The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 29, 1958, Image 1

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MARY WESTER, ZETA TAU ALPHA from Lincoln,
squeezes under the bar during the mystery event at the
Sigma Chi Derby Day held Saturday. For complete re
sults and a picture of the Derby Day queen, see page
four.
4
Masquers'
One-Act Play Contest
Rules Re-Announced
Rules for the original one
act play contest to be spon
sored by Nebraska Masquers
campus drama honorary
have been announced by
Steve Schultz, president
of the organization.
"The rules were announced
last spring," Schultz said
But we want campus wide
participation, and we thought
that another announcement
at this time would catch those
people who are new to the
university."
Regulations for the contest
are as follows:
(1) The contest is open to
any student, faculty mem
ber, or employee of the Uni
versity of Nebraska.
(2) All plays must be in
one act and must be original,
not translations. If the play
has been previously produc
ed, a statement giving the
time and place of presenta
tion should accompany the
script.
(3) Manuscripts must be
typewritten on one side of the
page and securely bound.
The author's name must not
appear on the manuscript,
but an entry blank giving
name, address and tele
phone number must be
placed in a sealed envelope
attached to the manuscript.
Neither Masquers nor the
Judges will assume liability
for the loss of manuscripts,
but every precaution will
be taken to return them.
(4) Any number of plays
may be submitted by an au
thor. (5) Entries must be
mailed or delivered to the
office of University Theatre,
108 Temple Building, by 5
p.m., November 14.
(6) Nebraska Masquers
reserve the right to produce,
royalty free, any of the en
tries during the academic
year of 1958-59.
(7) Three awards will be
made. First prize will be
twenty-five dollars.
"We wish to emphasize two
of these rules," Schultz said.
"First, that anyone connected
with the university may en
ter, and second, that we are
of
planning to produce some
these scripts.
We hope that this produc
tion will be a particular in
centive for entering, since
seeing a play onstage is the
only way one can really as
sess its value."
KU Party
Opposes
Prejudice
Study Urged
On Discrimination
A powerful student group at
the University of Kansas has
moved to fight racial discrim
ination in Lawrence.
The Allied Greek-Indepen
dent party announced In its
platform for the 1958-59 school
year that Student Govern
ment Week should be held
early in the fall semester in
stead of the spring to "elimin
ate racial discrimination in
Lawrence public places."
The president of the organ
zation was quoted in the
Daily Kansan as saying that
two-thirds of the Lawrence
restaurants catering to Uni
versity students "do not serve
colored students unless they
are in a mixed group, and at
least half of the rest catering
to students will not serve Ne
gro students at all."
The party plans to urge the
student council to make a
study of discrimination in
Lawrence.
"We can't tell now what ac
tion may be possible and cer
tainly no extreme or drastic
action is desired, but the ASC
should follow through with a
drive to eliminate discrimin
ation in Lawrence," the party
president said.
Vol. 33, No. 8
The Daily Nebraskan
Monday, September 29, 1958
About Face
Greeting Committee There,
Team Not Schedule Mixup
Approximately 200 people
arrived at the Lincoln Munici
pal Airport Saturday to greet
the University football team
after their game at Purdue
only to discover that the team
had landed in Lincoln nearly
two hours earlier than the
estimated time of arrival
Coach Bill Jennings said the
early arrival of the plane de
pended on many things. The
game was over earlier than
anticipated, the boys dressed
a little faster than usual, a
ponce escort to the airport
New Air Force ROTC
Staff Members Revealed
Four new faculty members
of the University Air Force
ROTC staff have been an
nounced by Col. W. B. Atwell,
professor of Air Science.
The new staff members
are:
Maj. W. W. Ault of Ft. Col
lins, Colo., a 1939 graduate of
the University of Colorado.
He served in the Air Force
from 1941 to 1945, then re-entered
in 1948. For the past
two years he was director of
finance for Tactical Air Com
mand at Langley AFB.
Capt. Neal Dusenberry of
Glenwood, la., a 1954 gradu
ate of Omaha University. He
served in the Army from 1939
to 1945, when he enlisted in
the Air Force. Before joining
he University staff, he
served as Chief of the Docu
ment Security Branch a t
Baysdale AFB, La.
Maj. Roland Fox of Omaha,
graduate of Omaha Univer
sity. He graduated from pilot
training in 1943 and since then
has logged 2,850 flying hours.
Purdue
Stomps
Huskers
Page 3
He was commander of the
6318th Armament and Elec
tronics Squadron at Kadena
Air Base, Okinawa, before
coming to the University.
Maj. Richard Hamilton of
San Antonio, Tex., a graduate
of the University of Mary
land. He entered the Air
Force as an Aviation Cadet in
1942. Before coming to Ne
braska he served as Chief,
USAFE Command Post in
Wiesbaden, Germany.
New York
Opera Ahead
For Lishner
Leon Lishner, associate pro
fessor of voice at the Univers
ity, will appear with the New
York City Opera Company in
October in two leading oper
atic roles.
He will appear as Osmin in
"The Abduction from the Ser
aglio", by Mozart and as Sir
Morous in Richard Strauss's
"The Silent Woman."
Both the New York City
Opera Company and the Chi
cago Opera Company have
offered Professor Lishner
contracts for the entire fall
seasons. He declined the of
fers because of his teaching
committments in the music
department, according t o
Prof. Emanuel Wishnow,
chairman.
Professor Lishner has ap
peared on national television
and on Broadway, and has
sung throughout the country
and abroad in concerts, op
eras, and with symphony or
chestras.
Lab Opposes
Soil Test Idea
Harris Finn Contends NU
Unfair to Private Companies
An independent Lincoln
laboratory has raised opposi
New Beta Theta Pi Housemorn
Finds Piniiings Impressive
Born and reared in Kansas,
Mrs. Alice Harker, new Beta
Theta Pi housemother, feels
that Nebraska and Iowa are
just "part of my county."
Before coming to the Uni-
Ag Team Judges
In Dairy Contest
Three Ag students will com
pete in the National Intercol
legiate Dairy Cattle Judging
Contest today at Waterloo,
la.
, They are Richard Hendrix,
junior, Don Kubik and James
Woestman, seniors. Judging
coach Jack Kuiken will ac
company the boys.
The judging team will com
pete with teams from 30 to
33 states and Canada. The
high individual in the contest
will receive a $500 graduate
scholarship.
The team and coach left
Thursday to visit five Iowa
dairy herds enroute to Water
loo. Included on the tour were
Rosebud Farm Guernseys,
Polk City; Bright's Brown
Swiss Farm, Eldora; Joe Ly
on, Toledo; Eastern Iowa
Dairy Breeders, Cedar Rap
ids and LP. Stewart, Mayn
ard. Earlier this month at a
Hutchinson, Kans. contest, the
Nebraska team ranked third
among seven teams. Woest
man was high man in the
H o 1 s t e i n division, topping
Hendrix by one point.
versity campus, Mrs. Harker
was a housemother for a
group at the University of
Iowa for ten years.
Bigger Task
"Getting acquainted here
though, is a much bigger
task," she said. "The group
I was with in Iowa was much
smaller."
"I've been around young
people all my life," she ex
plained. "First I was asso
ciated with groups my daugh
ters were in and then after
my husband died, I went
right to the University of
Iowa."
Mother Harker heard about
the opening for a Beta
house mother from a boy she
met at Nebraska.
Three married daughters
it
Mrs. Alice Harker
and seven grandchildren are
Mother Harker's pride.
Time Full
"But your time is so occu
pied here that I really can't
spend all the time with them
that I'd like."
With no "real problems,"
Mother Harker finds being
housemother very interesting.
She found the Beta 'pinning
ceremony impressive.
"It gives the pinning such
a serious atmosphere, which,
after all, it should have."
She was also thrilled with
the University campus.
"Everything is so centrally
located and well-regulated,"
she commented.
Mother Harker attended Mt.
Scholastica, a girls' school in
Atchison, Kan., and was born
in Greenleaf, Kan.
Ag 'Fall Fiesta9
Planned Oct. 10
"Fall Fiesta" theme will
highlight the annual Fall
Round-up Oct. 10 at the Uni
versity College of Agri
culture. The traditional open house
and dance will be held in the
Ag Union.
The dance will feature a re
ception line including mem
bers of the University admin
istration as well as staff
members in t h e College of
Agriculture, according to Bill
Spilker, Ag Union acting director.
tion to the soil testing labor
atory being considered by the
Board of Regents.
Harris Laboratories, Inc.,
of Lincoln, has sent the Reg
ents and state officials a let
ter opposing the plan to set up
the "best testing laboratory
in the Midwest" for use of
western Nebraska farmers,
Laboratory president Lew
is E. Harris said, "Such a
program would result in un
necessary expenditure of tax
funds, would serve no useful
purpose, would duplicate sim
ilar services already avail
able from independent labor
atories and would create ex
tremely unfair competition
for the taxpaying independ
ent laboratories in Nebras
ka." Regent J. LeRoy Welsh in
dicated at the last Board
meeting that some funds
might be available from in
dividuals to help set up the
program. He said more in
formation should be available
at the next meeting Friday.
Harris contends that pri
vately owned, independently
operated, tax-paying labora
tories throughout the state al
ready have adequate soil test
ing facilities and that these
laboratories "a r e already
faced with an unfair com
petitive situation with the soil
testing laboratory which has
operated on the Lincoln cam
pus for many years.
"To increase this unfair
competition," he continued,
"would be a gross injustice
to tax-paying laboratories."
Farmers may not know of
the availability of these
services, he said, but this is
being corrected.
Hello Girl
Nominees
Due Noiv
Names of all candidates
for the 1958 Hello Girl must
be submitted to the Barb
Activities Board for Women
by tonight.
The Hello Girl, an unaffili
ated coed, will be presented
at the Hello Girl Dance, Oct.
11., in the Student Union Ball
room. Each organized indepen
dent house with the exception
of the Women's Residence
Halls is allowed two candi
dates. The residence halls is
ii. . i . ....
anowea eignt candidates, or
two for every hall.
Five fmalists will be chos
en from the 16 candidates
Wednesday. The panel of
judges has not yet been announced.
A student vote at the dance
will decide the title winner.
Jane Savener, Love Memorial
Hall junior, was last year's
Hello Girl.
Candidates must be sopho
mores or above and have at
least a 5.5 cumulative aver
age, according to Rochelle
Hergenrader, dance chairman.
Candidates will be judged
on personal appearance,
poise, personality, grade av
erage and activities.
made up for time that is
usually lost in heavy traffic.
Refueling
When the team arrived at
the airport in Purdue, the
planes were gassed up and
ready to go. Refueling of the
planes, a process that usually
takes an hour, was not neces
sary because a tail wind
came up.
"I realize it is hard to make
connections," the coach said.
"We could easily be just as
late as we were early,"
"I didn't know about the
welcome," Jennings said. He
was told at the airport that
a rally had been planned.
"I don't know who estimat
ed the arrival at 9 o'clock,"
he commented, adding that
originally 9 p.m. was the time
they had expected to arrive.
Rally Fine
When asked what he thought
of planning welcoming rallies
for the team, the coach said
emphatically, "I think- it's
fine."
Bob Wagner, president of
the Extra-Point Club, ex
plained the situation. The
team was supposed to arrive
at the airport at 9 p.m. The
Extra-Point Club sent a tele
gram to the radio stations in
Lincoln urging people to meet
the team when they landed.
"The plane left about an
hour earlier and the team, ate
on the plane so that put them
in about an hour and a half
before schedule."
Wagner Notified
Ten minutes before the
plane arrived, when it radioed
Picture Loans
Begin Thursday
The Union picture lending
library will open Thursday.
A choice of 75 framed pic
tures is available, ine pic
tures are free of charge to
students presenting their I-D
cards.
Approximately half of the
pictures to be rented are ex
hibited now along the walls
of the Union Main Lounge,
Both water colors and oils
are available, as well as both
abstract and realistic paint
ings.
The pictures may be ob
tained between 10 a.m. and
5 p.m. Thursday and Friday
in the Union Lounge. The lim
it is one picture per student
Levi Painting
That Doesn't
a
Custom
Fade Out
1- rill IHt'' . M ''
i t7'f'fT?'T - I
A FRATERNITY pledge class performs the traditional duty of putting their emblem on
a freshman girl's jeans. From left to right, Myrne Munderloh, Dave Anstine, Roger
Brown and Dan Nelson. Their victim is Judy Bruce.
By John Hoerner
The age old custom of letter painting on
the northernmost end of a southbound
coed's levis has been causing quite a com
motion on campus lately.
One sweet young thing moaned the other
morning that she had been carried for at
least four blocks to the central painting
station of one of the local social organiza
tions. Question of Legality
The big question this year seems to be
one of legality. Narrow escapes from the
wrath of the University police have been
reported by pledges who were abruptly
halted when they sallied forth, paint pot
in hand.
Dp the girls really go for this or not? It's
really hard to tell. From the sounds of the
mortally wounded-type screams you would
think the answer was no. But my Piper
Hall informant tells me that several were
trampled in the big rush to put on levis
and dash out screaming Saturday morn
ing. Derby Day
The Sig Chi's have solved the problem
of showing their flag around. They just
sponsor a Derby Day and the coeds come
out like flies, wearing prepared painting
surfaces.
All in all, it seems to be a harmless
sport and one that will probably hang on
for a long time.
A paint remover salesman put in an
appearance at Saturday's festivities,
claiming that his product was guaranteed
not to dissolve even the daintiest of
lingerie.
into the airport for landing,
Wagner was notified of tha
early arrival.
"We had good intentions,
but it just didn't work out,"
the president of the Extra
Point club commented.
"It was just one of those
things," he said, adding that
he "really hated" to dissap
point the people who had come
to see the team land.
"We'll be trying again," he
said. "Those guys have really
been working hard. We're
trying to get people behind
them."
Went to Tell Crowd
Bill McQuistan, University
yell king, had been notified
before he went to the airport
that the team had already ar
rived. He and other members
of the yell squad went to the
airport to notify the crowd of
the early arrival.
"There was a good crowd,"
McQuistan said. "I think they
were disappointed. It's just
something that can easily
happen. It is not too often
they (the team) come in on
time."
McQuistan said he felt that
the team wculd have been
"inspired" by the welcome
planned at the airport but
that the uncertainty of the ar
rivals of chartered planes
made such a welcome diffi
cult to organize.
"Personally, I'll go out to
meet them again," he said.
Scheme "Undependable
When asked if he thought
arrivals like the one planned
would be planned again in the
future, McQuistan said the
difficulty of organiza
tion made such a scheme un
dependable. "In the future," comment
ed Brent Chambers, asst. yell
king, "the team's plans should
be better co-ordinated. It's a
shame that 200 people should
have to wait."
Chambers said the crowd
was "kind of disappointed
that they missed the team. I
guess they knew you can't de
pend on chartered planes."
Carnival
Judges
Announced
Penny Carnival judges have
been announced.
They are Miss Helen Sny
der, dean of women; Duard
Laging, professor of art and
Robert Hough, assistant pro
fessor of English.
Student vote counts 40 per
cent in determining the Car
nival winners.
Houses are restricted to $10
for the booths and $15 for the
costumes. No public address
systems will be allowed.
Costumes must be furnish
ed and checked before Thurs
day at 5 p.m.
Costs will be estimated by
Kaymarie Swarts, Penny Car
nival chairman, and the Coed
Counselors president and vice
president. Coed Counselors
sponsors the Carnival.
All girls who signed up at
booth foremen are required
to attend a meeting Tuesday
at 8 p.m. in Union 316.
Penny Carnival will be held
Friday from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
in the Military and Naval
Science building.
Tickets are 35 cents and
may be purchased at City and
Ag Unions Thursday and Fri
day.
Water Resources
Talks Available
Copies of talks presented
by national leaders in the
field of water use and con
servation are available from
the College of Agriculture.
"Proceedings of the Na
tional Water Resourses Insti
tute," is a 216-page volume
containing copies of 27 talks
presented at the Institute held
in Lincoln earlier this year.
A check or money order for
$2 may be sent to Ralston
Graham, Experiment Sta
tion Editor, Nebraska College
of Agriculture, Lincoln,
Nebr. to obtain a volume.
Society of Engineers
The American Society of
Engineers will hold a meet
ing Wednesday at 7 p.m. in
Stout Hall.