The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 28, 1962, Image 1

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    DIVERSITY OF NEB5U
LloARY
DEC 3 1952
AJWHiVES
Vol. 76, No. 39
The Daily Nebraskan
Wednesday, November 28, 1962
n
) i
'Individual Must Decide9
Health Convocation
To Center On Drinking
"Social Drinking or Alco
holism" will be the topic of
the annual College Health
Day convocation Thursday at
11 a.m. in the Student Union.
Held in conjunction with a
three-day workshop on alco
holism, the convocation will
be moderated by Dr. Henry
Schumacher, a native Ne
braskan and associate profes
sor of psychiatry at the Uni
versity of Florida.
"Of course, the issue of
drinking or not drinking is a
matter which each individual
must decide for himself, but
in this context the convoca
tion will be aimed at helping
Schumacher
." i
it f ' -: ' ....... W I
li; ',. v 'k4
Mil;
7 Alcoholism Authorities
Will Speak at Workshop
Seven" authorities on alco
holism will speak before a
three-day workshop which is
scheduled tomorrow through
Saturday at the Nebraska
Center for Continuing Educa
tion. They will discuss how a
city sets up a program to
treat alcoholism a disease
which has as many types as
there are theories as to why
people become alcoholics.
Those attending are profes
sional, business and lay peo
ple of Lincoln, who will at
tempt to examine virini
Panel WM Air
New Broadcast
"Alcoholism Sin or Sick
ness?" will be aired by a
local radio station at 8 p.m.
Sunday evening.
The program panel, mod
erated by Mr. M. H. Sigler,
Warden of the Nebraska State
Penitentiary, will discuss the
pros and cons of the ques
tion. Other members of the panel
include: Rev. John F. Nor
man, Director of the Tem
perance League in the state,
Mrs, HuJda Royer, Lincoln
Policewoman, Mr. James
Foley, social worker at the
State Hospital and Dr. D. D.
McLean, psychiatrist.
Scholarships
To Be Offered
Mortar Boards are offering
two new scholarships this
year, a J300 scholarship for a
woman going into graduate
study and $150 emergency for
eign student scholarship.
The scholarships are being
handled through the N'U Foun
dation. According to Cyn Holmquist,
the Mortar Boards are also
planning a meeting for Univer
sity coeds on Dec, S for the
purpose of acquainting under
graduate students with the NU
graduate college.
Dr. Roy Holly, dean of the
Graduate school, is slated to
give special information
necessary to submit an ap
plication to enter the Gradu
ate School. i
The meeting will be divided
into the special interest
areas education, economics,
arts and sciences and home:
economics.
students solve some of the
problems which attend social
drinking and help them avoid
the hell of alcoholism," said
Steve Tempero, chairman of
the Campus Health Council.
University students P a m
Hirschback and Roger Mey
ers will orient the panel to
the specific problems that
exist at the University.
Other participants will be:
Dr. Marvin A. Block, as-
jsistant clinical professor of
j medicine at University of Buf-
taio.
Dr. Nevitt Sanford, direc
tor of the Institute for the
Study of Human Problems at
Stanford University.
Dr Rov Holly, vice chan
cellor of the University and
jdean of the Graduate Col
lege. j nauve vi nuiupiuKy, ui.
Schumacher is the author of
more than 100 medical and
sociology journal articles.
In addition to the convoca
tion. Dr. Schumacher also
will be one of the panelists
in a discussion, "Anxiety on
the College Campus," before
the Nebraska Association of
Colleges and Universites, at
the Nebraska Center Satur
day at 11 a.m.
the College Day program
is being sponsored by the
Campus Health Council, Divi
sion of Public Health of the
College of Arts and Sciences,
and Division of Health Edu
cation of the University
Health Services.
community approaches to al
coholism. They will attempt to estab
lish a basic program for Lin
coln and a possible guide for
other Nebraska towns to meet
the increasingly serious prob
lem of alcoholism, according
to Dr. Samuel I. Fuenning,
director of Student Health and
chairman of the workshop.
The invited authorities who
will speak are:
Dr. Nevitt Sanford of Palo
Alto, Calif,, director of the
Institute for the Stndv of Hu
man Problems at Stanford
University.
Dr. David J. Pittman of
St. Louis, associate professor
of sociology at Washington
University.
D. Bruce Fal'-v of rw..
land, director of the alcoholism
project division of the Cleve
land Center on Alcoholism.
Dr. David S. Rtibsamei of
Berkeley, Calif, former di
rector of the Adult C.uA-Atu
Center for Alcoholic Rehabili
tation Clinic at Saa Francisco,
cam.
Dr. Jack Mendelson of Roe.
ton, associate in psychiatry at
narvam Medical School.
Dr. Marvin A RU f p.nf.
falo, N.Y.. assistant clinical
prolessor of medicine at the
University of Buffalo.
Mrs. Lillian Craltro f Kara.
ota, Fla., clink director of
the Florida Alcoholic Eehabil
liiation Program at Pensa
eola. Dr. Fuenning said the work
shop is being sponsored joint
ly by the Lincoln Community
Council and the University,
with financial support from
the Lincoln Foundation.
The workshop win allow
citizens of Lincoln to look at
the various approaches to
alcoholism, presented by the
consultants, and then work to
ward solving the problem for
their own city.
Dr. Fuenning said this fs
fa contrast to the approach of
allowing the authorities to do
aH the planning for the city
and then present the program
for acceptance er reflection.
Among the program partic
ipants will be: Chancellor C.
ML Hardin of the University;
James N. Ackerman. tirvxi.
dent of the Lincoln Commun
ity Council; Julius Humann,
chairmanof the Coimfil'c
committee on alcoholism and
Dr. L. F. Pfeifer, president
elect of the Lancaster County
Medical Society.
Ball Will Open
Peace Corps
To Consider
Training Site
The Peace Corps is con
sidering the University of Ne
braska's College of Agricul
ture and the Nebraska Center
for Continuing Education as
possible training centers in
the areas of rural, commun
ity and agricultural develop
ment. "Nebraska is ideal," Ross
Pritchard, assistant head of
the Peace Corps said at a
meeting Monday. He called
the College of Agriculture
"one of the nation s finest
agriculture educational cen
ters." Pritchard said he would re
port to Sargent Shriver,
Peace Corps head, on the
favorable enthusiasm of the
University faculty and stud
ents toward the Corps and
the "definitely desirable"
training atmosphere Nebras
ka would present.
Dr. K. 0. Broady. director
I of the University Extension
Division and the Nebraska
Center for Continuing Educa
tion, said that the University's
reaction was very favorable.
"We do feel we have excel
lent facilities here at the
University and that the state
has resources that would be
good for this particular train
ing area," he said. "This
area is for training people to
work with water resources of
certain African countries."
Pritchard was in Lincoln to !
meet with soil and water of-;
ficials and businessmen toi
find out if windmills can be
used in Africa to solve the
water problem of some of the
new nations on that continent I
Family Problem
Visiting Professor Howells Feels
Emotional Disturbances Inherited
fSDfTOB'S KOTC Thr fuUwUa
fhrawcfc earn imiww fceUraea ifc
By John Lonnquist
Daily Nebraskan Reporter
"We live, not only with ourselves,
but with families food or bad," accord
ing to Dr. John G. Howells.
Dr. Howells, of Ipswich, England, is
a visiting professor at the College of
Medicine. He has found that "an emo
tionally ill patient by and large means
an emotionally ill family."
"Every member of the family," be
says, "is bombarded by stimuli ronlinn
ally arising from every other member of
the family." Because of this, aa emo
tionally disturbed child fs usually indica
tive of emotionally disturbed parents.
The doctor stated that the child re
ferred from a family was often not the
most disturbed member, but the mem
ber with "the most awkward, or the
most attention-giving symptoms,"
In treatment, a consideration of the
family history is very important. How
ells mentioned that Churchill has re
minded us that "the further back we
look, the further forward we can see,"
and psychiatrists have repeatedly noticed
that each generation shares common
Former Student
Receives 4-Year
Prfeon Sentence
A 20 year-old former Uni
versity student, guilty of com
mitting a liquor store robbery
in September, was sentenced
in District Court yesterday
to four years imprisonment in
the Nebraska Slate Peniten
tiary. Robert Spore from Lexing
ton was cau ght by Lincoln po
lice on Sept. 11 only minutes
after be robbed the N street
Liquor Store, located at ISLh
and N streets, of more than
$150. He admitted two other
liquor robberies during the
summer.
A plea for a probation sen
tence made by Spore's law
yer was denied by Judge El
mer Scbeele because the
statutes of Nebraska clearly
state that a probationary sen
tence may not be pronoenced
in cases of robbery.
Moot Court Team
Heads for Finals
The University Law Col
lege Moot Court team
will travel to New York
City in December for the
national finals in Moot
Court Competition.
Twenty-two teams from
all over the nation will
participate in the finals
December 18, 19, and 20.
The 22 teams represent
the winners and runners
up in the II regions in
the country.
University team mem
bers are Bill Hemmer,
Fred Kauff man, and Clay
ton Yeutter. They are
coached by Wallace Ru
dolph, assistant professor
of law.'
T Student Ranks
First in Contest
Anda Anderson, a Univer
sity senior, has won first
place in the first of seven
monthly news writing con
tests sponsored by the Wil
liam Randolph Hearst Foun
dation. Fellowships and grants to
taling $40,900 will be awarded
throughout the foundation's
third annual journalism
awards program.
Judy Harrington, also a
University journalism stu
dent, took fifth place in the
competition this month.
The University School of
Journalism ranked first in
overall competition last year.
For the month of November
Nebraska ranked first, with
Texas and South Carolina in
second and third places.
Cridders Questioned
tn Monday Incident
Four University of Nebras
ka football players were tak
en to police headquarters for
questioning and then released
after a truck was reported
taken from a Roberts Dairy
lot at 21st and N Monday
night
A Roberts employe told
police that be and another
man observed the truck being
driven away and followed it.
The four said they had been
at a party for the NU foot
ball team and bad gone to a
cafe. They said they left the
restaurant just prior to being
stopped and denied any knowl
edge f the reported theft
They were subsequently re
leased without charge. It was
later reported lat the dairy
contacted police and asked
that no further action be tak
en. Officers said a fifth youth,
believed to be the one w b o
bad taken the truck, was not
contacted.
Winter
NU Student
Loses Life
In Accident
Steve Cass Killed
In Tivo-Car Crash
Funeral services for Steve
Cass, University senior, were
held Saturday in Ravenna.
Steve, an engineering stu
dent, was killed in a two-car
accident
Tuesday
night on his
way home for
Thanksgiving
J-
accident!
which also
i lev Johnson- 4
'of Aurora,
occurred Cass
about three-quarters of a mile
west of Phillips on U.S. 2-34.
The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lyman Cass, publishers of
the Ravenna News, Steve
was treasurer of Delta Up
silon Fraternity, a vice presi
dent of Student Council, vice
president of Kosmet Klub, a
member of Innocents Society
and two engineering honor
aries. Sigma Tau and Chi
Epsilon,
Steve was a member of the
Engineering Executive Board
which supervises activities
for that college. The new sys
tem of one-way traffic, around
the mall was also a project
of his.
In addition to his parents,
Steve is survived by a broth
er, Lyman Jr., who is serving
as a pilot in the ir Force in
Germany.
properties.
How far back in a person's life can
you go? Recent work by psychologists
suggests that the fetus may be influenced
by emotional changes in the mother. It
is the mother who is generally closest
to the child during the formation of bis
basic emotional attitudes in childhood.
Dr. Howells described family his
tory thusly, "The child, if disturbed, be
comes the disturbed adolescent, who in
turn becomes the disturbed adult, who
in turn becomes the disturbed parent."
"It is precisely these disturbed par
ents who are most likely to create dis
turbances in their children."
How do we break this vicious circle?
It is obvious that one part of the circle
cannot be removed, cured, and then re
placed, for its cure would soou be un
done by the rest of the circle.
Dr. Howells believes that Family
Psychiatry may be the answer. "In fam
ily psychiatry," as understood by Dr.
Howells, "the family is not regarded
merely as a background to be modified
. . . family psychiatry accepts the fam
ily itself as the unit, the presenting pa
tient of any age being only a sign of
family psychpathology."
Dr. Pfeffer
Will Discuss
Menial Ills
A man who found himself
in the position of having to
straighten out a condition
where several high I.Q. people
were found in an institution
for the retarded, will speak
at the University at 1:39 this
afternoon at the Nebraska
Center.
Dr. Peter Pfeffer, superin
tendent of the Glenwood and
Woodland slate schools in
Iowa, will give the keynote
address at the first informa
tional conference a dynamic
health to be held in the mid
west More than 63 newsmen will
assemble at the Center to see
what can be done about bet
ter informing the public on
mental health problems.
Formal
Fiftieth Anniversary Dance
Will Be Held In Coliseum
The winter formal season
for the University will open
Saturday night with the Mili
tary Ball.
The Fiftieth Anniversary
Military Ball will be held
from 9 D.m. to 1 a.m. in the
University Coliseum.
Decorations for the Golden
Anniversary Ball have been
flown in from Cornus Christi.
Tex. Multi-colored nylon tar
get banners will serve as the
ceiling in the Coliseum. A jet
from the Air National Guard
and an A r m y Corporal Mis
sile will be placed outside the
Coliseum to greet couples
attending the ball. Each serv
ice will have a display be
side the platform on which
the Honorary Commandant
will be crowned.
Music for the Golden Anni
versary Ball will be furnished
bv Teddv Phillips and his Or
chestra. During the first in
termission, the Cadence
Countesses will perform.
During the second inter
mission the Honorary Com
mandant and Miss Army,
Miss Navy, and Miss Air
Force will be crowned. Chan
cellor Clifford L Hardin wiil
crown the Honorary Com
mandant. Tickets are now on sale
and will be on sale Saturday
night Price is $2.50 per cou
ple to attend the ball and
$1.00 for spectators.
The first Military Ball was
held in 1908, sponsored by
Pershing rifles, for military
personnel and ROTC cadets.
The Ball was not recognized
as an all University dance
until 1925.
Attendance at the ball in
creased steadily uiitil World
War II. Peak attendance was
over 6,000 couples in 1941. In
1935 Nebraska had the larg
est cadet corps in the nation;
attendance at the Ball that
year was over 5,000 couples.
The first "big name" band
to play for the ball was Red
Nichols in 1939. Since then
manv name bands such as
Les Elgart, Glenn Miller and
Richard Maltby have puyea
Parking Areas
31ay Be A vailable
University students may
soon be parking their cars
at 9th and "V where four
buildings from the old loca
tion of the Northwestern Metal
Company now stand
Business Manager Carl Don
aldson said the land is in
tended for long-range develop
ment of the University cam
pus, but will probably be used
in the immediate future for a
parking area.
C. S. Ehinger, of Kansas
Citv. was awarded the con
tract to raze the buildings at
last Saturday s Regents meet
ing.
Positions Vacant
In Fedend Jobs
For Engineering
The St. Louis Region of the
United Slates Civil Service
Commission has announced
that vacancies in Federal
engineering positions will be
filled by examination.
The vacancies are in the
fields of aerospace, civil, ccn
stmction, electrical, electron
ic, mechanical and general
engineering. Jobs are located
in Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota,
Missouri, Nebraska, North
Dakota and South Dakota.
Starting pay ranges from $5,
3C5 per year for recent gradu
ates to $15,505 for experienced
engineers.
Civil Service Examiners in
this area, which will receive
and process applications, are
the U.S. Army Engineer Dis
trict, 6012 Post Office and
Cotaihouse, Omaha 2, Nebr.
and the Dept. of Agriculture,
134 South 12th Street Lin
coln. Hie latter win accept
applications only for agricul
tural and civd engineering.
More information may be
obtained from Gerald W. Val
lery, examiner in charge at
the Lincoln Post Office.
Season
for the Ball.
The last pre-WWII Ball was
held on the eve of Pearl Har
bor. The following year saw
a much less spectacular BalL
Victory corsages were sold to
help the war effort. The Ball
was not held the following
four years.
1956 marked a year of
change for the Military BalL
For the first time it was held
in Pershing Aidutiroium in
stead of the Coliseum. Also,
the Honorary Commandant
was elected ty campus-wide
election instead of by vote as
students entered the Colise
um. UBELL New York Her
aid Tribune science edi
tor Earl Ubell spoke to
journalism students in
integrated classes Tues
day. Ubell attacked the
traditional form of news
writing, claiming that
people want a "story
book" style. (Photo by
Pixie Small wood)
N.Y. Editor
Challenges
Traditions
Ubell Addresses
Future Journalists
One of the oldest traditions
in the journalistic style of
writing was challenged yes
terday by the science editor
of the New York Herald
Tribune.
Earl Ubell told journalism
students that the inverted
pyramid style of writing
placing the most important
facts in the lead and continu
ing by decreased importance
cannot ' hold some stories
together properly.
He explained that doe to
the accepted idea that jour
ualists must write for "peo
ple on the run," the inverted
pyramid style allows "skim
mers" to get the major facts
at a glance. This style says
to the American reading pub
lic "you don't hue to read
the whole papet or enjoy
reading ft, UbeQ continued
A syndicated columnist since
Ubell said that some
news stories should have a
ttory-type style. Writers
should start out and develop
interest in the theme.
Ubell also told the future
journalists that a reader
doesn't merely want to know
the news in straight form,
but how it all fits into the
overall picture of events in
the happenings of the world.
' He said that the two baste
retirements for a science
writer are good writing abili
ty and a basic interest fa sci
ence. He added that ft fs not
necessary to know science fa
the educational sense.
The New York editor point
ed out that a specialized
knowledge in one field is
helpf ul in other areas of re
porting. He explained that
specialists in one field w ill
know more and understand
everything better because of
this specialization.
nOUG SAYS: BUY A DIRECTORY
FOB SALE IN
THE UNION'.
$1X3
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