PAGE 16 DAILY NEBRASKAN Cornhusker, AfU Yearbook PrintsAnnualP mentation Of Activities On Campus Nine months of caption counting, rushed deadlines and occasional coffee breaks combine annually to bring the University a year of its history in a bock. The book? The Cornhusker. The staff? Editor-in-chief, asso ciate editor, four managing editors, the layout, panel and art editors, the business manager and two as sistants, photographers, section heads and workers. Of these, the editor, associate editor, managing editor, layout editor, and business manager arc paid workers. A Cornhusker editor-in-chief ov ersees the organization, makeup and management of the entire book. The editor's associate assists and suggests. Each managing editor directs the activities of a group of section heads. These managers also guide the slide rules, edit copy and fit nine-inch pictures into five-inch spaces. Layout editors draw the outlines that the rest of tne staff fill in. The panel editor arranges the square in which the smiling campus faces will appear. Any necessary artistic embellishments are delegated to the art editor. In the business office, the busi ness manager and his assistants plot to save pencils and guarantee a profit. Staff photographers focus their 1 NUCWA Has Interest In Current Happenings The Nebraska University Coun cil on World Affairs is student or ganization to arouse more interest in current, local, national and in ternational affairs. NUCWA's yearly program usual ly includes bi-weekly meetings, featuring outstanding speakers from many countries, panel discus sions, skits and films; the Interna tional Friendship Dinner; a spring conference; and a mock United Na tions meeting and political conven tion. The political convention, which Is held in the spring, is one of NUCWA's biggest events. Students Foreign Students Are COSMOPOLITAN CLUB is made up of students interested To enable the many foreign stu dents on campus to become ac quainted with the American stu dents, the University, has formed an organization of International and American students, called the Cosmopolitan Club. The club has a membership of 240 foreign stu cameras on scenes and people that are designated by the section heads. They snap and develop the majority of the book's pictures. Section heads handle specific por tions of the book such as fraterni ties, activities and colleges. They write the copy and devise and schedule the pictures that appear in the several sections. Workers, the typists and errand runners, insure the completion on the book. Freshman by serving as workers, learn how the pulse of .his publication functions. They are the future editors. Freshman boys may begin as Cornhusker workers as soon as school commences. Women may sign up to worK at tne Activity Mart. The Cornhusker is supervised by the faculty-student Board of Pub lications. Paid staff members are selected .by the Pub Board in the spring. This new staff then selects the section heads from the. worthy j workers who apply for these po- sitions. Lack of experience is no hin drance to those who are interested in working on the Cornhusker. The staff is always willing to explain and to demonstrate. The Cornhusker is a volumn of approximately 500 pa?es which is sold for $5.50 each fall. run for the offices of governor, lieutenant governor and secretary of state. After elections, a mock legislative session is held. This year, 22 bills were introduced at the session covering a wide variety of subjects. Bills stressing the broadening of the tax base led in filings. This mock legislative ses sion is one of the best chances for students to become acquainted with practical politics. For the hurried student who is unable to sift the world news from his morning paper,- NUCWA tacks clippings of the important news worthy events on a world map. dents representing 45 different countries. The club also affords the students an opportunity to get accustomed to the habits of the customs of the Americans. The exchange of ideas is stressed in the club, which is open to every student. At the various discussions j - "i-X'.t't ' f ' " ' H --' w- - ... . rr ww" ' ' n W'MfH i' ii -t"'- tri .Vw'-.t ..1 Addis With" the addition of a fourth issue per week the second semes ter of this year, The Nebraskan ad ded the word Daily to its name and stepped into the upper bracket of college newspapers. The extra issue resulted in a paper coming out Monday morning covering weekend events, which increased both the quality and quantity of news material. "Peanuts", a nationally-famous comic strip was another second semester improve ment, this time located on the edi torial page. In 1872 The Palladian Society es tablished the campus paper and called it "The Hesperian Student." Through the years the Rag has been a four page monthly, a seven-column daily, a five-column tabloid, a seven-column triweek ly, and a seven-column paper that comes out four times a week as it does at present. The Rag is free to all students. who may pick it up in various cam pus buildings. The paper's staff works in the basement offices of the student Union. The staff is selected in the spring imu.wj'A The Nebraska University Com-,LB's mittee on World Affairs (NUCWA) sponsored a mock session of the Nebraska Unicameral legislature this year as their annual all-camp project. The mock legislature sess ion was held March 27, 28, and 29. Each organized house or any group of individuals on campus could register as a district. These organizations which applied for dis tricts and were accepted were en titled to elect a senator and an alternate for that district and could nominate one person for each of the three elected offices. These officers included a governor, lieu tenant governor and a secretary of state. Each district could also elect and send any number of lobbyists to the legislature to lobby for the Acquainted in foreign lands which are held at the meetings, students are able to exchange opinions and ideas on controversial problems. Through this exchange of ideas and discussion of prob lems, a chance for real friendship is created. The purpose of this club is to promote international Dssyodl To ABB; T and mid-winter by the Publications Board, which consists of both stu dent and faculty members. Freshmen may begin their work on the Rag as reporters. Men sign up in the Nebraskan office, and women register at the Activ ities Mart. Beginning reporters learn the Nebraskan style for writ ing stories and the correct way to type and slug stories. Open House for all students inter ested in working on the student newspaper will be held from 3 to 5 p.m., Fnday, Sept., 13, in the Nebraskan Office, Room 20, Stu dent Union Basement Staff members will be present at the open house to answer any question about the paper. Refresh- ments will be served, Fred Daly assumed editor's du tiesof The Daily Nebraskan, and Sam Jensen edited first semester's Nebraskan. Others who helped to!"00 "ana shared the title .of mnWp nr. thp first scmpster Rna I news editor. Bob Martel man. staff, as it is popularly known to the student body, included Fred Daly as managing editor and Mack 1 Lundstrom as editorial page editor. Bob Ireland served as news editor sponsors LeghcGLZH'e (legislative bills) which were introduced by the senators from each of the districts. Five candidates for each of the: elected offices were chosen from the list of those nominated by the' districts by the steering committee. This committee was made up of the various committee heads with in NUCWA. The finalists, then, were placed on a ballot and the final officers were chosen by an all-campus election. The results were as follows: Jack Pollock, governor; Bob Ireland, lieutenant governor; and Mary Mc Knight, secretary of state. Committees made up of various senators were formed and the bills were presented. The legislature then acted upon some of them. Hugo Srb, clerk of the Nebraska legislature, was the speaker at the final session - and gave an evaluation of the legislature. Biff Keyes, vice-president in charge of programs, concluded that it was the purpose of the mock session of the Unicameral to come to a better understanding of the state government and problems it faces by actually tracing its proc esses through the mock session. Two years ago the NUCWA proj ect was a mock political conven tion. friendship and good will throughout be University by this exchange and discussion of ideas. Guest speak ers from foreign countries are in vited to speak at the club's meet ings. A tea, the Friendship Dinner, parties, dances and picnics are ac tivities sponsored by this club in addition to the regular bi-weekly meetings. The Smorgasbord is held In the fall and in the spring the" Cosmo-Carnival. Several weeks before Christmas, club members sold Christmas cards picturing winter scenes of the University campus Bi-weekly meetings ar range for social and educational events, and monthly parties carry out. the theme of v.irious American holidays. The carnival, open to the pubhc, includes a dance, and floor show. The floowshow consists of skits and variety acts. The mem bers participating in the carnival dress in costumes typical of their native lands. Naoirae and Walt Blore handled the sports page. Copy editors included Sara Jones, Dick Shugrue, Jack Pollack and Gary Frenzel. In charge of collecting the news on Ag College was Don Herman the business angle of the paper. He was assisted by Don Beck, Larry Epstein, Tom Neff and Jerry Sullentine. Dick Hendrix supervised circulation - of the paper. One night a week, three weeks a month, each copy editor takes of reading all proof and suDervUini I the makeup man in making up the ivur pages. Jack Pollock was managing edi- J tor of the second semester Rag, j and was assisted by Dick Shugrue . cujtunai page editor. The four-issue-a-week paptir made the es tablishment of another news edi tor necessary, so Sara Jones and r- i t i . aged the sPorts PSe and Dick Hen drix related the Ae news, rw Editors were Art Blackman, Car ole Frank, George Mayer and Ron i warsc'sKi- George Madsen again ervea as business manager, and was assisted by Larry Epstein, Tom Neff and Larry Sullentine, Jack Norris was circulation man ager. The people and positions listed above make up the paid Nebras kan staff, but there are many po sitions which require less work and are therefore not paid posi tions. Some of these include the office secretary, staff writers and society editor. Freshmen are usu ally reporters, without which the paper could not function. From the battery of reporters, the next semester's staff is selected. Staff members work on Satur day mornings and Sunday, Men day, Tuesday, and Thursday after noons. Reporters are naturally welcomed at any of these times to write stories, interview people and do any other tasks which might come up. As reporters become more adept at writing,- they are given more and more important things to do. All students and faculty mem bers who are dissatisfied with some phase of campus life, find an opportunity to vent their feel ings in the Nebraskan Letterip col lumn. Editorials are written by any and all members of the Nebraskan staff and usually concern contro versial topics around campus at the moment. Each staff member is required to turn in at least one editorial a week, besides being as signed specific topics to write about. Girls Join Activities Freshmen women have their first opportunity to begin working in activities after four , weeks of school. They sign up for the ac tivities they wish to participate in at the Activities Mart spon sored by the Assocated Womeu Students Board. Eighteen organizations are repre sented in the all-freshman Activi ties Mart. "Aim for Action" was the theme selected by AWS for this years Mart. Members of each group decorate and sponsor a booth which is used to explain the purpose of the or ganization. Only two women from any or ganized house may sign up for AWS workers in order to prevent any disappointment In the spring, but any number of independent women "may sign up.