The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 22, 1964, Image 1

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Jack Talks Oif v
Jon Wake if Tes
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Jack
ountesses Win
Hie Drill Meet
Cadence Countesses placed first in the coed drill com
petitition at the Pershing Rifle Regimental Drill Meet Satur
day in Madison, Wis.
Pershing Rifle Company A-2
members James Sackett and
Gary Watzke won the awards
for the Best Drilled Advanced
Course Cadet and the Best
Drilled Freshman Cadet re
spectively in the individual
contests.
The twelve Pershing Rifle
companies represented at the
meet were judged by top
military men from each
branch of the Armed Services.
Cadence Countesses, an aux- j
iliary of Pershing Rifle Com
pany A-2, won tirst place lasi
month at the National Invita
tional Drill Meet in Cham
pagne, HI. This means that
this group has won every meet
that they have entered this
year.
According to drill comman
der Linda Gilman, "If we j
could only have raised the I
money to go to the Washing-1
ton Cherrv Blossom Festi val, !
I'm sure we could have been
the winners, since the drill
team that did win it only
placed second to us in the
Illinois meet."
Greeks
Plan Fair
Exhibit
The National Interfraterni
ty Conference and. the Na
tional Panhcllenic Conference
will soonsor a special exhibit
t thP New York World's !
Fair which opens today.
The fraternity and soromy i
exhibit to be displayed in the
v, iiii nf tfniprnrise
on the International Plaza of
the fair grounds will be en
titled "Young Partners in
Free Enterprise."
Special guides will be on
duty to help explain the
various features of the dis
play and to distribute litera
ture containing basic in
formation about the fraterni
ty and sorority system.
The exhibit will h a v e a
limited run during the period
from July 19 to August 9
since the space is being
d o n a t e d by the American
Economic Foundation on a
rotating basis with other
participants.
Sen. Stromer Misses
Talk; Illness Blamed
Slate Senator Marvin Stro
mer, who was to speak Mon
day on Nebraska's drinking
laws, was unable to speak
because of illness.
Tom Kort, chairman of Stu
dent Council public issues
committee, was unavailable
for comment yesterday as to
whether another time would
be set.
The Daily
PHOTO BY DENNIS DeFRAIN
Kosmet Klub Selects
12 For Membership
Kosmet Klub has selected twelve new members for
next year. They are selected on the amount and quality
of work done on sets, ad and tickets sales for both the Fail
Revue Show and Spring Show
The new members are Buzz
Brashear, Kappa Sigma; Jim
Cada Alpha Gamma Rho;
Doug Foster, Beta Sigma Psi
Mike Jeffery, Beta Theta Pi;
Larrv Kuck, Phi Kappa Psi;
Bill Marshall, Phi Kappa Psi.
Buzz Madson. Phi Delta
Theta; Bob Oswald, Kappa
Sigma; Don Pont, Sigma Phi
Epsilon; Dave Qualsett, Delta
Upsilon: George Schlothauer,
Sigma Phi Epsilon; and wai-
jv Weeks, Delta Tau Delta
vy Sjna TpOUtS
1 v J 1 1 1 V ' 1 w w a
Will Be Tonight
Tryouts for women's sings
for Ivy Day will be held to
night beginning at 7 p.m. in
the Union ballroom. Groups
must be there ten minutes be
fore the group sings. All
groups are to line up in the
hall.
Groups and the times they
sing are Alpha Chi Omega,
7 p.m.; Alpha Delta Pi, 7:05
p.m.; Alpha Omicron Pi, 7:10
p.m. Alpha Phi, 7:15 p.m.;
Alpha Xi Delta, 7:20 p.m.
Burr East. 7:25 p.m.; Chi
Omega, 7:30 p.m.
Delta Delta Delta, 7:35 p.m.;
Delta Gamma, 7:40 p.m.; Fed
de Hall, 7:45 p.m.; Gamma
Phi Beta, 7:50 p.m.; Kappa
Alpha Theta, 7:55 p.m. Kappa
Delta, 8 p.m. Kappa Kappa
Gamma, 8:05 p.m.;
Love Memorial Hall. 8:10
p.m.; Pi Beta Phi, 8:15 p.m.
Pound Hall, 8:20 p.m. Wom
en's Residence Hall, 8:25
p.m.; Sigma Kappa, 8:30 p.m.
Towne Club. 8:35 p.m.; Zeta
Tau Alpha, 8:40 p.m.
Blanks Available
For Pub Board
Interviews for positions on
the Publications Board (Pub
Board) will be held April 26
in 240 Student Union from 3
to 5 p.m., according to Susie
Pierce, Student Council sec
ond vice president.
Interested students should
pick up applications in 240
Student Union and return
them by 5 p.m. April 25. Can
didates must sign up for an
interview time. A 5.0 cumula
tive average is required.
Pub Board is composed of
six students representing the
sophomore, junior and senior
classes and serves for one
calendar year.
Its purpose is to select
DAILY NEBRASKAN and
CORNHUSKER staffs and to
have jurisdiction over all stu
dent publications.
Nebraskan
Agnmenfs. And Outlooks
Shift Throughout World
Five dimensions of change
in the "post test ban" period
we now live in were proposed
by Dr. Homer Jack yester
day in his talk "The Politics
of Disarmament".
Jack, internationally known
speaker, traveler and author,
is executive director for the
National Committee for a
Sane Nuclear Policy.
The existence of a "high,
fast-moving detante" be
tween the United States and
Russia characterized by such
innovations as the famous
"hot line" and the wheat
sales was the first acknow
ledgment of change by Jack.
The four other dimensions
of change proposed were the
existence of new alignments
in the alliances; the change
in the attitude of American
foreign policy "myths" con
cerning China, Latin Ameri
ca, the United Nations and
the power of Communism;
the increasing similarity of
American foreign policy and
American peace move
ments; and the changes in
role the American peace or
ganizations are undergoing.
Discussing what he calls
the "disarray of alliances",
Jack said that the once-exis-
tant Moscow vs. Washington
battle is fast changing to a
Cornhusker Bid
Deadline Today
Interviews for Cornhusker
staff positions will be held
Thursday. The interview room
number will be posted in the
Student Union Thursday.
Interviews for editors and
associate editor will begin at
3.35, managing editor and
panel editor at 4:15 and busi
ness staff editor at 5:00.
Applications for these posi
tions are to be turned to the
Cornhusker office by noon to
day.
KNUS Airs
Q-Bowl Meets
Team competition in the
Quiz Bowl semifinals will con
tinue tonight. Teams compet
ing at 7 and 7:25 p.m. must
be at the Student Union be
fore 7 p.m., and teams sched
uled for 7:50 and 8:15 must be
there before 7:50.
Tonight's match and also
Sunday's finals will be broad
casted over campus radio
station KNUS.
The overall winning team
will be determined on Mon
dav. The quiz bow schedules for
tonight and Sunday are:
Wednesday (Semifinals)
7:00 Farmhouse vs Kappa
Sigma.
7:25 Sigma Nu vs Heppner.
7:50 Kappa Kappa Gamma
vs Beta Theta Pi.
8:15 Theta Chi II vs Theta
Xi pledges.
P.: 40 Pi Beta Phi vs Outcasts
of Campus Flat.
SUNDAY (Finals)
2:30 Team U vs Team V.
2:55 Team W vs Team X.
3:20 Team Y vs Team Z.
3:45 Team AA vs Team BB.
4:10 Team CC vs Team DD.
February Grads Urged
To Plan Interviews
Students enrolled in all col
leges except Teachers who ex
pect to receive degrees in
February 1965 are urged to
register with the Placement
Office, 340 Nebraska Union.
Registration should be done
between April 24 and May 29.
Early registration will expe
dite preparation for employer
interviews which will begin
on October 12, 19C4.
Wednesday, April 22, 1964
IfDSnni
ge
Bars
battle between Moscow and
Peking.
"China is not there", "All
Communism is the same",
"We may use or ignore the
UN as we wish", and "Latin
America is a colony of the
United States" are among
the American foreign policy
"myths" that are dying rap
idly, accord;' .ig to Jack.
American peace organiza
tions are losing some of their
"fair weather friends" to the
civil rights movement, par
tially because of the success
of such peace orgaiiizations
with the test ban treaty and
partially because of "per
haps a personal interest" in
the civil rights legislation, ac
cording to Jack. The peace
movements are gaining new
friends from business, labor
and the Catholic church in
this period of change, Jack
said.
Peace organizations are
now seeking new channels in
which to work, possibly
through existing organization
and political parties, Jack
said.
harmacisf, Executive
Business leaders among the distinguished University
graduates participating in the Masters Program Sunday
through Tuesday are Robert Hardt, chairman of the board
of the American Pharmaceutical Company, and John Co
zier, president of the Cozier Container Company, manu
facturers of wooden boxes and crates.
Hardt, who graduated from the University College of
Pharmacy, was the youngest man in the nation to serve
on the Nebraska State Board of Pharmacy when he was
appointed to that position in 1923. He was employed bv
E. R. Squibb and Sons in 1926. and by 1936 he had risen
to the position vice president and director of that firm.
After his resignation from the Squibb company, he
associated with Hoffman-La Roche Inc.. and became vice
president in charge of marketing in 1958. He served as
president of the American Pharmaceutical Association
1954-55.
Hardt has been director of the Montclair National
Bank and Trust Company, chairman of the committee on
the Industrial Council of the Rcnsslaer Polytechnic Insti
tute, director of the New Jersey State Chamber of Com
merce, director of the New Jersey Mental Health Associa
tion and chairman of the organizing committee for the
Fourth Pan-American Congress of Pharmacy and Bio
chemistry. He was named Man of the Year In 1958 by AMERI
CAN DRUGGIST, received a distinguished service award
from the University, as well as an honorary doctor of
pharmacy from Rutgers University in 1956 and a doctor
of science from Massachusetts College of Pharmacy.
A native of Friend, Hardt is distinguished as a lec
turer, organizer and author. He is interested in writing,
public relations, training of young executives, economics
of distribution and golf. He is married and the father of
two sons.
Cozier is president of the East Central Wooden Box
Association, president of the National Wooden Box Assoc
iation, and a member of various industrial advisory com
missions. His social and service activities include member
ship in the Cleveland Country Club, the Union Club, the
University Club, the Cleveland Skating Club, troop chair -
V
"V:
Hardt
Department
The University has suffered
its third major faculty loss
in less than a week with the
resignation of Dr. Clyde Hyde,
professor and chairman of
the electrical engineering de
partment. Hyde will accept a position
in biomedical electron
ics with the International Bus
iness Machines (IBM) in Ro
chester, Minn.
Faculty ranks were earlier
thinned by the death of Dr.
George Young, chairman of
the department of veterinary
science, and the resignation of
Dr. Robert Koehl, professor
of history. Koehl announced
plans to accept a position on
the faculty of the University
of Wisconsin.
Hyde achieved national re
cognition in 1961 when he de
veloped a space communica
tions mechanism which al
lowed the further transmis
sion of radio signals waves!
i. i r !
wunuui siue eneci lniener
ence. Earlier this year he w a s
honored with two other Uni
versity professors for per
fecting a wireless method of
heart activity. This device is !
MASTERS
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known
graphy.
as magnetocardio-
Chancellor Clifford Hardin
said that, in spite of the loss
es, the turnover in the Uni
Ford Foundation Grants
To Aid 'Disadvantaged'
Washington (CPS) The Ford Foundation this week
kicked-off an attack on discrimination against students and
faculty in U.S. colleges and universities by announcing
grants totalling more than $2 million to aid "disadvantaged"
siuaents.
Ford Foundation officials
said the grants most of them
going to higher education in
stitutionsare aimed at im
proving education opportuni
ties for children of Negro and
other disadvantaged families.
Foundation grants an
nounced this week are:
S895.00O to upgrade teach
ing, strengthen curricula and
raise learning motivation and
achievement in the South.
$270,000 for Harvard Uni
versity for legal and educa
tional assistance to help
school systems solve de facto
school segregation problems
and design programs for in
tegrated schools.
$200,000 for summer study
at private schools and col
leges for elementary and
secondary school students
from deprived backgrounds.
8696,800 for New York City
experiments in preschool ed
ucation and job training.
The Ford Foundation grants
are the first of an expected
PROGRAM
man of a local Boy Scout troup, trustee of the Plymouth
Congregational Church and trustee of the Case' Work
Council of the Heveland Welfare Federation.
While at ie University he was a member of the
Pershing Rifles, the varsity basketball team, the Innocents
Society, YMCA cabinet, Alpha Kappa Psi honorary and
Delta Tau Delta fraternity.
Cozier, who is blind, is also a trustee in the Cleve
land Society for the Blind.
A native of Aurora, he married Mary Katherine
Towle on Oct. 12, 1926 and is the father of two children.
Mrs. Cozier is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma soror-
Cozier, following his graduation with a major in Busi
ness Administration, studied for one year at New York
University before entering the manufacturing business.
Masters To
Two nationally known law
vers who will be at the Uni
versity as part of the Mast
ers program win be present
at a Law College reception
and coffee from 2-4 p.m.
Tuesday.
They are Herbert BrownelL
-)
Master Won't Be Here
The University received
word yesterday that one of
the Masters, Allen Sutherland
of San Diego Calif., has in
jured his hand in an accident
and will be unable to make
Cozier
LHIeco
versity faculty was not ser
ious for this time of year.
The faculty losses have de
creased in recent years, al
though some key professors
have resigned.
series by large foundations
designed to improve educa
tional opportunities on all
levels.
A chief coordinator of the
program is the American
Council on Education (ACE)
which has a committee head
ed by Indiana University pres
ident Elvis J. Stahr Jr.,
The committee has already
laid the groundwork for the
program with representatives
of 30 major college and uni
versity officials.
The Ford Foundation grant
for the South will aid crea
tion of a joint school-improvement
center in Nashville,
Tenn.
In outlining the problems of
the Southern Negro, the ACE
noted that many able Negro
students fail to enter college
through lack of motivation
from parent. Upgrading of
basic education was also
thought needed to aid Negro
students wanting to continue
to the university level.
Return
Reception
Jr., former Attorney General
of the United States and Harry
Letton, Jr., senior vice presi
dent of the board of the
Southern California Gas Com
pany. All law students as well as
those in pre law are invited
to attend.
the trip to Nebraska next
week.
Sutherland is senior vice
president, a member of the
board of directors and execu
tive committee member of the
Security First National
Bank of San Diego.
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