Pcge 4 The Daily Nebraskon Monday, April 29, 1957 New Student: 650 Expected: Nation's History Profs Gather For Conference About 650 of the nation's top ranking American history profes sors and scholars will be in Lin coln Thursday through Saturday of this week to attend the 50th anniversary meeting of the Mis sissippi Valley Historical Associa tion. The association, publisher of a highly respected professional jour Dai and supported by more than 3,000 members, was formed in Lincoln a half century ago by a handful of American history en thusiasts. The founders, representing sev en states, met at the suggestion of Clarence Paine of Lincoln, who was then secretary of the Ne braska State Historical Society. At the opening session of the anniversary meeting at 10 a.m. Thursday at the Cornhusker hotel, Dr. James Sellers, University his tory professor and a former pres ident of the association, will re view the organization's 50 years. Dr. Max Savelle of the Univer- 'South Pacific' The Monday rehearsal schedule for "South Pacific" will be: 8:30 p.m.; Union ballroom; G.I.'s, nurs es, Bloody Mary, Cable, of ficers, etc. and 9:45 p.m.; Union ballroom; all nurses, G.I.'s, Brack eett, and Harbison, rag htk associated colHegiate pres sity of Washington will open the general historical discussions at a Thursday luncheon with a paper, "Is Liberalism Dead?" From that point the convention program branches off into numerous sec tional sessions where various as pects of history will be considered. The annual dinner of the asso ciation will be held at 8 p.m. Thursday. The principal speaker, Dr. Thomas Clark of the Univer sity of Kentucky, association pres ident, will discuss "The Great Vis itation to Democracy." In connection with the meetings the association is announcing an awards program uder which man uscripts on historical subjects may be submitted between June of this judging. Prizes of $1,000 each will be awarded to the authors of the selected manuscripts. An outstanding group session of the meeting is scheduled' for 10 a.m. Friday under the sweeping title of "A Half Century of Amer ican History." Chairman of the session is Dr. John Hicks, Uni versity of California, noted Amer ican historian and a former Uni versity staff member. The session will include discussions of the po litical, economic, and social phases of the nation's history by Dr. Wil liam Hesseltine, University of Wis consin; Dr. Thomas Cochran, Uni versity of Pennsylvania; and Dr, Philip Jordan, University of Min nesota. r f 5r Beta Gamma Sigma Initiates New initiates of Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary Busi ness Administration scholastic fraternity, are (sitting; left to Richard Tomasevic, Gerald Wilson, Otto Walter, Ralph Spald ing, Arthur Loomer, Lyle Jef frey, JoAno Sander, Laurie Bo bertson, Charles Kennedy, Fresh en Maschka, and Victor Golletz. Standing, left to right: David Johnson, Alan Dasdan, Loren Nebruku Phot Pierce, Robert Lienemann, Rich ard Pocras, Marlyn Carlson, Richard Remington, Sam Ellis, Robert Gier, Wallace Peterson, Keith Broman, and William Dick. The Long Wait: Junior Jitters Prevail; Traditional Ivy Day Wears By BOB MICHAELS Special Staff Writer Junior jitters is the theme of fee week as the University's tra ditional Ivy Day looms imminent on the calendar. v Saturday will see the women's and men's senior honoraries thundering around the hallowed turf near Adminny Hall busily masking and tackling their res pective choices for the 1957-58 "mystics.'' Numerous University traditions such as the planting of the ivy by Innocent's president Sam Ellis and president of Mortar Board Ginny Hudson; the Inter-fraternity and Inter-sorority Ivy Day Sings and the presentation of several awards recognizing high scholarship both individually and collectively will be witnessed by the many stu dents, professors and friends who will flock down on campus Satur day. For some the ceremonious pre sentation of the 1957 Ivy Day Court, the numerous addresses, and the other non-suspenseful ac tivities will be a pleasant addition to the day. For others, mostly eager juniors, the events pre ceeding masking and tackling will be boring, nerve-racking and to some (the boys and girls who classify on the racing form as "dark horses") everything will be down right superfluous. - Friendships will be momen tarily shattered as " each prospec tive candidate for Mortar Board and Innocents views a companion being masked or tackled. Friday night many tired young people will be pacing floors, walking wearily about the campus, taking Miltowns, and staring hopefully into the somber night looking for mesages in the stars. A red-faced, red-robed, hooded man wanders into the crowd. Sud- Veaver To Tour Dr. John Weaver, who will be come dean of the University Grad uate College July L, has received a Carnegie Foundation Traveling fellowship. 5 denly he spies his man a long, thin path is spontaneously formed by the mass of spectators the hooded man charges. Farmers Fair: Milking Contest Added A wild cow milking contest has been added this year to the list of events at the Farmers Fair Rodeo, according to Diane Peter son, chairman of the Fair Pub licity committee. The contest will consist of a three-man team from each organ ized men's house, including a milker, a mugger and a halter man. The cows will be turned loose from one end of the arena and the contestents must start from the oppisite end. They must catch a cow, get the milk in a bole and reurn to the judges with the halter and the milk bottle in their possession. The cows to be used are lo cal stock animals. A trophy will be awarded to the top team. The following groups are entered: Farm House-Bob Dannert, John Easten and Al Bollish; Delta Tau Delta-Wally Bierman, Norb Kmock and Dick Arneson; Phi Kappa Psi Kem Billings, Chuck Fike and John Haessler; Alpha Gamma Sig-ma-Darrel Zessin, Eli Thomssen and Bob Lebruska; Ag Mems-Bob Frels, Paul Stevens and Jerry sRa forth; Sigma Nu-Tom Baxter, Ger ald Niedfelt and Bob Parish; Sel leck Quad-Bob Grassmick, Dennis Boesiger and Leom Gompert; Del ta Sigma Phi-Gilly Nielsen, Den nis Vogel and Bob Konen; and Kappa Sigma-Lyle Burry, Sid Mc- Curley and Bill Erich. Contests; Queen: NU Ag Club To Hold Dairy Royal The Varsity Dairy Club will hold its sixth annual Dairy Royal next Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Horse Barn on the college campus, An ice cream eating contest. showmanship contest, coed cow milking contest and the crowning of a Dairy Royal Queen will high light the evening's program. Entrants in the coed cow milk ing contest include: Rae Beerline, Alpha Chi Omega; Sally Miller, Alpha Omicron Pi; Barbara Brit ton, Alpha Phi; Sue Schneider, Chi Omega; Eileen Hansen, Delta Del ta Delta; Pat Menke, Delta Gam ma; Patricia Brown, Gamma Phi Beta; Jan Warink, Kappa Alpha Theta. Penny Coats, Kappa Delta; Ann Desmond, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Gwen, Abbott; Pi Beta Phi; Dena Locke, Sigma Delta Tau; Lucille Happel, Howard Hall; Rojeanne Stich, Loomis Hall; Margot Fanke, Love Memorial Hall; Mary Vani- cek, Towne Club; Donna Bohling, Colonial Terrace and Ann Masters, Zeta Tau Alpha. Candidates for the Dairy Royal Queen include: Jolaine Loseke, Alpha Chi Omega; Connie Peter son, Alpha Omicron Pi; Clare Grasmick, Alpha Phi; Sharon Mc- Cormick, Chi Omega; Noram An derson. Delta Delta Delta; Carol Vingers, Delta Gamma; Patricia Brown, Gamma Phi Beta; Connie Allen, Kappa Alpha Theta; Penny Coats, Kappa Delta. Dallas Hunt, Kappa Kappa Gam ma; Jo Deveraux, Pi Beta Phi; Sandra Cherniss, Sigma Delta Tau; Marilyn Mass, Howard Hall; Evonne Einspahr, Loomis Hall; Shirley Richards, Love Memorial Hall; Marion Sullivan, Towne Club; race and Eunice MCosh, Zeta Tau Alpha. (V) Nebmkaa Fhote NORMAN CROMWELL AUBREY LAND Land, Cromwell Fofessors Givsn GuggsnhQim Grants Two University professors are the field of organic reaction mech- among 344 scholars and artists in the Western Hemisphere to receive the coveted John Simon Guggen heim Fellowships, "granted to per sons of unusual capacity for schol arly research." They are: Dr. Aubrey C. Land, professor of history, for studies of the merchant-planter class of the Chesapeake colonies. Dr. Norman H. Cromwell, pro fessor of chemistry, for studies in Pi Tau Sigma Nine students have been initiat ed into Pi Tau Sigma, mechani cal engineering honorary society at the University. They are: Dale Wenzinger, Kenneth Berns, Milton Almquist, Ed Splittgerber, Don Hide, Keith S c h a f e r, Frank Soelledy, Bob Langhauser and Ralph Zacbiry . : I ' ' If $ if -) -A, Spring Is Here Eprkif Is here again ruA young fnea's fancies turn fci training fee fiaw-kfgw! races in prepar ation for the second annual fpjfef 3Day, May 3. Dink Odum, !;.;? VaaWajfcJt and -Tom Sloan Ctfj to r:."" ) get ia snaae prac tice for Friday morning's com jetu;oa. CereaKKsies start at ajn. with a parade from city to ag campus. The competition begins at 9 a.m. and the Farm er's Fair Rodeo commences at 1 p.m. Other attractions of Spring Day are the bar-be-que, carnival, street dance and re duced prices ia the Crib, 9 I - 5 riL.i . I' Helicopter The "Helicopter,' a new fly-it-yourself innovation, will be one of six carnival rides on campus this week for the annual Union birthday party. Tbeme of the 19th anniversary of the Union is "Midway Madness" featuring the Art Thomas Carnival, a street dance Friday evening and reduced prices on many Union food prices on Saturday. The rides, which include the tilt-a-wbirl, octopus, rock-o-plane, dodgem cars, and helicopter, will operate Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Special kiddy rides will be held Saturday from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. amsms. V The University faculty members are the only Nebraskans to be named recipients of the 12-month traveling fellowships. Dr. Land, who was invited by the selection committee to apply, plans to spend a year, beginning next September, doing research in Eng land. He hopes to check public rec ords of the period 1696 to 1773, to determine the inflow of wealth into the Chesapeake. Dr. Land is the author of "The Dulanys of Maryland," a study of the most important colonial fam ily in Annapolis. Last year, he was cited by the Historic Annapolis, In a society formed to restore the colonial appearance of Annapolis. He also is co-autor of "The Old Line State," published recently. Dr. Land joined the University faculty in 2955, after serving as as sociate professor at Vanderbilt Uni versity for five years and as vis iting assistant professor at Prince ton for one year. For Dr. Cromwell, this is the second time that the has received the Fellowship the first time in 1950, when he spent nine months of study and research at the Uni-j versity College, London. J Dr. Cromwell, has gained wide spread recognition for his pioneer ing research activities along the lines of anti-cancer drugs. Beginning next February, be hopes to spend the first four months at California Institutte of Technology studying new spectro study of compound structures. In June, he plans to begin studies in London at University College and Chester Beatty Research Institute, Royal Cancer EospitaL Last year. Dr. Cromwell received a $16,496 grant from the National Cancer Research Institute of the U. . Public Health Service for sup port of his research. The Institute also recommended future support for the following three years at the rate of $16,157 per year. He joined the University staff in 1939 and is the author or co-author; of more than 60 articles on original research. Red Bullets Fill Escape From Hungary To Austria By DICK JAMES Special Writer Charles Nemeth had no doubt that he was doing the right thing when, amid a burst of Russian bullets, he and ten other Hunger ians one a nine-month-old baby- escaped across the Hungarian bor der to Austria. Nemeth, who arrived in Lincoln only a few weeks ago in connec tion with the University Hungar ian student project, is now a pre medical student at the Univer sity. As one sits talking with him, one realizes that this 27-year-old Hun garian doesn't take his life for granted. Charles recalled the day he fled Budapest. "People were in the streets, not wanting to work and Russian soldiers were running up and down." Even though the sun was shining that day, it must have seemed dark to Charles when Russian sol diers caught and jailed him as he was leaving Budapest. Luckily there was a non-Commu nist officer at the prison who helped him escape after only a few hours of confinement. For two and a half years Charles studied . medicine in Hungary, When he completes his pre-med training at the University he plans to attend medical school in Omaha, Charles traced his interest in medicine to his mother who was ill and in great pain for eight years. Now he wants to help other people who are ill and suffering. He said while studying medicine in Hungary he learned to love this career. During Charles's university at tendance in Budapest he was ar rested and sent to a concentration camp in Feb., 1952. He said this happened because he was what the Communists called a "class enemy" and an "unreliable man, Charles has no regrets about leaving Hungary. The Communists terror he said, was terrible and if he had been caught after the fight ing had begun, he would have been deported to Russia. Before bis flight from Hungary, Charles actually took part in the fight against the Russians. He was working in a doctor's office at the time and his work took him from the office to a near-by hospital. Traveling between the two, be was able to pin-point Russian po sitions and direct the fire of guns placed in a castle near the office. As an afterthought he added that Consulate General To Visit University The Korean Consulate General and Vice Consul, Chu Young Han and Woo Chong, of San Fran cisco, will visit the University campus Wednesday and Thursday. They will be guests of honor Thursday evening at a dinner spon sored by the Cosmopolitan Club, campus foreign student organiza tion, at the Student Union, and will show colored motion pictures of Korea. Dinner arrangements are being made by Byong Moon, one of 12 Korean students enrolled at the University. The dinner and pro gram are open to all students and the public two doctors and a nurse had been killed traveling this same pati from office to hospital. Charles said this country is very wonderful and the standard of liv ing high. In Hungary, he ex plained, the average worker has to work two weeks for one pair of shoes. ( He also is grateful to the Univer sity Hungarian student project and said the students and professors "are wonderful and help me very much." For having studied English only one year, 10 years ago, Charles speaks the language understand ably. After 1948, he recalled, tha Russians permitted only Russian to be taught. . When he ' finds time Charles would like to learn the American dances and play ping pong. NU Geologist Claims More , Oil In State A University geologist predicted Friday that additional oil fields will almost certainly be discovered in southwestern Nebraska in the next few years. R. F. Svoboda, subsurface sreo logist for the University's Division of Conservation and Survey, ia an address before the Nebraska Academy of Sciences meeting on the University campus, said the relatively large number of "dry noies" are not indicative of tha region's oil potentiality. Oil operators most likely to suc ceed in the location of new oil reserves in southwestern Nebras ka will have drilled as a result of recommendations based on a thorough knowledge of the subsur face as revealed by all well re cords available plus a thorough study of geologic formations dur ing the drilling of exploratory wells," be said. There is now a tendency. Mr, Svoboda said, among oil operators and geologists to quickly con demn a well or area based on what is incimplete knowledge or test data. "Less than ten per cent of all dry hole locations drilled in south western Nebraska can be con demned as barren of oil or gas because each and every possible reservoir prospect has not been thoroughly tested. The so-called dry hole can only condemn the area immediately surrounding thi test site," he said. Pooling of well data and in formation on a voluntary basis by oil operators provides the means for experienced sup-surface geo logists to make soound recommen dations that will undoubtedly re sult in locating new oil reserves for southwestern Nebraska," Mr, Svoboda said. "A Cooi Temtktn Aftmty! DAVIS SCR88L SEltfSl ErtvbBriwd Mil & Mia Mtri vaar to Wt1 Cm Enroll Mow. S29 Suurt BMg, Uncoil Weighty Problem: Prof Says Waistline Battle Unnecessary The battle of the waistline being fought by some Nebraska men and women may be wholly unnecessary, in the opinion of a University sci entist, Edward Fry, instructor of antho- pology, said today there is good reason to believe that the so-called normal weights for adults are not scientifically accurate. Further, Fry added, it is probable that the proportion of fat to the total weight of an individual varies to a considerable degree from one person to another, and perhaps from one sex to another. Fry, a physical anthropologist, is now investigating the problem. To assist him in gathering the neces sary infonntkm, several hundred University men and women stu dents are voluntarily submitting'' to scientific measuring and "pinching." The research study, be says, is designed to provide answers to two immediate questions:. How much bone, muscle and cubcutan-i ncous tissue (fat) does the body' contain, and what are the relative proportions of each ofo these to the other? Measurements taken include standing height, sitting height, the circumference of the waist, biceps, forearm and knee, and the width of the hips and the shoulders. At this point Fry's scientific "pinching" begins, with the assist ance of a pair of accurately cali brater spring-operated calipers. The calipers are used to measur e folds of skin picked up on five body areas: the upper arm, the lower arm, the waist, the back and just above the knee cap. x " 'Fry has measured and pinched 175 students. He believes the study will require information on about 800 mere students. While he has not assessed the in-; formation collected, Fry believes that hij study will establish scien tifically, accurate normal weight' ranges for Nebraska men and worn-: en ia the Is to 22 age group. i The information may aso sbed some light on the relationship of, climate to bodv we'urht- the rela. Uonship of height and weight to Ne braska's high human longevity rate; the relationship of body fat to disease; the relationship of fat accumulation to ape changes; and patterns of fat distribution in var ious types of individuals. Fry, assisted by Mrs. Fry, made a similar study of natives on the Island of Raratonga in the South Pacific, under a Fulbright grant, in 1953-54. The research work be ing done at the University is al lied to a national program endorsed by the National Research Council, tion, the United Nations, life in surance companies and several uni versities. "The program is concerned with over-all body nutrition, undernour ishment as well as over-nourishment," Fry said. "Our studies in volve an approximate analysis of body weight in terms of body com position. This information is neces sary V we are to interpret body weight properly, particularly body fat which is the variable showing' the largest individual differences." Use Your Token WIS We Give Green Stamps Polished Cotton Ivy League Slacks Completely Washable A Strap fesefc, easy-coff bottom and tailored-la comfart. Lean and slim af line with the look yaa like. Choice of tan r white. See McGregor's complete wardrobe of casually el egant summer sportswear. GOLD'S Men's Store. . .Street Floor v