if , UU , M. ,,U,.,I. X,., , , ,I.(W, ... .. , .-. : '; : i V n I i . , f jftft! . jrfj Vi . Ill; i M 4mAM-::-'WS&i ' , : I V i feT)l illPfe; I : J" BMW VI -1 i Vol. 31, No. 20 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Wednesday, November 7, 1956 ""3 o 1 Elsenhower Thursday: The major music forms and styles of the Middle Ages will be the theme of the annual fall con cert of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, professional men's music frater nity, Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Student Union ballroom. The public is invited to attend, and there is no admission charge. Among the highlights will be the Gregorian Mass, the liturgical chant of the Roman Catholic NHSPA: Professional Journalists To Sp ilc Fifteen professional journalists will address the 23th annual meet ing of the Nebraska High School Press Association Nov. 9-10 in the Union Ballroom. Carl Towley, National Scholastic Press Association; Lee Pursley, National Association of Journal ism Directors, and Gunner Horn, Quill and Scro'l will represent the National IV S?hcol Press Asso ciation at the Silver Anniversary meeting. Towley is assistant director of the National Scholastic Press As sociation and also executive sec retary of the National Association of Journalism Directors. He is publications adviser at H o p k i n s (Minn.) High School. President cf the National As sociation of Journalism Directors, Lee Pursley, is publications advis School. The representative of Quill and Scroll, Gunner Horn, is publica tions adviser at Benson High School, Omaha. Marguerite Davsi, Chicago bu reau manager for the United Press, will give the keynote address at 10:30 a.m., Friday. P. D. Allen, vice president of the Maclean Hunter Publishing Corp., Chicago, will be the ban quet speaker Friday evening. He is chairman of the speaker's bu reau of the Associated Business Publications. The Nebraska High School Press Associaiton is an organization of Nebraska high schools that have some form of publication of in struction in journalism. Its pur pose is to establish closer rela tionship among high school pub lications in the state, to give pu pils and teachers' an opportunity to discuss problems ind to create standards for high school journalism. AGR Ground-Breaking Chancellor Clifford Hardin (center) turns the first shovel of soil in grouud-breaking' cere monies Sunday for the new.Al , pha Gamma Rho fraternity Courtesy Sunday Journal and Star People's Choice IBSIC Church which was named after Pope Gregory I under whom it received its final arrangements. Being purely melodic music, its style dominated the first ten cen turies after the death of Christ. Another feature will be music for recorders, fore-runners, of , the modern flute and the most im portant type of whistle flute. The recorder attained very nearly its final form in the Middle Ages. Up to that time, instrumental mu sic had not come into its own and vocal music still predominated. Soloists in the program will.in baritone; Joseph Babcock, tenor; Norman Riggins, baritone; Arnold Epstein, recorder; Wendell Freist, and Edwin Velte, both trombon ists; and Howard Johnson, pian ist. William Bush will direct the pro gram. The complete program with the performing group, music form, title, and composer listed in that order: Small vocal ensembles Paral lel organum, "Sit Gloria Domini"; three voice setting of plainsong hymn, "A Solis Ortus Cardine," by Gilles de Binchois; troubere song, "Or La Truix"; hymn, laud spirit 1, "Plangiamo Quel Crudel Basciare"; Minnelied, "Ey Ich Sach in Dem Trone," by Frauen lob; roundelay, "Rosa Fragrans"; three-part carol, "Verbum Patris Humanatur." Instrumental groups music for recorders, "Two Motets," by Perotin, "Instrumental Motet," "Lamento di Tristan," "Dreistim miges Instrumentalsatzchen," by Guilelmus Monachus, and "Estam pie." Glee Club Gregorian Mass, "In Festis Beatae Mariae Virgin is"; three-part motet, "Alleluia Psallat"; six-voice rota, "Summer is A-Coming In"; three-part con ducts, ' "Beata Viscera"; two vpice canon with instrumental ac companiment, "Gloria," by Guil lermus Dufay; and English war song with accompaniment, "The Agincourt Song," arranged by Rob ert Barrow. Army ROTC Sets Antiaircraft Talk University Army ROTC cadets will receive a briefing Thursday noon on the role of the Army antiaircraft command in the de fense of the continental United States. The briefing officer will be Maj. Peter Genera of the Army anti aircraft command headquarters, Colorado Springs, Colo. Major Gen ero is tlie chief of the G-3 opera tions section. i house. The building will be locat ed at 3605 Holdrege, near the Ag College. Pictured above are (left to right) Don Crosier, president of the Lincoln AGR alumni as sociation; Dean W. V. Lambert $3,500 Collected: SororifiesLsadFrafs In JkU F Campaign After one week of collections, the annual AUF charity drive has collected $3,500 according to AUF chairmen. Incomplete returns from soror ities show them leading frater nities so far $369 to $539. Mary Huston, AUF chairman in charge of sororities said that col lections were going very well. On ly two sororities have turned in complete reports although six have made partial returns. Bob Schuyler, chairman of frat ernity solicitations, announced a Sakai Effprts: Japanese Collection University Library has acquired the nucleus of. a research collec tion of Japanese history. It . was made possible through the efforts of Assistant Professor Robert K. Sakai in a cooperative venture backed by the University Library and the Department of History. Dr. Sakai', who was in Japan as a Fulbright scholar during the 1955-56 academic year, was em powered to make special on-the-site purchases of important Jap-' anese research sets. Among the acquisitions are a 19-volume com pilation of ducments relating to the Meiji Restoration movement which overthrew the feudal re gime in 1868, an encyclopedic com pilation of materials relating' to the Shognunate (military) rule, a score of volumes of pertinent news paper articles which appeared" at this time, a major reference col lection on Japan's constitutional history, and a bibrary of offical records of the Ministry of Finance. Most of the newly acquired ma terial deals with the critical Mei ji Period (1868-1912) when Jap an's leaders set out to modernize their country. NU Fall Concert Scheduled The University Symphony Fall Concert will be presented by the department of fine arts and the Union Nov. 18 at 8 p.m. in the Ball Room. The Orchestra, under the direc tion of Jack Snider, will play Sym phony No. 40 in G Minor by Mo zart, and Overture to Rienzi by Wagner. Soloist will be baritone Louis Sudler, a Chicago business man. Sudler attended Yale University and while there, was a member of the renowned "Whiffenpoows." Selections ty Sudler will include "O Du Mein Holder Abendstern," by Wagner; "Zueignung," by Strauss; "Pilgrim Song," by Bo lognini; "Avant De Quitter, Ces Lieux," by Gounod; and "Lullaby" by Bolognini. "Lullaby" was written especial ly for Sudler and will be present ed here for the first time. Courtesy Lin com Star of the College of ' Agriculture; Chancellor Hardin, AGR alum nus of Michigan Stete University; Walt Roberts, First Noble Ruler of AGR, and Don Beck, presi dent of the fraternit'. tentative goal for fraternities at $2,000. Five houses have so far returned partial reports. "As a general trend," Schuyler said, "fraternities are contribut ing more than $2 a man. Sally Carter, chairman for in- dependent- houses announced very incomplete returns of $166. New faculty members contributed ad ditional $33 to bring the faculty contribution to $639.50. Most of the faculty was solicited last spring in the regular faculty drive. Plans for this week call for com plete reports to be submitted by sororities and fraternities, as well as junior and senior medical stu dents. ' Freshman and sophomore medi cal students were solicited last week and contributed $51. Money collected by AUF is di vided among six charities. World University Service receives 25 per cent, American Cancer Society 20 per cent, United Cerebral Palsy 20 per cent, Community Chest 20 per cent, Lark School for Mentally Retarded Children 10 per cent and the Emergency and Expense fund S per cent. Four Squads: Beginning Debaters Wirt Nine Four University beginning debate teams won nine of 12 debates which they participated in at Hastings College Tuesday. The affirmative team of Don Montgomery and Ken Snider won all three of .the. contests they par ticipated in the three-school tour ney. The contest, an annual affair for those debaters who have no pre vious college experience, includes teams from the University, Has tings College and Kearney State Teachers College. Donald Olson, director of debate for the University, reported that the other three squads each won tow of the three debates they par ticipated in. Those teams are composed of Barbara Bacon and Marial Wright, negative; George Moyer and Dave Rhoads, affirmative and Melvin Eickelberry and Dick Shugrue, negative. Knotek Soloist: Navy Choir Sets Ball Appearance The Naval Aviation Cadet Choir ' structional exhibition of a new from Pensacola, Florida will high light the program of the 1956 Mili tary Ball, to be held Nov. 30. The choir will give two performances. Their opening , number will be their traditional anthem "Mighty Navy Wings." Diane Knotek, Miss Nebraska will be featured as guest soloist singing the Cantata, "Mid winter." These singir.g cadets, . under the direction of Ensign Fred Schad, USNR, are a volunteer group of Naval Aviation Trainees. They have appeared as guests on the Perry ComO Show, Herb Shriner's "Two for the Money," and the Ed Sullivan Show. They have also en tertained in the Miss America and Miss Universe contests. The NavCad choir was organ ized in 1950 to, sing for worship services at the Pensacola Naval Air Station Chapel. Students volun teer for the choir, and are re quired to maintain above average grades in flight training. Additional entertainment sched uled for the evening will include the Arthur Murray Dancers, who will display four different types of dances. They will give an in- 7 Matthews To Visit Nebraska -ROTC . Maj. Gen. Willis Matthews, com manding general of the First In fantry Division, will visit the Uni versity Wednesday, Col. Chester Diestel, prpfessor of military sci ence, announced Tuesday. General Matthews, who will rep resent Lt. Gen. William H. Arnold, commanding general of the Fifth Army, will inspect the training and facilities of the Army ROTC de partment. He also will confer with Chan cellor Clifford Hardin, Colonel Diestel, and other University offi cials. He is scheduled to arrive at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday. Mercury Hits Season Low Today's high will reach into the high 50s and lows into the low 30s. Fair weath er and clear skies are pre dicted for Lin coln and vicin ity throughout the day. Yester day's low was 32 and high was 50. This was the first freezing tem perature o f the winter season. Traces of rain were reported throughout the Lin coin area. Agriculture: Turkish Officials If s A sT B B VISIT If & A party of top-ranking Turkish government officials have been in Nebraska since Saturday, studh ing agriculture and visiting the University. Esat Dudakoglu, Minister of Ag riculture, heads the party. Accom panying him will be Enver Erlat, assistant to the under-secretary of agriculture; Zeki Sayar, direc tor for the Agricultural Research Center at Adana; Abdi Bozoglu, advisor on foreign agricultural re lations; and L. L. Scranton of the U.S. foreign Agricultural Serv ice. The Turkish visitors arrived in time to see the Missouri-Nebraska football game. Monday, they met with the administrative staff of the College of Agriculture and later toured points of interest on the campus. Tuesday, the goup will visit the Grain Exchange and the Livestock Exchange in Omaha and the pack ing plants. They have asked to observe the voting procedures in the general election in Lincoln in the afternoon. Chancellor Hardin will be the host at a dinner in their honor Tuesday evening. Men's Dance Group Men interested in organizing a men's modern dance group at University may contact Miss Maxwell at extensiqn 4138 in Grant Memorial. dance meringue. The Lincoln Drum and Bugle Corps are slated to appear during one of the enter tainment periods with an exhibi tion of music - and maneuvers. The NROTC Drill Team will also be included in the program during the presentation of the Hon orary Commarfant. NavCads Sing The NavCad choir will sing during this year's Military Ball. Shown singing around a Navy jet fighter are members of the choir. The NavCad's have ap peared as guests on the Ferry LaDndsSodle Ike Victory By DICK SHUGRUE Copy Editor Shortly after 12:20 a.m., Demo cratic presidential hopeful Adlai Stevenson conceded the election to Dwight D. Eisenhower. Speaking from the ballroom of the Conrad Hilton Hotel in Chi cago, the former governor of Il linois said that he had sent a mes sage to the president stating, "You have won not only the election but the great confidence of the American people." The Eisenhower-Nixon ticket, which, according to Gov. Averell Harriman of New York, "won on the popularity of the presidential candidate" will retain the two highest offices in the nation. Shortly after Stevenson made his speech in Chicago official elec tion figures showed that the GOP had gained 292 electoral votes, having won in 26 states. Jn order to win an election, a candidate must poll 266 votes in the electoral college. Stevenson said further, "We are not Republicans and Democrats but Americans. As Americans we join in wishing you success in the coming years. "First I want to express my thanks to my partner Estes Ke fauver. "I wish very much there was some way I could properly thank you one by one. I wish there was some way I could make you feel my gratitude for your support. "To you who are disappointed, let me confess that I am too. But we must not be downhearted. To succeed we have only to lose. For here in America people have made Loerch Named: NU Regents Approve State Forestry Service The University's Board of Re gents Saturday set into motion the machinery for an expanded state forestry service. The Board a p p o i n t ed Karl Loerch state forester in addition to his duties as assistant exten sion forester at the College of Ag riculture, effective Dec. 1. It also approved an agreement with the U.S. Department of Agri culture Forest Service for provid ing technical forestry assistance to Nebraska farmers under the Soil Bank program. In addition, the Regents ap proved the signing of a coopera tive agreement with the U. S. sec retary of agriculture, as provided for by the Cooperative Forest Management Act of 1950. Chancellor Clifford Hardin said the State Forester will handle both programs. Under the Soil Bank program, the University will furnish techni cal advice to Nebraska farmers in using their diverted cropland for shelter belts, windbreaks, and woodlots. Also, the University will promote the tree-planting phase and assist the State and county agricultural stabilization and conservation com mittees with forestry services. Undr the 1950 act, the Univer sity agres to aid in improving tree-planting practices, and in get ting better survival of newly plant Como Show, . Herb Shriner's 1 "Two for the Money" and the Ed Sullivan Show. Nationally fa mous, the choir has traveled to various parts of the country dur ves their choice, , through the demo cratic process. And I say God bless democracy. . : "Take heart." There are things more precious than political vic tories. There is a right to political contest. - "I have tried to chart the road to a new and a better America. I am supremely confident that our thought will ultimately prevail. . . America can go only forward. The state to give the landslide vote to the president was Steven son's own home state, Illinois. The President, a picture of health, spoke to the nation at 1:45 eastern time. "This is a solemn moment he said. "The only thing I should like to say is this. It is a very heart warming experience to know that your labors of four years have achieved the level where they are approved by the United States of America in their vote. , s "To all the people of the United States who have understood what the administration has been try ing to do my most grateful thanks. "It is our earnest prayer that nothing we shall ever do shall betray that trust." Deferment . ... Tesfs Set Any full-time college student who is a Selective Service registrant is eligible to take the selective service deferment test if he has not previously taken this test. ed trees in shelterbelts. Chancellor Hardin said that fed eral money on a matching basis will be available under the agree ments. It is planned that an assistant to the state forester will be ap pointed next year, he added. Establishment of a state forest er also was provided for by the 1953 Legislature, Hardin said. The newly appointed state for ester is a native of Tekamah. He ontained his bachelor of science degree from Iowa State College and his master of science from University of Minnesota inn 1950. Loerch served as county agricultural agent inn Pierce County from April 1951, to Oc tober, 1952, when he became es sistant extension forester. He is a member of the Society of American Foresters and Ameri can Forestry Association. Other action by the Board of Regents Saturday included: Approved the retirement of Ruth Odell, assistant professor of Eng lish since 1937. A native of Ful lerton, she receivedJier bachelor's from Nebraska inn 1914, her mas ter's from Columbia inn 1920, and her doctor of philosophy de gree from Nebraska as a student of Dr. Louise Pound in 1937. She specialized inn American litera ture. , V. Ncbrasfena fkvM ing the past years, singing ia concerts, for dances and other public events. The NavCad Choir is an additional entertainmret feature of the Ball. v f f: hi I v i V: v. f-f-.' 1 V r fv if t ' 'A v V, 4 o k : 1