Hove, Council president", presided during the meeting. Comments indi
cated on the chart with an 'x" were special questions to the president.
Record of the discussion was made, in triplicate, during the course of the meeting.
In cases of differences in the tabulations, the average of the three has been used.
All Council members are listed alphabetically with the college or organization they
represent.
Army, Miss Navy and Miss Air
Force after the honorary com
mandant is chosen from the fi
nalists. The 1954 Honorary Commandant
was Jan Harrison. The Military
Ball traditionally opens the cam
pus formal season.
In previous years Honorary Com
mandant was selected from the
list of applicants by Cadet Offi
cers Assoc ia ton. No selection of
semifinalists was held.
After the 1954 Honorary Com
mandant election was invalidat
ed and subsequently upheld by Stu
dent Council, COA was dissolved
and replaced by a Military Ball
Committee.
NUCWA Dinner
f
Hanson W. Baldwin, military
editor for The New York Times,
is shown speaking at the
NUCWA banquet Tuesday eve
ning. Wednesday morning Bald
win spoke before an all-University
convocation discussing "War,
Politics, and Atoms."
Baldwin:
Courtesy Lincoln Star
A Pulitzer Prize winner, Bald
win graduated from the Naval
Academy at Annapolis and left
the Navy to work as a newspa"
pei reporter. He has been with
The Times since 1929.
Shown above left to right are
Billie Croft, Baldwin, and Charles
Gomon, NUCWA president.
World Develops Into Tvjq
Superstates: Russia, US.
"Despite the beliefs of many
people, nuclear weapons will not
make wars obsolete," Hanson
Ba'dwin, military editor of the
New York Times, said Wednes
day. Baldwin spoke before nearly
2000 University students at the
first All University Convocation of
the semester.
"However nuclear weapons may
limit, but will not stop wars," he
said Puppet wars and fringe wars
as well as atomic wars are a
danger to national security, he add
ed. He estimated that the United
States has a stockpile of 10,000
atomic bombs to about 1000 for
Russia and that this country has
made 65 atomic tests to Russia's
14.
However, he said we must con
tinue to build atomic weapons at
an accelerated pace. "If we re
la::, Russia will grow stronger
than we.
He mentioned three main rea
sons for the "sweetness and light"
attitude of the Russians. "Russian
leaders are still struggling for the
top spot in the government."
Secondly, he said, Russia is un
dergoing an economic strain. They
are trying to provide both guns
and butter, he said.
This change of Russian policy,
but not of ultimate ends, is, third
ly, bringing results for them on
the world scene. France plans to
reduce its military forces now and
Adenauer's long-term polition has
been weakened by the agreement
between Russia and the West Ger
man government, he said.
According to Baldwin, the world
around us has become two worlds
since World War 11. Two super
states, meaning Russia and the
United States, have grown so much
more powerful than other nations,
This has resulted in conflict ex
pressed as the "cold war" or at
times as actual fighting.
These two worlds are now be
ing separated by "gray areas"
which are independent of the two
major powers and their allies. He
classed India, Burma and Indo
nesia in this group with the pos
sible inclusion of Germany and Ja
pan in the future.
Baldwin emphasized the impor
tance of the consequences and ef
fects of the small-scale wars. Be
cause of the stalemate in the Ko
rean War, Red China could term
the United States a "paper tiger."
"They have exploited the term so
that other Asiatic nations began
doubting the strength of the Unit
ed States."
I Report! Eu Week I MlnatiM t Roand Table I Total I BeporU I Eaai Week I Migrattoa I Koepd Table I Total
Kazys Alminis ft Gail Katskee 1 I C I ft A ft
Cosmopolitan Club ; I u Senior holdover 1 i J I u w
Jim Arntzen I ft Sharon Mangold 1 I O I ft I A I 5
Pharmacy I V 1st vice-president I X V V
Don Beck I I ft Marv McNeice I ft
Corn Cobs j J U Bus. Ad.
Marsh Becker No comments; left early Ben Neff I l J 1
Law U Bus. Ad. j 1
Glenna Ferry 1 I 1 1 Dorothy Novotny V V
2nd Vice-president I 1 I Coed Counselors ' 2
Marv Breslow 1 j A j 7 Kay Reeves . Q
CCRC I 1 I ' Ag College ; V
Brace Brugmann J j T Dick Reische ill 2
Arts, and Sciences ' i ' '
Dob Bucy . Absent i ft Harold Roseneau Absent A
'Engineering 1 U Dental College V
Bev Deep I ft Len Schropfer I I A
Arts and Sciences V RAM j '
ass -1 I4i j . i 4 .1 ' I I l io
satf&-. 1 I ' i 1 - 1 o "01 1 11 l ' 0
1 ,j f, j j0 gacXn"nble i 1.1-1 1 I 1
Ginny Hudson I ft "L v ' ' ft
Panhellenic. -J j , U Arts and Science . I v
Jane Jeff-y l j Ken Vosika i A
Tassels i I I I Teachcrs i V
Rita Jellnek I I j 1 V I V AWS ! 1 i 1 2
Teachers' College j A A I 1 I 1 -
Bernie Wishnow f
Senior Holdover U
Outside World:
Douglas Offers Plan
By BARB SHARPE
Staff Writer
A program to raise lagging farm income was advanced Thursday
by Sen. Douglas (D-IU) in a speech to be delivered to the National
Editorial Assn.
In addition to a subsidy plan, Douglas urged that ways be found
to build up consumption of food at home and abroad and to send
wheat, cotton and dairy products to countries where there is starva
tion. He proposed that countries receiving these products would ex
change quantities of tin, copper, uranium, cobalt and other minerals.
The Senator said he feels efforts should be made toward aiding
small and low income farmers, but added that he did not know what
such a plan might cost. He attacked GOP farm policies and declared
that the Republicans "broke" 1952 promises to farmers.
Chou: Prisoners 'Free To Leave'
Communist China Premier Chou En-lai was reported to have told
British officials that all Americans now being held in China have been
notified that they have a right to leave.
An earlier Peiping radio broadcast had said that 47 Americans
were free to leave but 19 had criminal charges against them. Ameri
can officials predicted that the Reds may still try to use the 19 Ameri
cans as pawns in the repatriation talks at Geneva. However, the fact
that these 19 have serious charges against them was not being re
garded as too great an obstacle in the way of their release. Most of
the American citizens and airmen recently released by Peiping had
been jailed on long prison terms.
Power Deals Draw House Probe
White House conferences concerning disputed government efforts
to sell federal hydroelectric power to a private utility in Georgia for
resale to cooperatives are being probed by a House Government
Operations subcommittee.
Possible obstacles in the investigations appeared when Fred Aan-
dahl, Asst. Secretary of the Interior, told of a presidential order stat
ing inter-departmental executive discussions may be withheld from
congressional committees.
Aandahl indicated that the conferences were held before the preo-
aration of a ruling by Atty Gen. Herbert Brownell, on the power
question last summer.