The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 06, 1960, Image 1

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    UNIVERSITY OF NEBR
LIBRARY
QECZ
Pii Psis
Lead
Swimmers
Review
Taac 2
7
Vol. 74. No. 42
Lincoln, Nebraska
Tuesday, Dec. 6, 1960
NTOMtPf AIM
PA
Journalistic
Writing
Contest
Hearst Foundation
Offers Fellotcships
Journalism majors at the
University will have the op
portunity to receive national
recognition in a( new jour
nalism contest in the areas
of news, feature, editorial and
sports writing.
The William Randolph
Hearst Foundation, in coop
eration with the American
Association of Schools and
Departments of Journalism,
will sponsor a program of
fellowships and grants de
signed to encourage journal
ism education in the colleges
and universities of the United
States.
Grants and fellowship
awards totaling $29,800 will
be made during this current
academic year. Only journal
ism majors at fv.e 45 colleges
accredited by tne journalism
association -re eligible U
compete.
At the end of the six
months' competition which
began Nov. 1 and win end
April 31. 1961. fellowships
ranging from $500 to $2,000
will be awarded to the ten
individual students with the
best overall performance.
Grants in the same amounts
will be made to the schools
they represent.
Additional awards f $3,990,
$2,000 and $1.00 will be
made to the three journalism
schools whose students rive
the best collective perfonn-
' a nee la the six month period.
Two entries will be sub
mitted to the Hearst Founda
tion each month, after being
paged by the faculty of the
School of Journalism.
A news article written by
Ingrid Leder on "what the
voters were thinking daring
the last few weeks before
election and one by Nancy
Whitfonf a "the findings of
a Nebraska education study
directed by Dr. Lyman A.
Gleuny" have been submitted
for this month's contest.
Entries to be considered
iuul mvi apeareu in a u- leaving 241
rvmJL?atT sad,T.as as married coeds,
the Daily Nebraskan, a Lm- lbs R.by Gingles. ia
cola paper, Bhieprad .or an j. Umt.
experimental publication. Ai.oc.-.i.mmw m th
S100 fellowship win be
awarded to the student
whose work is adjudged best
by the Hearst Foundation in
each monthly competition.
Students Explore
Peace Corps
Princeton, X.J. (UPS)
Delegates to a conference
oa American Youth and the
Emerging Nations voted to
set cp a permanent organi
zation to explore possibili
ties of setting cp a youth
peace corps.
More than 100 student
leaders from Eastern
schools met with business
men from Africa, Asia and
Latin America at Prince
ton University recently in
an effort to initiate nation
wide support for the peace
corps.
Such a corps wkM be de
signed to provide an expres
sion of American concern
and to work wi'Ji local prob
lems in the world's under
developed areas.
Participants discussed
government sponsored pro
posals for a peace corps
offered by Rep. Henry Re
ass (Dem.-Wisconsin), and
Sen. Hubert Humphrey
(Denx-Minaesota), both of
whkh have been endorsed
by President - elect John
Kennedy in recent speeches
in San Francisco and Chica
go. A privately sponsored
plan presented by Dr. Tho
mas Melady, African af
fairs authority who called
the conference, was also
discussed.
Major addresses were
given by Sir Hugh :ylor.
President of the Woodrow
Wilson National Feowship
Foundation, Taylor Osl
rader of American Metals
Climax and Dr. Melady.
Represented at the dis
cissions were President
el ect Kennedy, Senator
Humphrey, the Young Adalt
Council, the National Stu
dent Association, th Foun
dation for Youth and Stu
dent Affairs, Institute of
International Education,
American Society of Afri
can Culture, AFL-CIO and
pax Romana as well as
many other interested
groups.
i
'i
1J-
Louise Shadley, Leta Powell, Dennis
Sheefer and Larry Long rehearse a scene
from University Theater's next play, "A
More
Wedding
Rings
Undergraduate
Hit 22 Percent
Marriage among under
graduate college students is
rapidly increasing as about
22 are married, reported
the Registrar's office.
A total of 1,433 of the .839
students are married, said
Floyd Hoover, Registrar.
There has b e e n a steady in
crease since World War U
when very few undergradu
ate students were married.
Breaking down the number
of married students finds that
1 1V rJt tKo trtfal Tnarril tn-
increase has beea steady
this time married students
were not accepted by the
student bodv and maiv did j
BAt attend n!We for t 1 a t
reasea, she said.
However, since the war the
government prompted many
military veterans to further
their education and provided
funds for them to attend col
lege. Many of these veterans
were married and started the
big movement to the college
campuses, she said.
Now Accepted
Now the major reason for
the increase is that the stu
dent body is now accepting
the married students as a
part of the University, Mrs.
Gisgles said. In turn, the
married students are partici
pating in more activities and
are closer friends to the
a r j
whole student body.
Married stadests still
faced with maav problems
Housing and financial prob
lems seem to be the greatest,
she said. Many times both ef
the married partners caa not
afford to ge to eDege at the
same time and eae of them
has to work. Seeb cimm
staaces find prtbk-ms ef twe
different werlds ef friends
.
Many times if both of the !
married students remain in i
Mrh ha to m-rV- for
financial reasons, said Mrs.
Gine'es. This may lead to a
problem of lack of studying
time and home life which are
essential in our American so
ciety, she said.
Housing is no longer a ma
jor problem as it used to be,
said Mrs. G ingles. The mar
ried students bousing has
aided in that problem. But
with the increase in the num
ber of married students.
many of them are not able to
find housing near the campus
and are living in various parts
uf town which sometimes cre
ates a tr.T'rportation prob-J
lem, she ra.
History Lecture Set
F or Burnett Today
Dr. Daniel Casio, 'noted
Mexican lecturer who gave ,
the Montgomery talk Moa- i
day, wia speak on history at
3 p.m. in 206 Burnett. j
SEEN A STREETCAR?
Pulitzer Prize Play
Theater Will Produce
'Streetcar' Dec. 14-17
Louise Shadley, Leta Pow
ell, Dennis Shreefer and Lar
ry Long will star m Tennes
see William's Pulitzer Prize
winning play "Streetcar
Named Desire," to be pre
sented by the University The
ater Dec. 14-17.
"We've been thinking of do
ing this play for a number of
years," stated. director, prof.
Dallas Williams. "However,
until now we didnt know if
we could cast it," he added.
Right Characters
"This year, it somehow just
happened that we had the
right characters, physically
and mentally," Williams con
tinued. "In this play, the char
acters are deep and compli
cated and difficult to
portray."
The play itself is a giant
real classic in American
theater," William continued.
We're all quite excited about
Streetcar s production. Its
subject is significant, and
is a good, well-written play'
wwrT'wur .
" Lanls added-
Vfre nopia- ry
Z61 at the play. Most
PPl ve at least beard its
ame; it ran for a tong time ' wi?Jf?lle 1 eIent5or
a Broadway and was a 1 s el 1960 Ba3 03 Sat'
made into a movie starring l"1 y:
M a r I e a Brand. - Peeple 9:00 Introduction of band
are asaaHy interested ia
things they know abort," Wil
liams said.
The 23 member cast has
now been working on the play
for about four weeks. The
four majors are "doing fa
mously," according to Wil
liams.
Jr. Panhel
To Discuss
Responsibili t y
A panel of last year's sor
ority pledge presidents will
discuss the respons.b I.ties of
pledge presidents at the Jun
ior Panhellenic meeting which
will be held at 5 p.m. today
at the Alpha Omicron Pi
bouse.
The new president of Junior
Paaheilenic is Nancy Eriksen,
cbi Omega. Ann WahL Alpha
,s eTit
" j
Other members of Junior
Panhellenic include Judy Low
ery, Alpha Chi Omega: Con
nie Cochrane, Alpha Xi Delta;
Janie Thomason, Alpha Phi;
Marcie Coe, Delta Delta Del
ta; Sue Hardin, Delta Gam
ma; Judy Keys. Gamma Phi
Beta: Susan Swift, Kappa Al-
pna ineia. j
Ann White, Kappa Delta;!
Susan Irvine, Kappa Kappa
Gamma; Karen Skoda, Pi
Beta Phi; Bonnie Kuklin, Sig
ma Delta Tau; and Kathy
Paulman, Zeta Tau Alpha.
Each of these girls is the
president of ber respective
pledge class.
Sigma Xi Sleets.
"The Genetic Biology Pro
gram of the National Science
Foundation," by Dr. Dwight
Miller is the featured pro-
gram for the Sigma Xi meet-
ing tonight at 7:30 p.m. in
Bessey Hall auditorium.
"
Vy
A I
. " I
V &5 I
Streetcar Named Desire." 'Streetcar" will
run Dec. 14-17.
In the play, Blanche Du
Boss, a young woman bred
on a rich plantation gone to
seed, arrives in the French
quarter of New Orleans to
stay with her sister and her
rough-hewn Polish brother-in-law.
Stanley Kowalski.
Blanche lives in a world of
the past and seems unable to
face reality in the sordid sur
roundings. Stanley unravels
details of her former life, and
torments her until she is fi
nally committed to an asy
lum. The whole play is bailt
arMnd the conflicting views
of life held by Stanley and
Blanche.
"We hope many people will
come to see the play," Wfl-
I liams stated. "It's interesting
and exciting and after alL
tr? audience is part of the
theater too.
JILots of Activity
For Military Ball
The Military Ball commit
tee has announced the fol-
9.05 Dancing
9:tiIntermission Entertain
ment. Pershing Rifle Drill
Team
Cadence Countesses
10:00 Dancing
10:39 Introduction of distin
guished guests
Grand March
Presentation of Hon-
orary Commandant
and Service Queens
11:15 Dancing
12:00 Intermission
12:15 Dancing
1:00 End of the 1960 Military
Ba3
Master of Ceremonies will
be Cadet Dee CuttelL
Ball Has Early
Sixty-five years of history
will be represented when the
4Sth Military Ba'J is held Dec.
10.
Attendance at the Ball has
ii-iivi rrmn isi lurcniK in thp
. ... uvu, w t-v,. . .
original "gatherings," of the
late 1300's not vet called
Military Balls, to the record
high of 3,500 at the 1957 Ball.
The first f the military j
gatherings to be otft-
eiany termed the Military
BaD was held May 13, 1911-
Since this time the Ball
has been held annually with
the exception of the war
years of 1943, 1944 and 1945.
Honorary Colonel
.Pearl Swansea, now Mrs.
Joseph Noh of Sioux City,
Iowa, was the first Honorary
Colonel in 1922.
This title continued until
1949 when, due to the open
ing of Air Force and Navy
ROTC detachments at the
University, the name was
changed to Honorary Com
mandant. Pat Berge. now Mrs. Ran-)
dan Ewing of Lincoln, wasjmandant appeared in a for
Dr. Cosio Revolt Dead,
Why No Death Notice?
'The Mexican Revolution
is dead, so why hasn't the
death notice been circulat
ed?" asked Mexico's leading
intellectual, Dr. Daniel
Cosio Villegas in the first
of this year's Montgomery
lectures.
Dr. Cosio said that the rev
olution gave Mexico her ide
ology and language and that
"so long as no new ideas
are evolved, it will be nec
essary to continue witn me
old."
Unknown Evil
It is commonly thought to
be "better to endure a known
evil rather than to experi
ment with an unknown good,
he noted.
He indicated, however,
that he did not believe that
Mexico's political, social and
economic situation was infe
rior to the best found in any
Latin American country to
day.
The noted educator said
that Chile, Uruguay and Cos
ta Rica have a potential for
real and stable democracy
which is limited by their
scarcity of physical and hu
man resources.
"Argentina vi'J take years
to recover Zrom the physical
and moral damage? inflicted
by the Pera dictatorship,
and Brazil, with physical and
hu:r.an elements far superior
to Mexico's, has not
progressed as was expected
of her," he added.
Black Cloud
But, he noted, there is a
black cloud on the horizon
that few Mexicans and for
eigners have noticed until
now.
Dr. Cosio said the essential
characteristics of the Mexi
Bridge Trophy
To Phi Delt Pair
Don Linscott and John El
liot of Phi Delta T h e t a fra
ternity took top honors in the
Student Union bridge tourna
ment last Saturday, accord-
ing to Ron Gould of the Un- land explained.
ion Tournaments committee. J Failure in part of the two
Second and third places! day test the juniors are tak
went to Chuck Sherfey a n d ing now is redemable, ac
Lloyd Wade, Sigma Phi Epsi- cording to Ireland. A re-ex-lon
and John Stansbury and amination may be taken over
Ned Notle, Beta Theta PL in any part that a student
The top ten twosomes will might faiL
compete in the National Inter- Ireland called the test "a
collegiate bridge tournament very fine thing, although it is
in February, according to very rough" and the test is
Gould. J "a very important part of the
A traveling trophy was giv-1 Dental College student's ca
en to the Phi Dells and a setlreer."
of chemical plastic coated
cards were presented to the
SiS Eps.
The final scores are pres-
ently posted in the games
area of the Student Union,
Gould noted.
The other eight twosomes
eligible for the national tourn-
ament include (in no specific
order of finish) Dick Hem-
mer and Joe McWilliams, Bill
Utmiur an1 Hal Anderson.
Ted Marks and John Luch-
singer, Arnold Joffe and Jerry
Rosen, Pat Anderson and Phil
Johnson and Charles Johnson
and Gene Blobaum.
selected as the leading lady.mal gown
tt Um nirht to '49.
1942 was informal, a change
from prior rears when the
Bail opened the formal socud
. v- i
season iur 1101 wie i;iuibmij i
and the city of Lincoln, as it
does today
Operation
Operation of the Ball
has
changed slightly througn tne;lhe citv
years. Alter au tnree service j
were represented on campus,
me canoiaaie umcers
MAmmiHoA f mam.'
ation. a committee ot mem
bers from all units, put on the
Ball for five years (194S-1953).
As a result of operational
difficulties, the current plan
was adopted in 1954 making
one of the services responsi
ble for the affair each year.
This year the Army is In
charge of all arrangements,
including contracting a band,
renting the auditorium, select
ing candidate finalists and su
pervising the elections.
Highlights of the Ball the
last seven years include:
1953 The Honorary Com
can Revolution were to en
trust the promotion of the
country's general welfare to
the state rather than to in
dividual or private enter
prise. "The revolution consisted
in the destruction of the past
rather than the construction
of the future. The haphazard
development became the
same as carrying the country
back to the exact point of
mental outlook before the
revolution," he said.
Why did the revolution pro
duce a reaction?
Dr. Cosio attributed it to a
"lack of ideologies to form
goals and the failure of the
most prepared people to join
National
Dental
Exams
Ttcelte-Hour Tests
Giren to Juniors
Some 32 juniors in Dental
college will finish 12 hours of
laborious testing today as
they complete one of the most
important trials of their ca
reers, according to Dr. Ralph
Ireland, dean of the Dental
College.
The five hour and a half
tests on general science
courses are presented by the
Council of Dental Education
of America better known as
the National Board Dental
Examinations.
If a junior passes all five
chases he takes a six part
Rational board test as a sen-1 "This is, perhaps, the prin
ior. A passing grade, 75 per cipal concern of Mexico's
cent er better, will enable a leading men, although I do
graduated student recognition j no know whether there is an
in H states. agreement at least as to the
When taking specific state
board examinations a student
will not have to take the
written part if he passes his
national board exams,
Ire-
j ln part U o tests on
specific dental techniques,
the Nebraska dental students
ranked lltn out of 45 partjci.
ipating dental schools in 1959,
said.
"We have had verv few
failures in the past. If they
(juniors) go along as they
nave ia tne past it won t De a
had record," Dr. Ireland ex-
P110-
Most of the tests include a
103 cr more multiple choice
questions and the questions
are very specific," Ireland
said-
Origin
rather than uni-
torm
1955 Reserved tables in
limited numbers were made
available to guests at the BaU.
f"S
raBgements Baa
-
able.
195 Boxes were intro-
jduced for honored guests at
'the Ball, with the boxes
- also being sold to patrons in
mi Iocation of the
Ball was moved to Pershing
Auditorium from the Coliseum
.
and the crown and scepter
were used to crown the Hon
orary Commandant Also the
first live telecast of the Ball
was made by KOLN-TV.
1958 The Honorary- Com
mandant represented all serv
ices, with an individual queen
for Army, Navy and Air
Force.
1959 The appearance of
the Naval Aviation Cadet
Choir and the introduction of
the Cadence Countesses.
This year the Countesses
will return along with a per
formance by the Pershing Ri
fles. .
the government in anything
but minor posts."
State Prisoner.
"In the sphere of economic
action, the authority and
force of the State have degen
erated to the point where the
state is the prisoner of pri
vate enterprise.
"If it wanted to fight, the
government would win, even
using only legal means. But
the government does not
want to fight nor even to dis
agree with private enter
prise," he said.
"It is already remarkable
that a considerable increase
in the number and magnitude
of public needs has not been
matched by a change in tax
rates or by the creation of
new taxes," Cosio stated.
He explained that 60 per
cent of industrial investment
to date comes from private
sources.
Inflation Restriction
"Because the State has
been unsuccessful in restrict
ing inflation, the real wages
of the labor force have notice
ably diminished, and it is
the workers who, ultimately,
are paying for the industrial
progress of Mexico," he said.
Dr. Cosio, who is economic
adviser to the Mexican Sec
retary of Treasury and to the
National Bank of Mexico, al
so noted that economic influ
ence has begun to creep into
political influence, so much
so that "the State today
would have difficulty in tak
ing fundamental economic
policy measures without first
consulting the country's great
banking and industrial
i firms.
"It is difficult to give an
opinion on whether Mexico
caa go back to a course
more in keeping with the or
iginal objectives of the Rev-
' olution." he said.
principal points toward
the country should direct it
self.
"It may be that the real di
lemma for Mexico lies in
growing faster at the top
only, or at a slower rate only
at the bottom of the social
pyramid," he concluded.
Foundation
Construction
Advancing
Work on the new Wesley
Foundation Student Chapel is
progressing ahead of sched
ule according to Rev. J. Ben
ton White, associate direc
tor of the foundation.
Concrete has been poured
for the basement walls and
construction of the steel
I framework is expected to get
under way later this week so
mat uie building mar
be ready for occupancy by
Aug. 1, White said.
Methodist students are
working toward a donation
goal of $5,000 for the build
ing project
A total of $65,000 still has
to be raised to finance the
building itself before the proj
ect of furnishing the chapel
begins.
Rev. White said that much
of the $55,000 is expected to
be raised by mission funds
from the Nebraska Confer
ence of Methodist Churches
and from individual donations
which he and Dr. William B.
Gould, director of Wesley
Foundation, will solicit
throughout the state.
The three story structure
at 16th and U Streets is ex
pected to serve nearly 2,000
Methodist students.
Today On Campus
History lecture, Dr. Dan
iel Coaio Villecas, 3 p.m.,
206 Burnett Hall. -
"Sound of Music," 4 p.m.,
Student Union Music
Room.
Chr i s t m a s Decorating
Party, 5 p.m., Ag Union.
Chr i s t m a s Decorating
Party 7 p.m.-9 p.m., City
Union.
Sigma Xi meeting, "The
Genetic Biology Program of
the National Science Foun
dation," by Dr. Dwight Mil
ler, 7:30 p.m., Bessey Hall
auditorium.
Extension Club. 8 p.m.,
Ag Union.