Weather 'r Not The weather Wednesday will continue being cloudy or partly cloudy with occasional thunder storms possibly predicted. Highs are expected In the 70's. It Happened at NU One of the late returnees to school from the. famed CU Days celebration last weekend at Boulder was asked of his opinion of the "Pixl Press." He countered rather shakily "Did th Nebraskan go out of business?" Vol 29, No. 85 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Wednesday, May 9, 1956 Rodeo, Barbecue: Farmer's fair Activities To fat Umlervjay Friday A rodeo, barbv-.ue, horse show nd the Cottoff aV.- Denim Dance will highlight Farmer's Fair, Fri day and Saturday on Ag campus. A student rodeo will start the festivities with the first go-round at 1:30 p.m. Friday. Rodeo events for the men in elude saddle bronc riding, bare back riding, Brahma cow riding, calf roping and steer wrestling. - A coed calf catching contest and the typical cowboy and cowgirl contest will be other highlights of the rodeo. Hungry cowpokes and specta tors who manage to survive the ro deo are invited to take part in a barbecue sponsored by the Home Economics Club. Serving will be from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. in the area west of the College Activities Build ing, if the weather is favorable. Tickets are 85 cents and may be purchased in the Ag and City Un ions, from representatives in the organized houses, of from any member of the Builders Sales Committee. The fifth annual Dairy Royal Show will be the last event on the program Friday night. The show will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the , Horse Barn with Dick Terp, presi 'dent of the Varsity Dairy Club, acting as master of ceremonies. The showmanship contest will again be divided into a junior will be given to the grand champ ion and reserve champion show men. Special events on the pro gram are a profs promenade and a coed cow milking contest. The Fair will continue Saturday doming with a nationally ap proved Quarter Horse Show and the Block and Bridle Showmanship Contest taking place simultaneous ly at 9 a.m. Both events will be held in the rodeo arena on the Ag campus. Trophies for the Quarter Horse show are being donated by the American Quarter Horse Asso ciation of Amarillo, Texas, and the competition will include nine halt er classes and one reining class. Fall: AFROTC Selects Officers The headquarters of the Univer sity Air Force ROTC Cadet Wing has announced staff and command positions for next fall. New officers for the headquar- ters, 465th AFROTC Cadet Wing are Cadet Lieut. Col. William Bed- well, Deputy Wing Commander; Cadet Lieut. Col. Marvin McNiece, Deputy Wing Commander; Cadet Major James Placke, Wing Per sonnel Officer; Cadet Major John Morrow, Wing Operations Officer; Cadet Major Francis Ostdiek, Wing Material Officer. Cadet Major Charles Summers, Wing Inspector; Cadet Captain Walter Gerlach, Wing Adjutant; Cadet Captain Doyle Hulme, Wing Information Services; Cadet 1st Lieutenant Dennis Brune, Assist ant Wing Operations; Cadet 1st Lieutenant James Oehm, Assist ant Wing Personnel and Cadet 1st Lieutenant Richard Swanson, As aistant Wing Adjutant. Either Bedwell or McNeice will be selected Wing Commander fol lowing summer camp. Cadet Major Marshall Nelson is the Group Commander of Group 103. Other officers are Cadet Cap tain Mar low Patton, Group Adjut ant; Cadet Captain Keith Arndt, Commander, Squadron "A." Cadet Captain Walter Blore, Commander, Squadron "B"; Ca det Captain Steven Davis, Com mander, Squadron "C"; Cadet 1st Lieut. John Ball, Adjutant, Squad ron "A"; Cadet 1st Lieut. Dennis Hruby, Adjutant, Squadron "B"; and Cadet 1st Lieut. Joe Klaas meyer, Adjutant, Squadron "C." New officers of Group 104 are Cadet Major Ronald Schneider, Group Commander; Cadet Cap tain Ronald Hoel, Group Adjutant; Cadet Captain James Fager, Com mander, Squadron "D"; Cadet Captain James McConnell, Cora mander, Squadron "E." Cadet Captain Neil Miller, Com mander, ,Squadron "F"; Cadet 1st Lieut. Robert Kelley, Adjutant, Squadron "D" and Cadet 1st Lieut. Stanley Mickus, Adjutant, Squad ron "F." Group commander of Group 105 is Cadet Major John Scanlon. Oth er officers are Cadet Captain Gary Kelly, Group Adjutant; Cadet Cap tain Thomas Olson, Commander, Squadron "G"; Cadet Captain Lee T h o r i n, Commander, Squadron "H"; Cadet Captain Emmet Wier, Jr., Commander, Squadron "I." Cadet 1st Lieut. Lenny Schropf er, Adjutant, Squadron "G"; Cadet 1st Lieut. Keith TeSelle, Adjutant, Squadron "H" and Cadet 1st Lieut. Ronald Yost, Adjutant, Squadron Dwam Trenkler, senior in Ag College, will act as master of cere- monies for-'both events. A series of special events, includ ing a pie eating contest, games. relays, and contests between in dividuals and teams will also take place Saturday morning following the horse show and showmanship contest. These events will be held in the area north of the Plant In dustry Building and will be under the direction of Doyle Hulme, chair man of the special events commit- tee. A cnuck wagon teed, spon sored by the Block and Bridle Club will be held Saturday noon in the Meats Lab. Tickets are $1 each and may be purchased from members of the Block and Bridle Club or at the door. The second go-round of the two day rodeo will begin the afternoon festivities at 1:30 p.m. Those at tending the rodeo will have an op portunity to vote for the Typical Cowboy and Cowgirl. Kaye Don Wiggins, last year's Typical Cow boy, will be the rodeo announcer, Bob Discoe, Ron McMillan and Warren Mitchell will be the clowns. Tickets for the rodeo are 85 cents for adults and 50 cents for children. The presentation of the Goddess of Agriculture and the Whisker King will also b'e a part of the rodeo program Saturday after noon. Climaxing the Farmer's Fair ac tivities Saturday night will be the annual Cotton and Denim Dance featuring the Husker Hoedown theme. Music for the "hoedown" will be furnished by Jimmy Phil lips and his orchestra. The dance will be held from 8:30 -11:30 p.m in the College Activities gym. Tick ets are available from members of the Ag Builders sales member ship committee, in organized hous es, ana in tne Ag union. Aamis sion is $1.50 per couple. Rodeo awards will be presented during the intermission. Sterling silver buckles will be given to the winners in each event, and troph ies will -be. ivea-.iO-tha-Allarouiid Cowboy and Cowgirl. Presentation of the Typical Cowboy and Cowgirl will also take place at this time The Goddess of Agriculture and Whisker King and their court will reign over the dance and will pre sent the- awards. Allan Trenkle, manager of the Farmers Fair Board, will be master of cere monies. Beutel To Address CosmopolitanClub F. K. Beutel, former Dean of the College of Law, will speak Wednes day tet 7:30 p.m. in Union Room 315 to a meeting of the Cosmo politan Club. Beutel will speak, on the topic "Academic Freedom.". AH interested students are invited. A short business meeting preced ing the speech will 'be held. Of ficers for next year will be nom inated and plans made for ' the spring picnic May 20. Outside World: Increased Output By WALT SWITZER Staff Writer Charles Wilson, Secretary of Defense, disclosed that the production schedule for B-52 bombers has been present only six are being produced Last week Gen. Curtis LeMay received only 78 B-52's and only 46 to minor defects. He also said that distancing the U.S. in production of Wilson contradicted this when he priations Subcommittee. He said "it stripping the United States in terms Conspiracy Charges Testifying for the Internal Revenue Service, Ernest M. Flimm told of his investigation of an income tax evasion case which led to con spiracy charges against two officials in the Truman administration. They are charged with conspiring to stall prosecution of Irving Sachs, a St. Louis shoe manufacturer tax evasion. Tydings Ex-senator Millard Tydings won he lost six years ago. With most slim margin over George Mahoney Maryland. After 24 years in the senate Tydings in 1950. Butler won overwhelmingly in the Republican primary. Airman Suspected In Omaha a 22-year-old airman from Offut Air Base was given a lie detector test in the continuing investigation into the Carolyn Nevins murder case. The airman was reported to police for making advances to a 25-year-old Omaha University coed. Police Captain' Alvin Coin chard said the results of the test proved negative. It was the first lie detector test given in connection with the Nevins case in several weeks. Bomb Test With northwest winds still blowing Island experts thought that America's test would be delayed again. The explosion was tentatively scheduled for about 45 minutes before dawn Thursday, about noon here. Flagpole Misses Queen Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh escaped iniurv when a heavy flagpole fell into a royal ten feet. The pole hit the car directly behind (he Queen's however, it did not crash through the roof. The car household. Top Production: 'Mary Of Scotland' Called Howell's Best By ELLIE GUILLIATT As Elizabeth says in the last scene of "Mary of Scotland," "it is not what happened that is true, but what men believe . . ." and this I think is keen perception on the part of the playwright Maxwell An derson, and on that quotation I base this criticism. As for what "happened" last night, a wonderful thing happened, a play was (presented as a play should be presented with sen sitivity, with artistry, and with a spirit of theatre which was not a wraith but a living being from the opening curtain to the final call! As for what I believe, I sincerely believe that this is one of the finest plays I have ever had the pleasure of seeing during my uni versity career, and the best play that has yet been done on Howell Theatre stage. It would be an injustice to de vote this- column to the trifling weaknesses I saw in the face of the whole, and I must admit, moving production of "Mary." So allow me to rave The most outstand ing character of the play was Eliz abeth, played by Bonna T e b o. Here was the virgin queen, with Replaces Westbrook: 'Top Flight Singer Chosen To Direct NU Singers Leon Lishner, at present a free lance singer in New York City, has been appointed to replace Dr. Arthur Westbrook as Professor of Voice and Director of the Univer sity Singers, according to Dr. Dav id Foltz, chairman of the School of Music. The change will become ef fective Sept. 1, 1956. Lishner has been recognized as one of the most important young singers in the music world, ac cording to Dr. Foltz. He has en joyed the unique position of haying achieved equal success ,,m varied fields of the entertainment world, Foltz stated. He has worked in opera, in tele vision and on Broadway, as well as in concert, oratorial and op- peretta. Lishner did his graduate work at the Juillard School of Music, long recognized as the outstand ing School of Music in the coun try, and at the Trinity College of Music at London. Election: edweil Earned New ilosmef illuh Head In their annual spring elections held last night, Kosmet Klub elect ed Bill Bedwell, Beta Theta Pi, increased to 20 a month. At a month. testified that the Air Force had of these have been accepted due the Russian Air Force was out the intercontinental planes. appeared before the Senate Appro is not so that Russia is far out of air power." who was fined $400,000 for income Gains a chance to regain the Senate seat of the returns in, Tydings held a for the Democratic nomination in John Marshall Butler defeated Delayed at all altitudes around !Zniwetok first air-dropped hydrogen bomb precession missing their car by L carried members of the Queen's i all her brilliance, all her regal, polished treacherousness, all her hollow triumph. Miss Tebo com manded the stage in every one of her scenes with a marvelous understanding and portrayal of her role. Mary was played beautifully by Joey Margolin, who gave the au dience a many faceted, womanly queen, a queen, full of tenderness and vitality; she jmade us feel the wretchness of enforced deposi tion and the final victory of integ ity. Jack Parris brought us a Both well "full of sound, and fury," he filled h;s scenes with suppressed violence, and brought to the stage a character animated with en ergy, complimentin ; the more gen tle Mary. John Knox, th fire-breathing Scottish prophet, was admirably portrayed by Gerald Carlson. With a voice that wailed like bitter high land winds, he threw his vitupera tions at Mary, and though he be gan with intensity, and never once slackened, I firmly believed there was always more energy, always a slightly higher pitch for him to reach, if he needed it. He starred in the last three world premiers of the works of Gian-Car-lo Menotti. These include the Broadway performance and two European tours in "The Consul, on Broadway and television in "The Saint of Bleecker Street" and on all NBC performances of "Amahal and the Night Visitors." He has appeared exte'nsively on television in many performances on the NBC TV Opera Theater, on Omnibus on CBS TV and on the Steve Allen and the Ed Sullivan shows. Lishner has appeared with, ihe Havanna, the Pittsburgh, the Mon treal and the Philadelphia opera companies and sung with the Bal timore, the Philadelphia, and the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestras. The appointment was a result of the screening of several hundred top flight young men in the music business, Dr. Foltz explained. These were later eliminated to forty, then to nineteen and finally to two. president; Sam Van Pelt, Phi Del- ta Theta, vice-president; John E. Nelson, Theta Xi, secretary; Marshall Nelson, Phi Gamma Delta, Dusiness man ager; and Har ry Din g m a n, Delta Tau Del ta, historian. Bedwell, who succeeds Von Innes, Pi Kap pa Phi, as pres ident, is also assistant busi ness manager f 1 1 T I ui me meuras- Ni-br.ik.n photo kan. He is a Bedwell junior in Business Administration. The new yice - president, Sam Van Pelt, is a member of the Stu dent Council and enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences. John Nelson is the new secretary of Innocents. He is also president of Corn Cobs, vice - president of C.C.R:C. and vice president of Theta Xi. Newly elected business mana ger, Marshall Nelson, is also a mem ber of the Innocents Society. He is a member of the University wrestling team, the N Club, the University band and secretary of Phi Gamma Delta. Dingman, the new historian, is a newly elected member of the Student Council representing the College of Engineering and assist ant circulation manager of Blue Print. Dingman is also Kosmet Klub's outstanding worker for the current year. Interviews Slated For Cornhusker Interviews for positions on the Cornhusker staff will be held Thursday. Any University student who is carrying 12 hours or more and has maintained the accepted all University grade average is eligibl Positions available are editor, associate editor, layout editor, busi ness manager, two assitant busi ness managers and four man aging editors. Applications may be made at the Cornhusker Office at the .Union. ' -jut Ft 1 9 ' ' 3 Ik - t I Courtesy Sunday Journal nd Star I could go on naming each mem ber of the cast, for each in his own way contributed to the over all picture of the play, but it is enough to say that if I had twenty- one roses, I would gladly give one to each member. The sets are fine, fine in the most artistic sense of the term, the lighting equally beautiful. In short, here is a play worth see ing, here is an example of theatre which rises above "educational' theatre, here is a production of such stuff as critics' dreams are made on. Lishner we were looking for a proven - fine teacher and a proven fine singer," Foltz said." We needed a man who could work in the up per workshop who would be in charge of all of the dramatic act ing there. Lishner is exceptionally capable in all these respects." Foltz described Lishner as ' personaDie young man and an absolutely top-flight singer the best quality professor we could possibly get." Lishner was on the University campus for a few days, Foltz said He sang for a faculty committee and for Dr. Westbrook. Everyone was most enthusiastic about him Foltz added. The faculty was most cooperative in providing a salary which would attract him, he said Asked why, at the peak of his singing career, he would want to give it up to teach in a university, Lishner told Dr. Foltz that teach ing had always been his major am bition. "I want to pass on the things that I have learned in my work to young men and women," he said. "I want to do it while I am at my peak and can do it well not after wards, when I have become a has been." Dr. Foltz said that Lishner would be off the campus occasionally each year to appear in major per formances, so that he would not be in complete retirement from ac tive performance. "I cannot stress enough the val uable addition to the staff that Lishner will be. He is presently at the peak of his career and extra ordinarily fortunate to interest him in a teaching position," Foltz said. Presby: Fellowship To Build NewChapel The proposed Presbyterian-Congregational student chapel will provide -a greater opportunity for meeting the spiritual needs of stud ents, according to Dr. Rex Know les, pastor of the Presby student fellowship. "Besides providing a sanctuary for worship services, the new build ing will be the new center of Presbyterian-Congregational activities on campus," he said. The proposed $100,000 chapel, to be used by over 1600 Presbyterian and Congregational students, will be financed by individual subscrip tion of the state's Presbyterian churches. The Congregationalists, who own the parsonage used by the student pastor, will also contribute $3000 to the operating budget of the student program and provide an associate pastor. The chapel is expected to be completed and ready for use by September of 1957, according to Charles Hoff of Omaha, presi dent of the Westminster Founda tion. Ground breaking ceremon ies will be held early this summer. In addition to the main chapel which will seat 250, the proposed chapel will include- social hall, rec reation room, stage, kitchen and administrative offices. The building, to be constructed adjoining the student house at 333 No. 14th, will also provide rooms for small group and com- j mittee meetings. , Hardon To Visit Errs liurlcBsri College ... To Leave About July 1 Chancellor Clifford Hardin is planning a trip to Turkey this sum mer to help with the International Cooperation Administration pro gram. According to James Pitten ger, Adminis trative t Assist ant, the Chan cel 1 o r will leave around . . . . M July 1. Hardin had planned to go this spring but could not woi k me vnpcourtesy Unrein Journal into his sched- Hardin ule at that time. Dr. Marvel Baker, a University animal husbandry professor on leave of absence, returned here last year and invited Hardin to Atuturk University. He is the dean and chief agriculture administrator MM-.' Professor Comments: Demotion Of Dr. Mitchell 'One Example' Says Moore Dr. Donald Moore, whose resignation as professor of physics and chairman of the department, was accepted by the Board of Regents Saturday, has issued a press release for The Nebraskan concerning tht question of academic freedom and outside pressures at the University. Moore's resignation was announced April 18. He said he was leaving the University because "greater research and salary oppor tunities" were available in private industry. Moore has accepted a job in industrial research for an eastern firm. Moore said that the demotion of Dr. Clyde Mitchell was "but one example" of the University's unconcern with the free enterprise of ideas. Mitchell, who is in Rome on a Fulbright Lectureship, is expected to comment soon on his demotion. Moore's Statement "Perhaps it is because I am both a native of the state and an alumnus of the University, but I find myself concerned about the . direction in which our University of Nebraska is moving. I have reluctantly come to the conclusion that the present ad ministration of our University is not concerned with the free enter prise of ideas at either the level of the departmental chairman or - of the individual staff member. The demotion of Dr. Mitchell is but one example. There is a clear impression of a conflict between integrity and expediency. He who doubts that outside pressure influenced the Mitchell de motion ought to read, side by side, the public statements of Regent Welsh, the Hall County Farm Bureau, and the series of conflicting statements which have been issued by the administration of the University. The succession of events is such that it will now be next to impossible for the present administration to build a 6trong De partment of Agricultural Economics, and all problems of staff pro curement are seriously aggravated." Union Election: Knotek To Head Activity Committee Diane Knotek was elected presi dent of the Union Activities Com mittee by the Union Board Tues day night. Marilyn Staska will serve as f vice-president. Miss Knotek, junior ( vSf"""'' in Arts and Sciences ; is a member of Mor- -tar Board and Acti vities Chairman of Pi A, Beta Phi. As a freshman, she worked on three Union committees, recreation, gen e r a 1 entertainment and house and office. As a sophomore, she was assistant chairman of general Knotek enter tainment, chairman of recreation committee and recipient of the dis tinguished service award. She is now on the Union Board of Man agers and chairman of the awards banquet. Miss Staska, junior in Busi ness Administration is president of the Business Administration Council, member of YWCA, Coed Counselors and activities and pub licity chairman of Delta Delta Delta. In her freshman year, she worked on the personell and mus ic committees; as a sophomore she was the dance committee chairman and in her junior year she was secretary of the Union Board. Other new student members of the Board of Managers of the city Union are: Kay Christensen, Alpha Om cron Pi, junior in Teachers College, Tassels, AWS Board and chairman of the special activities in Union this year. Polly Downs, Alpha Phi, junior in Business Administration, record ing secretary Alpha Lambda Del ta, secretary of the activities com mittee in the Union and Beta Gam ma Sigma. Karen Dryden, Delta Delta Del ta, sophomore in Arts and Sci ences, AWS Board, Cornhusker chairman, Lincoln project and chairman of the public relations ! committee in Union this year. ' Marilyn Heck, Kappa Kappa at Atuturk. Baker and a group of specialista have studied the situation in Tur key and have set up a campus plan, faculty requirements and a building program. The ICA pro ject is directed by University Mis sion with funds from the Turkish government and the ICA commis sion. Nebraska's contract with ICA provides that the state land grant school (the University) provide aid and assistance, as necessary, to the Turkish project. At the present time there ara several Turkish professors here working under the Project's plan for faculty instruction. Under the ICA program the United States lends Turkey assist ance in establishing better schools. The main emphasis of the pro gram is being put on Agriculture. It was started in April 1955. Gamma, sophomore in Arts and Sciences, Builders board, Corn husker section head and chairman : Nebraska Photo Staska of hospitality committee In Union this year. Roy Boyd, sophomore in Engi neering and chairman of the dance committee this year. Tea Honors Thirty-Five In Home Ec Thirty five home economics mi' jors at the University were honored at a tea sponsored by the Home Economics Club Thursday. The honorees who had joined the American Home Economics Association and the Nebraska Home Economics Association were Mrs. Barbara Beghtol Thompson, Ruth Ernst, Alice Hamilb. Joyce Young, Lee LingrBT Lou Lingren Moir, Joyce Sporn, Ifiarta Trautrimas, Mary Taylor. Janet Lingquist, Twila Ri'ey, Carol Beattie, Ruth Ann Lenne man, Iris Becker, Jo Ann Heil man, Shirley Gies, Ruth Vollmer, Margaret Wright, Jeanne Hrabak Kane. Bonnie Lindau, Marilyn Ander son, Shirley Walberg, Carroll De maree, Judy London, Jacqueline Hagadorn, Wanda Walbridge, Jan ice Baker, Margaret Drayton, Bet ty Eberhart. Carol Dunker, Shirley Slagle, Joyce Splittgerber, Virginia Mey er, and two foreign students, Mrs. Primitiva Manalo of the Philip pines and Mrs. Wadia Faraf. L n