1 Vol.-29, No. 94 rv Under Dr. Herbert Prochnow, deputy under-secretary of state for eco nomic affairs, will be guest speak- . er at the University Summer Ses sions National Affairs Preview . Monday. ' . ' He will speak at a convocation at 2 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. Prochnow assumed his pesent duties last October, From 1929 to 1955, he was successively assistant cashier, assitant vice president and vice president of the First Nation- sl Bank of Chicago. During his service with the bank; he was a lending officer, member f the senior trust investment com mittee, economist and for a nuiii Jber of years, was vice president in charge of the bank's foreign operations. . . l From 1945 to 1955, Prochnow was secretary of the Federal Reserve System. He has been vice presi Regents9. ActU Staff changes approved by Uni- - versity Regents Saturday include: Appointments: "" Charles Anderson, instructor ki bearing therapy. Lois Howsden, general counselor Howard Fuehring, instructor in agronomy. Resignations: James Munger, instructor in ag ricultural economics. Allan Fox, assistant instructor in high school vocational educa tion. Retirements: Dean Robert Goss as dean oi Graduate College, (mandatory ad Tour Planned A tour of IJneoIjj Air Force Base is being offered Summer Sessions students Wednesday, ' Chock Clasek, assistant to Dr. Frank Sorenson, director of sum mer sessions, announced Wednes day. All students wishing i attend must register in advance for the tour with Bob Handy, director of Union activities, in the Activi ties Office of the Union, he said. ' Students making the tour will meet at the front door of the Union at 1:15 p. m. Wednesday. A charge of 49 cents will be made for transportation, Clas ek said. tninistrative retirement at age 65.) M. P. Bruning, assistant profes sor of agricultural engineering emeritus. Mamie Meredith, assistant pro fessor of English, emeritus. Evelyn Metzger, assistant profes sor of home economics. Winona Perry, professor of edu cational psychology and measure ments, emeritus. Harriet . Schwenker, assistant professor . of commercial arts, emeritus. ... Ruth Staples, professor of home economics, emeritus. Lotis Wade, professor of zoology, emeritus. O. II. Werner, professes' of his tory and principle of education, emeritus. i C. C, Wigginas, professor of horti culture, emeritus. - - , " i - Secretary Of State Scheduled dent and director of the Chicago Association of Commerce and In dustry and a member of the Eco nomic Policy Commission of the American Bankers Association. Prochnow is the director of the annual Summer School of Bank ing at the University of Wisconsin and also has served on the faculties of the University of Indiana and Northwestern University. The Surflmer Session offices also scheduled a World Affairs Preview with Frank Graham as speaker July 9. ' "Both of these sessions were scheduled to give summer sessions students a better chance to under stand and interpret national and international events," Dr. Frank Sorenson, director of Summer Ses sions, said. . There will be no admission charge for the speech, he said. Clinic: No I jf ' W 44 i 4. ' ii Thursdioy.-.'-" A visiting lecturer from New York will be featured speaker Thursday at a University "Summer Sessions clinic on religion and pub- he education. Jerome Na than son, chair man of the board of lead ers of the New York Society for Ethical Culture, will discuss "What Can Wt TVi for the De- I velopment of Moral Values in Children Nathanson Courtesy Sunday Journal and Star and Youth?" at the 2 p.m. meet ing to be held in Love Library Auditorium. A four-member panel will dis cuss the topic following his ad dress. Panel members will be Arthur Gruenler, principal of North High School, Denver, Colo.; Mrs. Lor raine Giles, principal,- Belvedere Grade School, Omaha; Dr. Frank Court, pastor, St. Paul Methodist Church, and Roy Green, dean of the College of Engineering and Architecture. . Dr. Charles Patterson, chairman of the department of philosophy, will preside. Nathanson is also director of The John Elliott Institute for Adult Education and a member of the board of trustees of the Na tional Child Labor Committee, board of directors of the Interna tional Humanist and Ethical Union, and the executive committee and board of directors of the Ameri can Ethical Union. From 1943 to 1946 he served as chairman of the, Conference on Science and Democracy, and from 1948 to 1353 he was chairman of the National Committee on Feder al Aid to Public Education. fhbnson LINCOLN, NEBRASKA X j Prochnow Degi irees AU students wishing to receive a bachelor's or advanced degree er teacher's certificate mm tarn ail fiwiiuvii ,(oie . tvetu;, Shirley Thompson office of sen ior checking, announced Wednes day. ' v Instrumental Duo: The Mitchell-Ruff Duo, an in strumental combination, will be the second attraction in the Union Artists' Series. They will, appear Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Union Ballroom. There will be a Meet the Artists session following the performance, Bob Handy, director of Union ac tivities, said.' : Dwike Mitchell on the piano and Willie Ruff on the bass and French horn compose the duo. With the use of tonal combinations and oth er devices, the Duo has both old and new jazz forms in their rep- etoire. Building from a classical base, the Duo combines the rhythms of jazz with classical themes to pro duce inventive . chamber music works. Handy said. Mitchell and Ruff have used more than the usual classical base of MOhaud, Schonberg and Bartok and-have drawn heavily from the works of such old masters as Bach,' Scarlatti and Beethoven. The free-flowing ideas of the Romanticist movement in music are employed in most of the Duo's music, but their music is not with out modern touches, Handy said. Ruff and Mitchell met during military service and made their first musical experiments then. Mitchell studied the classics at ihe Philadelphia Academy of Music following his discharge and ap peared as a soloist with the Phil adelphia Symphony Orchestra. Later, Mitchell joined the Lionel Hampton group and loured Eur-i ope ri a member. M f I f ; i 1 Calendar June 21, Thursday: Church School Relationships clinic, 2-4 p.m.. Love Library Auditorium; Sports reels on archery and bull- fighting, 11:45-12:30 p.m. in Union Main Lounge; Craft shop, 7-9 p.m., Union basement. 22, Fridays Square Dance, 9 p.m., Ballroom. 23, Saturday: All State picnic, 4 p.m., Capitol Beach. 24, Sunday: Film, "A Song To Remember," 7:30 p.m., Ballroom. 25, Monday: National Affairs - Preview, Herbert Prochnow, speaker, 2-4 p.m., Ballroom; Elementary Ed Club Luncheon, 12 noon, Union; All State Recital, 7:30 p.m.. Ballroom. 26, Tuesday: Union Handicraft Lessons, 7-10 p.m., Union base . ment; Unjon. Bridge Lessons, 4. p.m., Parlors AB; George Gardner, air age education speaker. 27, Wednesday: Union Artists Series, Mitchell-Ruff Duo, 8 p.m., Ballroom; Pi Lambda Theta- luncheon, 12 noon. June June June June June June Furbay, Gardner: ir " Keprs3of oties 3K( Two representatives of large air lines will be on campus next week to participate in the Air Age Edu cation Workshop. ' ' ' - John H. Furbay, director .of air world education for Trans World Air Lines, will speak at a convo cation Thursday at 11 a.m. in Love Library Auditorium. His topic is "Global Minds For A Global World." Furbay spent several years in the U.S. office of education. He also served as education attache for the U.S. -embassies in Costa For three , years he , served as president of the College of West Africa in Liberia. During World War II he Carried out special assignments for the r ! t ' - nn Quiim Wednesday's: Artists The Mitchell-Ruff Duo, pic tured above, will be featured at the second Uaion Artists Series Wednesday at 8 p.m. in. the it Ruff studied music at Yale Uni versity. He joined . Mitchell with the Lionel Hampton group and they performed there as a duo. ;. Mitchell, and. Ruff ,be.gu? work-. ing as a separate duo ia md Thursday, June 21, 1956 JOGSday war department related to the in vasion of North Africa. He was ah official delegate to the Pan Am ican Conference on Cultural Co-operation and has rep resented U.S. aviation at several UNESCO world conferences. George Gardner, who will be speaking at. the Workshop on Tuesday, is the superintendent of educational services for Pan American World Airways. Tuesday at 10 a.m. he will dis cuss "Geography for Citizens" using " world transportation sys-'le-msr';-.---,:" ' -;-T " " At. 2 p.m. he will talk on model airplane building. Both meetings will ' be held in Love Library Room 433. Ballroom. There will be no ad mission charge. There are two more presentations scheduled in the Artists Series. - -A it have appeared at several Las Veg as night clubs and at The Embers in New York City. There will be no admission charge for the presentation. Handy said.-