. 1 Foge 4 The Daily Nebraskon Monday, May 20, 1 957 'J . i .A it 0-7. In iflv, j ; it 0 M Vv f 1 ft J I ' ft .,.. ..i i "TN! nil ;i ft ll.;7r""---:- Xs J I UTi? :?,IJL 'NiMH ' " ittTiT.." ,fftn i r?tim S - f F I i if . ttf j. FiVsf Sfeo NebmUu Fksto FTtOM THIS ... A worker in cry from the frontier days, milk- University herd produces 700,- vuc ng uauj uisugiies me uu- ing is now carriea on Dy all vw pounds of milk annually ac tial process of making ice cream, sorts of scienitic equipment. The cording to official reports, namely milking the cow. A far IF5 I7w'? 1m 1 r 1 -v V"cri y Journalism Society Elects New Officers Sigma Delta. Chi, national hon orary journalism society, has an nounced its new officers for 1957 58. The new officers are: president, Mack Lundstrom, a junior in Arts and Science colleee and Dast dent of Phi Kappa Psi. Jack Pollock, vice nresident Jack is a member of Innocents So ciety, president of Sigma Nu and a junior in Business Administration. Phil Stephens, secretary - treas urer. Phil is a member of Phi Del ta Theta. Kosmet Klub. and 'a junior in Arts and Science. Ag Union Picnic Slated For May 21 All Ag College students and faculty members are invited to at tend the sixth annual Ag Union picnic to be held May 21, on the picnic grounds west of Love Me morial Hall. A program of outdoor fames has been arranged by the game committee. A new feature this years is the series of competitive games between organized groups. The following groups will com pete: married, foreiarn. indenend- ent, and organized. There will also be special events for the faculty. Staff members and committee officers from the City Union will be present. All Ag Campus houses close tables for the event. Last year 350 guests were served. . . . Mitchell (Continued from Page 1.) the sake of an exaggerated self assertion." The Nebraskan reported on May 25, 195S, that Dr. Mitchell was go ing to appeal to the faculty com mittee on Academic privileges. Julius Cohen, professor of law and the then chairman of the facul ty committee on privilege and ten ure, sent Mitchell a cable Thurs day stating that the charges which Mitchell made in the May 23, 1956, of The Nebraskan which described the attack of outsid pressures on his academic freedom, would war rant investigation by the commit tee. Mitchell cabled back that he would welcome an investigation and would send whatever informa tion Cohen and the committee desired. The charges which were slated for consideration by the commit tee were made by Mitchell in his Nebraskan statement are that he was advised to tone down his writ, ing and talking and pressure was brought to curtail his expression on certain subjects. The committee on Academie Privilege and Tenure has since passed under the chairmanship of Dr. David Dow and has been con. sidering the charges of Mitchell, The report which will be pre sented to the Faculty Senate some. times before the end of the final exam period, will consist of the findings of that committee. "" Good Teachert Agnnej" DAVIS SCHOOL SERVICE Established 1918 rrinq th Mia souri Vail to th Wt Coast. Enroll Now. 529 Stuart Bldg.. Lincoln 8, Nebr. I KsbMlssnMBIMs Finished Product TO THIS . . . Mrs. Helen Krieger (left) hands Dorothy Christensen (right) a package of butter which she purchased at the Ag Dairy Bar. The finished product has by this time gone NrtnakM FM through the routine scientific process starting from the raw product itself. Top Milk Producers: WW's Contented Com Calmly Prepare for National Dairy Month During June By WALT PATTERSON Ag Editor The cows of Nebraska and the nation will have their time of glory next month, for it's National Dairy Month. To the cows in fee University Dairy Department's herd it will be no different from any other month. They will still be milked at the same time and in th same way, but what difference does that make, they're happy. The 75 cows in the herd are divi ded among four different breeds, Holstein, Guernsey, Jersey and Brown Swiss. Approximately 700,000 pounds of milk is produced annually by the herd. The top cow in the herd produced 20,660 pounds in ten months. The herd is noted through out the midwest as having some of the best producers in this area. Forty-nine cows out of the herd had a production record of over 12,000 pounds of milk in ten months. The animals in the herd have been shown at different shows throughout the country. Dairy animals nave won over 13 grand championships at the Nebraska State Fair since 1944. A Brown Swiss cow was chosen as the top aged cow of her breed at a show in Waterloo, Iowa. "This U the keenest competition in the country," Dr. Philip Kel Jey, chairman of the Dairy Depart ment, said. The cows are milked at three o'clock each morning and evening. About 20 students are hired to milk and care for the animals. The students work either full time or Just a few hours a week. All the milk produced by the herd goes to the Dairy Depart ment's Creamery. Here the milk is bottled, made into ice cream, cheese or condensed for storage. The con densed milk will later be used for making ice ere ami , "In addition to the milk pro duced In the herd, the creamery buys some milk froa fanners," according to Dr. Kelly. The products made in the cream ery are sold to the dormitories and cafeterias on the University campus. In addition, they have a salesroom where students and Lin eolnites can purchase the dairy products produced in the cream ery. ; "We have the creamery to keep the staff up to date and to teach the stndents in the best way pos sible," Dr. Kelley stated. In addition to the students em ployed in the barn, 10 others work for the dairy department, giving work to a total of 30 students. "The reasons we like to em ploy students are: (1) the student in the diary field will need the training that he can receive here, (2) the students can get to know the different jobs and machinery involved in the dairy industry and (3) it is necessary for us to know our students better because it makes it easier to place them on jobs after graduation," Dr. Kelly said. While the students are kept busy milking or making dairy products, the teaching staff in the Dairy De partment is busy trying to make their job easier. Research projects that are now being carried on in clude: work with the vitamin con tent of dairy products; pasture management and improvement; blood studies of cows to determine their future value; new cheeses and methods of producing cheese better; using different products that will cut down the cost of dairy products; and herd management studies using a tape measure to determine the weight of the cattle. The Dairy Department also has a rat laboratory where the nutri tional value of dairy products is determined. "Approximately 4,000 or 5,000 people go into the dairy barn and ack questions of the people work ing there. About twice that amount go into the observation room. There have been people from 4 or 5 different foreign countries and from all parts of the United States." Dr. Kelly said. We Know It! You've Heard It! That Regents Bookstore will give you the best deals on your used text books. Come in and compare prices with us. Also for fhe convenience of Ag students books can be sold in the basement of the Food and Nutri tion Bldg. Ag Campus. REGENTS BOOKSTORE JUST NORTH Or LOVE LIBRARY You are invited to attend the 36th annual spring show of the Lincwi fartiM 'Giu&t !! oil paintings plu? j ?! ! water-colors 3 pottery ; drawings 4 stoneware ?! ! I : prints porcelain j I collages a J Jewelry C i through Saturday, May j5' Auditorium, Fourth Flooz i U.n ctoilin 1 ! Vrtruni-u-iirijrua- mr-,r-,, II f I &3 yt'fii to n ft if 1 AauAitortit, t.. JzyL.,Jl.-&,JCil.. How to roll a box car Southern style THE rings this railroader's holding art Timkeo tapered roller bearings. Mounted, instead of ordi nary friction bearings, on freight car axles, Timkeo bearings reduce friction so much you can actually roll the car by yourself. Reducing friction to i minimum enables Timken bearings to eliminate the hot box problem. No. 1 cause of freight train delay. They roll the load Instead of slid ing it. And that's why the Southern Railroad has started to go "Roller Freight", with 415 of its freight cars on v Timken bearings. One of 58 railroads making the big switch to ''Roller Freight" to speed shipments, by eliminating the hot box problem, cutting terminal bearing inspection time substantially. And when all railroads go "Roller Freight", they'll sstc an estimated $224 million annually. The Timken Company pioneered the use of roller bearings for freight cars. We're looking for young men to pioneer improve ;aent like this with tut, help find new places to reduce friction, speed up machines. Men who want to grow with the world's largest manufac turer of tapered roller bearings. Men who will work hand-in-hand with the railroads, and with the people who make aircraft, automobiles, construction and fun machinery. We think yon might nd profitable reading In our booklet, ''Career Opportunities at the Timken Com pany". Drop us a card at The Timken Roller Bearing Company, Canton 6, Ohio. UTITTTV ftMflf lW pan m. . ft m. . ZAPIXSD ROLLER BEARINGS Timkeo bearings kesp America on tha 3 . : : and isi kep S2 !i2 when yw go with the Timken Company t 'i