Financial Flop Means IFC Balls Finished Some Alternative Plans Offered By John Hoerner - mere will never be an- ouier ire can as we Know it" IPP crwial airman Trt Knoll said Fridav night. J-member and then the IFC us "We planned the ball in , ing this budget to hold & big February because it was a event to which all fraternity dead month last year. This i members would be invited. year it was practically the height of the social season,' Knoll said. Formals Held Kappa Alpha Theta. Kap- pa Sigma and Sigma Nu held their Jormals Friday at the same time as the IFC Ball. I In addition to competin formals three fraternities. Phi Delta Theta, Delta Tau Delta, and Sigma Phi Epsilon were holding Hell Week. The IFC lost more than $300 on the ball this year with around 200 couples attending, Knoll said. I The spirit of the Air Force officers was cited as a true Ball or Work ' sign of democracy by Ali Ghandour, the only foreign student IFC treasurer Tom Ncff, ! in ROTC. agreed with Knoll Friday, j "During my first semester in the program, I was my "'We'll never have an other j class leader," Ghandour said. ""As far as I'm concerned this one like this!" is democracy." "I'd like to see a big dance The 24 year old Jordanian student had to obtain per early in the year when spirit mission from the Jordan government to participate in the is high" Knoll said. If it was j ROTC program. supported by fraternities as a whole rather than individu al members we could bring in most any band in the coun try." The plan which Knoll pro- Luncheon To Honor Scholars Mortar Boards will honor University women for superior scholarship at a Scholarship Luncheon Saturday. Guests will be the three top-ranking sophomore, junior and senior women and the highest ranking senior women in the Colleges of Business Administration, Agriculture, Arts and Science and Teach ers. "Women students who lead the University in scholarship certainly deserve some spe cial recognition," Doris Eby, luncheon chairman, said. The luncheon, which will be held tt the University Club, will replace the Mortar Board Scholarship Tea given in past years. Betty Holcomb, Mortar Board alum and law student, will address the luncheon group on the significance of good scholarship. In addition to the luncheon, the Mortar Board will also send congratulatory notes to all women students maintain ing a 6.5 average or above. YW Directors Slate Campus Visit Tuesday Two representatives of the YWCA will be on the campus Tuesday End Wednesday to discuss professional oppor tunities with women students. Miss Betty Wilson, execu tive director of the Univer sity YWCA, will interview in terested students Tuesday in the second floor lounge of the Home Economics Building on ag campus. Appointments, between the hours of 1:30 p.m. and 5:00 p.m., should be made in advance in Km. 116, Home Ec Building. Miss Sally Beck, Young Adult program director at the VUTJ ii. ill l,i in T?m 1 .Jnnri flnnV of RnH, Bouton ! Hall, from 1:30 to 5 p.m. 1 Twenty-six months ago Wednesday Elizabeth Remenyi walked The YWCA needs 1,000 new :or U hours over the snow workers in the next three i covered plains of Hungary vears for placement in the i into Austria and a new life. U.S. and Hawaii. Jobs open I Now she is a librarian in for inexperienced graduates J the Social Studies Room of are health and physical eiu- cation directors or Young Adult and Teen-Age program directors. Hurlbut to Talk On Russian Visit A recent visitor to Russia USSR Wednesday. Prof. L. W. Hurlbut, head pf the agricultural engineer ing department, wiU lecture and show slides on Russia at 7 p.m. in Love Library audi torium. The talk is sponsored by the American Society of Agricul tural Engineers. iibJer to Speak At Dairy Meet C. W. Nibler, University College of Agriculture exten sion dairyman, will speak lit the annual meeting of the Cornhusker Dairy Herd Im provement Assn. The meeting will be hold at 1 :30 Monday in the County Ex tension Office al the Lincoln Post Office. posed would involve each fra-1 ternity putting up a certain j amount, say $1 or $2 per With almost 1400 fraternity members such a budget could conceivably range op to 000 or $4,000. The budget was set at $960 for Friday night's IFC Ball, Foreign Student Likes ni ROTC Program Jordanian Impressed by 'Democracy" By Sondra Jordanian "They were agreeable to me doing this because there is a mutual defense arrangement between Jordan and the United States," he said. He explained that he would not be eligible to apply for a commission in the Air Force. "It was agreed to train me and that's all," he said. Ghandour comes from Jerusalem originally where he has eleven brothers and sisters. He is the oldest of the fam ily. Roundabout Journey "It has always been my dream to come to America," he said. "A lady I met in Jerusalem recommended this university." He left Jerusalem in 1954 for Jordan. "I was jailed for 3 months after I crossed the border,11 he explained. "Finally I received special permission from the King to stay in the country. I slept on the streets for one month before I got a job in an office. Six months later he left for Iraq, remained there six months and then left for an accountant's job with an oil company at "a very good salary." Three years later he resigned his job, sold his personal possessions and after visits to Egypt, Italy, France, Syria and Lebanon, arrived in the United States. Well Treated "I have nothing to comment about the treatment of for eign students here," he said. "I've always been well treated and receive many invitations from people I dont even know." Ghandour lives with an American family who he claims has helped him with his English a great deal. Ice skating is one of his favorite pastimes although he said that learn ing was rather hard at first. A further step toward Americanizing is his crew cut, which he got just a few days ago. "I didnt really want it this short, he explained, rub bing his shorn head. "I surrendered my head to the barber and this is the result." KNUS Starts With Revised KNUS, campus radio sta tion, starts second semester with a completely different format featuring special shows along with the Top Thirty Tunes. At 10 a.m. Thursday, Pro Sherman will "Meet the Ent ertainers." Sherman will in terview famous jazz artists and play some of their music. Shearing Quintet This week the artist is George Shearing and Quintet. John West will review mus-, later on in the semester in sic from famous movie pro-1 elude "Teardrops with Dixie," ductions at 30 a.m. Wednes- Dixie Helms with records and day. chatter, and hour shows of A classical hour wiU be pre- 'progressive jazz. 11 -Hour Trek Wins Liberty Librarian Recalls Sudden Emotions of Revolution I! Jan-Hwa Chang Love Library. Vivid Memory And although it has been more than two years since fr .iJHJ1 mHHsM ..WBI "''J IQ&Wt IjWfcft'S a. v . : TWO YEARS after the Hungarian Revolution, Elizabeth Remenyi sits behind a desk in tne Social Studies Reading Room of Love Library, far remvd from te day when she made an 11-h'tur hike larough ie snow toward freedom. the third held since the 1955 i iwo-year layuu. i rr 55 Successful The 1955 Ball, also held in Turnpike Ballroom, featured Louis Armstrong and accord ing to attendance records was a huge success. Student Affairs took a dim"! view of the drinking, however, $3,-land the Ball was discontin- ued until 1957. Last year the Ball cost the IFC around $900. Whalen Permission Semester Format r.ented on Monday, Wednes day and Friday from 6 to 7 p.m. Campus Interviews Campus personalities will be interviewed about Univers ity problems at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday. Beth Toomey and Mary McKnight are hostesses for the program. Bob Wirz will interview sports personalities at 7:30 p.m. Friday. Other shows that win start Mrs. Remenyi left her na-1 tive land, she remembers the Hungarian revolution scene vividly: ""It started out as a dem onstration for the Polish event. "Nobody knew that it would become a revolution. I look part in the demonstration. As we were marching and singing the national anthem, 3 flWiP jF i if v. . -. J L Ujwrsity Faculty Salaries ank Many Degrees In 90 Years Sunday marked the 90th birthday of the University. In those years since NU first opened its doors to a handful of students, 60,147 degrees have been con ferred and almost 100.000 students have been enrolled. NY Opera Soloists Billed Lishner To Sing In Spring Concert Two nationally f a m o u s opera singers will parti"' " n? in the University's annual spring concert. Prof. Eman uel Wishnow, chairman of the music department, an nounced. Joining Leon Lishner, as sociate profeseor of music, as featured soloists are Sarah Fleming of the New York Opera Co. and John Alexan der of the NBC-TV Opera Co. and the New York Opera Co. Prof Lirhner has performed with the New York Opera Co the Chicaeo Opera Co. and the NBC-TV Opera Co. Performing with the 500 voices of the University chor al froup and the symphony orchestra, Alexander win sing "Sound an Alarm11 by Han del. Lishner win do the bari tone solo in "By the Bivou ac's Fitful Flame.'" AH three soloists win combine for Haydn's "'The Seasons w The concert, sponsored by the University Convocation Committee and Department of Music, is tentatively planned for May 10. Collegiale Band Will Present Winter Concert The University Collegiate Band, directed by Prof. Jack Snidsr, will present its an nual winter concert Feb. 22, at 4 p.m. in the Union ban room. Featuring brass choirs, the band wifl play "Jubilee," by Kenny; the "Beautiful Gala tea," by von Suppe; ""Music for a Carnival," by Grund man and the "Original Suite,1' by Jacob. The trumpet en semble win play "The Magic Carpet" "by Burket. Admission to this concert is free. everybody's emotions be- came out of control. Shouting, Too, ""I am a very quiet person, but 1 was shouting like the others. 1 remained there until the soldiers started to pass out guns to everybody. I could not fire a gun to kill people. Although I hated the Russian government and commu nism, I could not make my self hate the individual per sons and I could not kill. "So I went home in the con fusion. 1 did not want to leave Hungary, but 1 had no choice. During the days of the revolution, 1 argued sev eral times with my super visor in the( Hungarian Na tional Library in Budapest) who was a Communist Par ty member. XT A tpn Tnnnnn Communism. So when the Russians came back, 1 knew I had to escape," she re- C Via mnrcur1 -rhJ A ft. LUUL-U. Mitt UDOlU strian border Dec. 28, 1956. After staving in Austria 5 months, she went to New York where she worked in the New York I'uhlie Li- brarv. She took the Love U- jbrury position in July, 1958. I Mm RpmpTivi had received R 'a diploma in Librarv Science 1 relatives that it is impossible i ceived the American Chem- staff members l.edu. mere !: -m the Academy of Educa-for the government to exe-1 ical Society Award in 1945 for J are only 22W spaces avail i lion in Budapest in 1953. cute all the people." I pure chemistry. able wound the campus. The Doily Comparatively Low Studies Show Present Pay Scales Is Far Below the National Average By Carroll Kraus Two studies of staff salaries of American universities show ! that the University may have ja strong basis for requesting faculty salary boosts in the 1959-61 biennium. . Studies by the Oregon State System of Higher Education and the U.S. Office of Educa tion indicate the University's comparative standings in sal arieschief item in the Uni versity's proposed continua tion budget relatively low. Printed Studies The "Nebraska Alumnus," in printing the studies re- Girls With Guns See Page 4 6 Alumnus9 Features J-Schoolers Students Have Seven Articles Seven University journal ism hopefuls wfll see the re sults of their creative work in print this month. The journalism students are the authors of an the featured articles in the February issue of the "Nebraska Alumnus,"" the University's Alumni As sociation magazine. The student writers, Diana Maxwell, Del Hood, Ann Hale, Anne Pickett, Emmie Limpo, Elizabeth Smith and Pat Flan nigan, were members of a Journalism 151 (magazine article) class. Writing the magazine art icles is one project of the class. The February "Alum nu.'1 i: tne third annual all stuuent issue. Articles by the other 11 members of the class wffl be published in forthcoming is sues of the ""Alumnus." Math Colloquium Planned Tuesday A mathematics colloquium win be held Tuesday at 2 p.m. in Room 209, Burnett HaU. Dr. Donald MUler, assistant professor of mathematics, win discuss "On the Imbedding of Nets in Affine Planes." Upon her graduation, she worked for the Hunpian iauuaai ijiuiaij' uuui mc revolution. "Wonderful Place" Mrs. Remenyi says she thinks ""the United States is a wonderful place for one to start a new life," but stin hopes to go back to Hungary some day. "But 1 realize the chance it rery slim because I know -very well the Russian sys tem,1" she said. The thing I like best about America is the freedom to express one's opinion. You do not have to be afraid that you might be put in jail. Yau can even critize the govern ment. 'This Is Freedom' "I think this is the com- Mrs. Remenyi vorced in 1952 and has no children, but three sisters and a brother remain in j Hungary- ! "They live very quietly and , earn barely enough to eat, she said, "My letters have not "brought them trouble be- : cause there are so many families who have escaped Nebraskan seph Soshnik in the Governor's hearing on the NU budget, shows that the University staff salaries are well under these of many other state colleges and universities. Chancellor Clifford Hardin said at the hearing that the proposed continuation budget, w-'ch asked an increase of more than $4 million in state tax funds over the last beinni nm, was a '"realistic, yet for ward looking" one. And although budget re quests by the University would place salaries in the Crossan In Recital Thursday Selections from Mozart, Schumann and Debussy will be presented Thursday in a piano recital by Jack Crossan, assistant professor of music The program, to be given at 7:30 p.m. in the Union, is open to the public It win in clude Schumann's ""Fantasia in C Major" and Debussy's "Preludes,"" Volume L Prof. Crossan las appeared with soprano Dorothy Waren skjold in concerts and has made a record album with Miss W7arenskjold. He also has been accompanied on tours for John Charles Thom as and Igor Gorin. Bucks 4Goingf: J. College Staging Fadeout Better get your use from those white bucks and that blazer. "Joe College is rapidly dis appearing,'" according to Registrar Floyd Hoover, as he spoke on the University's 90th birthday Sunday. "About 18 per cent of the nrpRPTit onrnliment oi K,2M I are married; about one of everv lour male sxuaenis have completed a tour ol duty with the armed forces; and, despite the fact that age 18-21 is usually considered the college age more than 45 per cent of the present student body is over age 2V he said. Band Fraternity Names Pledges Seven University students have been named as pledges of Gamma Lambda, national professional band fraternity. New pledges are Ken Bar jenbruch, Larry Briggs, Paul Huebner, Doug Kent, Bob Peterson, Lynn Roberts and Bob Colwen and Jim Mo hatt, graduate students, -were selected as associate mem bers. Water Institute Slates Gustavson A former University chan cellor will address the Na tional Water Resources Insti tute in Lincoln March 18 and 19. Dr. R. G. Gustavson will speak on ""New Dimensions for Conservation" at the sec ond annual meeting. Dr. Gustafson is now presi dent and executive director of Resources for the Future, Inc., a branch of the Ford Foundation. Chemical Group To Hear Wall Dr. Frederick Wan wfll be the speaker at the Thursday faculty members decided lo meeting of the American arjve their cars the same day. Chemical Society in Km. 32814,300 of them would still be A very Laboratory at 7 : 30 p.m. driving around looking for Dr. Wall is now at the Uni-! parking places. versitv of Illinois where he re- Monday, February 16, 1959 midpoint of these 1958-59 stu dies, the Chancellor said b did not know how much the University would fall behind in the coming biennium. Near Lowest the Oregon State study of 23 state universities and col leges for 1958-59, as reported by the institutions, shows that NU is 21st from the top in salaries for professors and associate professors. The study also shows that the University ranked last ia payments for assistant pro fessors and 19th for instruc tors. The NU averages were: professor, $8,073; associate professors, $5,687; assistant professors, $5,482; and instruc tors, $4,619. Comparative Salaries Top salaries in the study, which was made chiefly of Mountain, Midwest and Pa cific Coast universities, ranged to nearly $12,500 for professors at one Pacific Coast state university; about $8,500 for associate professor close to $6,500 at more than a half dozen of the colleges for assistant professor salar ies; and salaries Bearing $5, 500 for instructors. The IIS. Office of Educa tion study of 46 institutions showed a mean salary of $9, 489 for professors, $7,260 for associate professors; $6,03 for assistant professors and $4,900 for instructors. Maximum and minimum means ranged from $12,350 to $6,550 professors with simi lar fluctuations among other staff salaries. Request Increases The University requested increases would raise profes sors'' salaries aa average of about $L500 a year icr 1959-60, Similar per cent increases were . asked for other staff members. ,(The above figures apply to undergraduate college facul ties for academic year ap pointments only.) Gov. Ralph Brooks recom mended trimming $S.f million off the entire $5.9 requested University increase irich in cluded about a $L mffljoa increase in the expansion budPeL Hardin had tola KrooKs ana i former Governor Victor An- i aerson, ai the Governor's Hearing, that increased sal aries were necessary ""to com pete in the market place for replacements for the normal turnover in the faculty, and we must offer our faculty ad ditional incentive to remain at Nebraska."" Red Cross: Second Mass Meet Scheduled The University Red Cross unit wiU hold its semi-annual mass meeting Thursday at 7 p.m. in Union 313. The meeting is arranged lo enable students who wish lo work on Red Cross lo sip up for a committee. All Red Cross volunteer workers, committee and board mem bers are lo attend. Mrs. Grace Darby, recrea tional director at the Vet eran's Hospital will speak. Refreshments wfll be served. Workers are needed for these committees: State Hospital, entertain ment Water Safety, Adult Activities, Orphanages, Pub licity, Junior Red Cross, Transportation, Handicrafts, Vet's Hospital, Specif pro ject, .Orthopedic, Leadership, and First Aid. KU Parking Shoics Situation Could Be Worse Think the parking situation is bad here? The Daily Kansan reports that if all KU students and Student cars total 5,9Uu ana