The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 30, 1960, Image 1

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    Although Tabbed for Cellar JVU's Fans Will Be There
By Norm Beatty
Time: Thursday, 8 p.m.
Place: Coliseum, Univer
sity of Nebraska
Occasion: The start of
the 1960-1961 Nebraska
Cornhusker basketball sea
son. And so it is here again,
the round ball season and
all that goes with it. From
Dec. 1 to Feb. 27 the big
gest piece of conversation,
for most students and fac
ulty, is the success and
failure of Coach Jerry
Bush's cagers.
Pre-season p o 1 Is have
tabbed the Huskcirs to
wind up in the cellar
eighth in the Big Eight
Conference.
Regardless of this dis
mal presumption It is a
safe bet that the Coliseum
will be packed both Thurs
day and Saturday nights
as the Huskers entertain
Iowa State Teacher's Col
lege and Wichita. It never
fails, win, lose or over
time, basketball is a source
of excitement and enter
tainment.
Midway in the final half
of the freshman game the
crowd increases and the
clamor for g o o d seats
raises a ruckus loud
enough to drown out the
sounds of the talking play
ers and the dribbling of
the ball.
Immediately following
the preliminary game, as
if by magic, the pep band
and the red and white
clad cheerleaders appear.
Their respective appear
ances cause more noise,
cat-calls and confusion as
they take their places. Sud
denly a brief apd presump
tious stillness ' throughout
the stands "Here they
come!"
Eleven agile members of
the scarlet and cream var
sity basketball team cas
cade onto the floor as .the
crowd rises, almost in uni
son, to show its approval.
After what seems to be
an agonizing eternity,
Coach Bush ends his ner
vous fidgeting son the side
lines by calling the players
to him. The public address
asks for attention.
The crowd quiets. The
announcer introduces the
starting line-ups for both
sides. The national anthem,
then last minute instruc
tions from both benches.
Here we go again!
For the next hour and a
half tension reigns. Basket
by basket, foul by foul the
game moves to what is
often an exciting climax.
Nebraska is known for its
thrilling and close finishes.
The gigantic Coliseum
rocks back on its heels
with each thundering ova
tion during the final stages
of a tight contest.
If we win pandemoni
um. "What a team, what a
coach! Maybe we'll win
thp Big 8!" If we lose
dejection and pessimism.
"What's wrong with our
c o a ch and our team?"
"I'm never coming to an
other game!"
There are 12 home games
and for the most part, th
same people who are pres
ent at the first game can
be found at the 11 other
games.
Engineering Magazine
Dick Meyers to Edit
1961 'Blue Print'
The 1961 editor for "Blue Print," the engineering maga
zine, win be UicK Myers. ,
Myers is a junior in electrical engineering and was
lormeny feature editor.
the
Vol. 74, No. 39
Lincoln, Nebraska
Wednesday, Nov. 301960
Registration Cards Revised.
Beginning first semester
Myers said that he plans to include a wider variation of 1961 ere wiU not be tne
articles than in the past
"We will also try for some
local advertisement in the
hopes of a larger magazine,"
said Myers.
The circulation at present
is 1600 copies each month..
Other editors are Mike
Hewlett, sophomore in elec
trical engineering, Managing
Editor; Bill Paxton, senior
ra mechanical engineering.
Article Editor; Feature Edi
tor will be Arlin McKim,
sophomore in mechanical en
gineering; and assistants to
the feature editor are George
Krauss, sophomore in civil
engineering and Lynn Cor
coran, freshman in electrical
engineering.
Tom McMahon, senior, will
remain copy editor and
Deanna Davison, senior in
architecture, will remain as
layout editor. Assisting in
layout will be Roger Hahn,
junior in civil engineering.
Photo Directors for the
"Blue Print" will be Wayne
uuehrer and Dick Johnson,
both from Lincoln. Toshiro
lsa, senior in architecture,
will serve as Art Director
and will be assisted by Lynn
conge, sophomore in archi
lecture.
Charles Burda, s e n i o r in
Mechanical Engineering, will
be General Manager. Gary
Koopman, senior in mechani
cal engineering will become
Business Manager.
Treasurer will be Chuck
WahL junior in electrical en
gineering, and assisting him
will be Bill Swick, freshman
in mechanical engineering.
Lee Blake, senior in me
chanical engineering, will be
come advertising manager.
Serving as assistant will be
Dave Weatherall, freshman.
Editorial assistant will be
Bob Miley, junior in electri
cal engineering.
Serving on the engineering
Publication Board are Prof.
John Paustian, chairman,
Prof. Thomas Smith, Prof.
W. E. Minford, Charles
Burda, Dick Myers and Gary
Koopman.
long string of cards for stu
dents to fill out when regis
tering, according to Mrs.
Irma Laase, assistant to the
registrar.
"A bear down form will re
place the cards," she said.'
Fall and summer registration
now requires the student to
fill out five separate cards.
Pershing Group
To Direct Traffic
The Military Polic- platoon,
a branch of the Pershing
Rifles, will help with traffic
at the basketball games, ac
cording to Captain Charles
Svoboda.
lie pointed out that the 28
member group was active
this fall at the football games.
Due to the help of these
men we were able to keep
me campus sireeis ana pant
ing lots open, something we
were never able to do before,"
said Captain E. H. Masters,
University police captain.
The platoon also assisted
greatly in the movement of
traffic on the campus streets.
After the games we were suc
cessful in keeping people off
of the playing field, includ
ing the youngsters at t h e
south end of the field." the
Captain said.
"All of tbe men performed
in a very fine manner and
not one complaint was re
ceived in regard to their op
eration. . CapL Svoboda, Sgt. Ver
Meer and Lt. Jones are to be
congratulated for the organi
zation and performance of
this outfit." Capt Masters
said.
Dress Rehearsal'
For Rifles Friday
The Pershing Rifles drill
team will entertain at Waver
ly High School Friday night
betvreen halves of a basket
ball game, according to Sgt.
Joesph B. Ryan, who will
lead the 16-man squad.
Sgt. Ryan described the per
formance as a "dress rehear
sal for the Military Ball." The
team will travel by bus. "
Us Holds
Careers
Conference
Activity Includes
Sessions. Banquet
All Ag College students at
tending tomorrow's Careers
Conference are to be at the
College Activities Building by
p.m. said Dr. F.E. Eld-
ridge.
Eldndge urged students to
arrive early so that prelim'
inary instructions and the as
signment of specific session
times can be given. He said
all students would be able to
attend the career sessions of
their choice but that the time
for each will be specified.
AD. afternoon Ag campus
classes have been dismissed
by Eldridge for the confer
ence. Three sessions, two in
the afternoon and one in the
evening and a banquet will
be included in the conference.
Considerable enthus i a s m
hal been shown by the Ag
student body, Eldridge said.
Besides the 600 expected to
attend the sessions, a large
number of people have ex
pressed interest in the ban
quet, he said. Plans were
made for an estimated 150 at
the banquet but a larger
group is now expected to at
tend, he said.
Tickets for the banquet are
still on sale with Rnss Edeal,
member of the Aff Exec
Board, in charge of tickets.
Eldridge said all . students
should attend the conference
or they will be the loser. Any
student who has not regis
tered for the conference may
attend, he said, but those that
have registered will be ac
commodated as to specific
sessions first, he said.
The Careers Conference
an expansion from the previ
ous Job Opportunity Day and Over $2,800 was spent yes-
will include all Ag students terday for Christmas gifts in
instead of only seniors. There the "International Market"
will be three sessions instead set up by the YWCA in the
of one this year. Student Union
The conference is being PeoDle Dacked the Indian
sponsored by the Ag Exec suite as the doors opened at
uoara ana uie Ag wmege iac- u a.m. to students and visi
ulty. Larry Williams, Ag kxec nr from nvor thA stat
Boara memDer, manage ana ReSembline a denartment
Winter registration takes
four cards.
Carbon copies will be sent
to the office of the Registrar,
the Alumni Association, the
religious organizations the
student affairs office and the
summer sessions office, when
the new style goes into ef
fect next September, accord
ing to Mrs. Laase
After turning in work
sheets, students will still pay
tneir tees as they do now,
but there will be even less
writing and filling out to do,
Mrs. Laase said.
Machine
The copies of the work'
sheets, which are presently
filled out as a student regis
ters, will be partially com
pleted by machine. It will not
be necessary to list the
v N x ' -.X. )V- " f4, I, MS
A.iLLi - -
BARGAINS GALORE!
The pre-Christmas rush hit the Student
Union yesterday as hundreds of Lincoln
residents, faculty and students of the Uni
versity, and children came to make their
purchases.
International gifts were more than a
curiosity as women grabbed for the rare
articles as they often do when downtown
department stores advertise "sale today."
'International Market' Has Gifts
uFor Early Christmas Shoppers
courses, course number,
credit hours, time of day,
days, room or instructors
from the original worksheet;
it will all be done by ma
chine, she said.
A quick check of all forms
to be filled out at each reg
istration indicates that stu
dents will not have to write
in more than 30 to 35 blanks.
All worksheets will be
turned between January 9
Three Grants
Aivarded
To Dent Men
Three grants totaling $52,
480 have been awarded to in
structors in Dental College
this year.
Dr. Sam Weinstein and Dr.
Donald Haack received a
$23,000 grant from the Na
tion Institute of Health.
The grant which the two
received at the end of this
summer, is the second grant
of this type they have re
ceived. The two were awarded
a grant two years ago.
Dr. Weinstein is the chair
man of the department of
graduate orthodontics and
Dr. Haack divides his time
between mechanical engi
neering and the Dent Col
lege. Last year he received
his doctors degree at Kansas
State College.
Dr. Carl Zeiler, a graduate
student in Debt College, is
the recipient of a post-doctor
fellowship worth $7,480.
A three-year $22,000 grant
by the NIDR was awarded
to Dr. Dick Bradley, chair
man of the periodontics ae-
partment.
Dr. Bradley s project is
the enzyme study of oral
tissues.
This study of normal and
diseased tissue will involve
specialized equipment, which
is on its way from the U.S
Public Health Service.
Charles Adams, assistant pro
fessor of animal husbandry.
Grab a Pitchpipe
Interviews for the musical
director of tbe Spring Kos
met Klub Show, "Damn
Yankees," will Se held Sun
day, Dec. 4, at 2:30 p.m. in
the Student Union.
All those interested in ap
plying for this salaried posi
tion, contact Al Plummer at
the Phi Dclt House, phone
HE 5-2957.
The musical director will
ho in rhnrPP of all VOC&l
soios, choral work, and the Union Presents
orchestra.
Kosmet Klub will present Swedish Flick
me musical cudicuj m
Pershing Auditorium April
15. Cast tryouts for the
show will be announced at
a later date.
store "sale" day, the Christ
mas shoppers grabbed
through the masses to obtain
the limited number of rare
items on display.
"The most expensive gifts
were the first to go," said
Susie Wood, chairman of the
event. "We could have sold
many more of the large
items, however we still have
many gifts for men, women,
and children left," she added.
New arrivals that came in
late yesterday were crested
dinner bells from Germany
"Wild Strawberries," a
Swedish movie directed by
and hand made "smoking
men. The little men actual
ly puff smoke and extra
packages of cigarettes are
sold for fifteen cents a pack
age.
Some other items left are
carved African animals; cer
amics from Hungary; jewel
ry from the Holy land, Spain,
and France; stuffed toys and
dolls from many countries;
dishes; art prints; and other
glass items from Italy.
People, especially women,
buy most anything even if
they don't know what it is
said an observer.
One lady remarked, 'Oh,
what will my husband say,"
as the cashier presented the
bill.
Men Shoppers, Too
"Unusual this year is the
fact that many men have
come to purchase or just to
look at the items," said a Y
officer.
"We want to promote the
Christmas spirit as well as
provide the service to Uni
versity students," she said.
Not only were University
students doing their Christ
mas shopping on campus but
also Y-Teen groups from
Lincoln schools and many
grade school children.
The inventory value is $6,
000. It is the fifth year for
the project which has grown
from a small number of
handmade objects made by
Y members to the present
year-round project which in
volves many advisory board
members and alumni. j
The bazaar will be open
today and tomorrow until 9
p.m.
TODAY ON CAMPUS
Wednesday
Phi Eta Sigma, 7:30 p.m.
Student Union.
Film Society, 8 p.m. , Ne
braska Theater.
ASAE Student Branch, 7
p.m. Agriculture Engineering
206.
Christmas Bazaar, 11 a.m.-
9 p.m. Indian Suite, Student
Union.
Thursday
Pi Lambda Theta, 5 p.m.
Student Union. Cornhusker
pictures will be taken.
Documentary Film Series,
4:30 p.m. Student Union.
Basketbal 1-Iowa State
Teachers College, 8 p.m., Col
lesium. Faculty Recital, 7:30 p.m.
Student Union.
Christmas Bazaar, 11 a.m.
9 p.m., Indian Suite, Student
Union.
and 4:30 p.m., January 13.
Fees will be paid between
January 30 and February 1.
The schedule is as follows:
January 30, last names be
ginning with A through Ha.
January 31, last names be
ginning with N through Z.
February 1, last names be
ginning with He through M.
Classes do not start for sec
ond semester until February
6. "This will give you a long
weekend at home," Dr. Floyd
Hoover, registrar, said in a
letter to all students.
Changes
Mrs. Laase noted that any
student may make one change
in his or her worksheet prior
to January 25, at .4:30 p.m.
Any further changes after
this date must be done
through a two week period
set aside each semester,
from February 6, 1961, for
adding and dropping.
The deadline for dropping
courses for the present se
mester, is 12 noon, Saturday
December 17. This is the last
Saturday before Christmas
vacation and three weeks be
fore the end of classes, Mrs.
Laase explained.
Art Curator
To Lecture
At Morrill
Dr. Hans Huth, curator of
the department of decorative
arts at the Art Institute of
Chicago, will present two
lectures as guest of the Ne
braska Art Galleries Thurs
day and Friday.
A specialist on 18th cen
tury and American art, Dr.
Huth will lecture first on
"Baroque Churches of Ba
varia and Austria" in Morrill
Hall at 8 p.m. Thursday.
The institute director will
speak again Friday on Ameri
can art at Morrill Hall at 3
p.m. Both lectures will be il
lustrated and open to the pub
lic. Dr. Huth is a graduate of
the University of Berlin and
also has studied at the Uni
versity of Vienna. Since his
arrival in the United States
he has served as a consultant
to the National Parks Serv
ice.
In 1944 he became a mem
ber of the curatorial staff of
the Art Institute and assumed
charge of the department of
decorative arts in 1958.
He is the author of the
book "Nature and the Ameri
can, published in 1957.
Union Managers
JSame Mary Knolle
Mary Knolle. chairman of
the Student Union hospitality
committee, has been named
new member of Union
Board of Managers and social
director of the Union.
State in Position to Raise Taxes
By Nancy Whitford
(SrMHid In m wrrinm af artlrlfs on T?-
porta made br Nebriaka rducatori and
nrrwntr ta Dr. Lyman A. Glfuny far
tn D..,, ,;u v Ma me m atuor af liner eancnoa
"B"ltu uwsuiau, mil uc i m Nebraska.)
presented at 8 p.m. tonight at
the Nebraska Theater by the
Student Union Film Society.
The Union also sponsors a
series of documentary films
Fred Waring
Appears friday which are shown once a
month. There will be two
Fred Waring and the Perm- showings of these films tomor-sylvanians-
will appear m the row at 4:30 and 7 p.m. in the
"Stereo Festival" at Persh- nnjon small auditorium. Ad-
m Auditorium t naay ai mission is free,
8:15 p.m. Five experimental films,
Students who bought mem- mostlv British, will be ore-
berships in the recent Lincoln sented. Approximate running
Community Concert member- time for the films will be lVi
ship drive will be aammea to hours,
the show. There will be no Included among the films is
tickets sold, according to Per- "The Life of the Asterisk,"
shing Auditorium officials. which received awards at the
The total number of student Venice Film Festival in 1957.
memberships is over 1,500, other films include "Journey
according to Lou Roper, pres- Into Spring," "Between the
ident of the Community Con- Times," "The Violinist," and i of higher education in Ne-
certs. "Reflections." . i braska.
Nebraska is in an "econom
ic, if not psychological" posi
tion to increase the tax bur
den to aid college education
should the need arise.
This is the opinion of Dr.
Edgar Z. Palmer, chairman
of the department of business
research, in a report on eco
nomic prospects in Nebraska
submitted to the Legislative
Council Higher Education
committee.
Revenues Lower
"Total per capita tax reve
nues in Nebraska are consid
erably lower than the nation
al average although per cap
ita personal income is only
slightly below the national
average," said Dr. Lyman
Glenny, director of a study
"Meanwhile, per capita to
tal expenditures, are nearly
identical with the national
figure. Therefore, there is
room for more taxation
whether the people of Ne
braska like it or not," Glenny
observed
Data for the report has
been projected to 1970 in
terms of constant dollars" on
the "assumption that general
economic conditions will pro
ceed along the same lines in
the next decade as they have
in the past three."
Thus,, at the projected rate,
Nebraska's 1970 individual
tax rate would be $74.49 com
pared with 1959's $58.54 and
a national average of $90.29
in 1959. '
Bottom Tnree
"Nebraska has always
placed in the bottom three
states in regard to the indi
vidual tax burden," Glenny
emphasized.
Projected total personal in
come in Nebraska in
1970, termed a "conserva
tive estimate" will be 3.3 bil
lion compared to 2.8 billion
in 1959.
Palmer cautioned that the
figures were only "moderate
ly trustworthy" since this is
a statistical rather than eco
nomic prediction which
should normally be based on
a trend of 100 years rather
than 30.
At present, average indi
vidual expenditures for- high
er education are 20.64 com
pared to a national average
of 20.81.
Administration Efficiency
Palmer cited "efficiency of
administration of the prop
erty tax" as an additional
factor in the total tax pic
ture. In judging the possibility
that tax support for educa
tion will increase as suggest
ed, Palmer observed that
population figures, although
incomplete at this time, show
Nebraska "has not kept paca
with the natural increase."
"WTien the proper adjust
ments have been made, the
situation will prove even
worse in this respect, as the
population increase has been
less than estimated. Nearly
49,000 persons appear to have
left Nebraska in one two year
period," he said.
This long-continued trend
serves two opposite economic
effects.
"It tends to keep the aver
age income up, but on the oth
er hand, the trend represents
a decided economic drain
because Nebraska spends
much ti educate those who
leave and give other regions
the benefit o f their educa
tion," Palmer observed.