PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1952 SPIRIT OF GARGOYLE: Human Dynamo Shifts Gears * , * * By DONNA HENDLEMAN *s Marjorie A. Nimz, '52, is one woman who seems to personify thea age-old theory of the conservation of energy. a N'o matter how much she does, Miss Nimz, better known as Peg, " seems to be able to come up for more. Tiny, (5 feet, 95 pounds) the new has-been editor of the Gargoyle seems to make up for her: lack of stature with a seemingly boundless capacity for work. Anticipating her departure from the first floor hole in the Student Publications Building, Miss Nimz whirled her way through a giant campaign this spring to come in second in the three-seat race for the Board in Control of Student Publications. THE MINUTE Chicagoan's Gar- goyle career, oddly enough, all be- gan as a "horrible mistake.'" "I was a freshman, and decid- ed to go to a Daily tryout meet-: ing," she reminisced. "I wander- ed into the Garg office instead;: they were having a meeting, <.. , too.", 'U' Survey Examinesj '48 Election A report just published by the University Survey Research Cen- ter found that voters who made up their minds during the last two weeks of the 1948 presidential election decided the outcome. The national survey, written by Angus Campbell, Center director, and Robert L. Kahn, assistant pro- gram director, showed that this group comprised twelve percent of the total vote, with three-quar- ters of it going to the Democrats. Four other points uncovered by the survey are: 1. Truman's margin over Dewey was won in the big city and rural areas. 2. Skilled and semi-skilled workers, laborers and farmers comprised the largest bulk of Truman supporters. 3. The undecided voters in the professional-managerial class and the skilled, semi-skilled class made the largest shift to Truman. 4. The greatest gain for Truman after October according to income groups was in the $4000-$5000 cat- egory. Opera Class To Perform Opera Workshop class, under the direction of Prof. Wayne Dun- lap of the music school, will pre- sent a three-day program of opera scenes and complete operas per- formed by students in music school, beginning at 4:15 p.m. to- day in Rackham Assembly Hall. Featuring the lighter operas, to- day's performance will include the complete opera, "The Telephone" by Menotti; scenes from "Carou- sel" by Rodgers and scenes from "Street Scene" by Weill. Tomorrow's program will con- sist of standard opera while Thurs- day's will feature Menotti operas. The performances are open to the public. ESQIRE' regularly$6-NOW$4 with this coupon Use for gifts: graduation, Fath- er's Day, or own use. Offer expires June 30. Esky card sent. Fraternities Pledge Seventy During Open Rushing Svnyadtoame aebeen pledged by fraternities on campus during the Inter-fraterni- ty Council's open rushing program this semester, the Office of Stu- dent Affairs announced yesterday. The following men are pledges of: ACACIA-Robert E. Dildine, '55- E; David S. Dow, '55. ALPHA SIGMA PHI-Thomas F. Ehman, '55. ALPHA TAU OMEGA-Larry L. Eckstrom '55; Ronald F. Gora, '55; Carl R. Kamhout, '55; Jack A. Klassen, '53; James M. McKevitt, '55; Joseph G. Shom- sky, '55; James U. Wagner, '55; Donald L. Ferguson, '54; Ronald W. Bonatz, '54. BETA THETA PI-Richard H. Fisher, '55; Donald E. Schultz, '55; Don E. Byron, '55; John Gelden, '55; Floyd A. Graham, '55; Arthur T. Iverson, '55; Richard O'Connor, '54; Robert Van Volson Rice, '55. CHT PHI-Ronald.E. Wright, '54; George W. Stoner. CHI PSI-John D. Powless, '55P. DELTA KAPPA EPSILON - John Williams, '55. DELTA TAU DELTA-William P. Barlow, '55; Richard O'Shaug- nessy. '54. DELTA UPSILON-Paul Mal-. lory, '53. PHI DELTA THETA-Charles W. Kropf, '54; Richard Cota, '55. PHI GAMMA DELTA-Regin- ald E. Shave, '54; Clarence N. Tinker, '54. PHI KAPPA PSI-Gilbert J. Snyder, '55E; John Coolidge; Paul R. Jones. PHI KAPPA SIGMA-Joseph C. Lowrey, '55. PHI KAPPA TAU-Rodney H. Watson, '55E; Kenneth A. Hafer, '56; Ralph E. Wilson, '56. PHI SIGMA DELTA-Martin W. Gruenfeld, '55E. SIGMA ALPHA MU-Stephen J. Jelin, '55. SIGMA CHI - Frederick G. Newman, '54; Leo R. Schlicht, '55; Irving Lee Cannon, '55; Ed- ward L. Hickey, '55; John D. Cline, '55. SIGMA PHI-Martin J. Kelley, Jr., '54; William G. Nelson, '55. SIGMA PHI EPSILON-Maurice S. VanAuken, '55. TAU DELTA PHI-Gerald M. Avrin, '57A&D; Clyde L. Hale, '56- E; Evan Hirsh, '56E. TAU KAPPA EPSILON-Daniel P. Moroney, '54. THETA DELTA CHI-Herbert V. Jennings, '54, Harry A. Easom, '54; Charles E. Butler, '55. THETA XI-William H. Mor- rissey, '54E; Alan H. Koski, '54 Roger B. DeVries; Stanley L. Martin. TRIANGLE-Walter E. Rupp, II, '54E; David S. Neale, '55E; For- est G. Wolfe, '55E; Harry L. An- derson, '55E; Clifford M. Schutz, '55E; Howard W. Beatty, '53E, William H. Bernard, '55E. TRIGON-Raymond Lewis, '55; James L. Ryan, '57A&D; Arthur Speckhard, '54. ZETA PSI-James R. Buck, '53. Rushing Leaders To MeetTonight Both fraternity Rushing Chair- man and Inter-Fraternity Coun- cil Rushing Counselors will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 3B of the Michigan Union, the IFC an- nounced yesterday. l 1.1 "When I asled if it was the Daily, the editor said yes-and I stayed." ** S AND SO BEGAN a career that was a little more trying than most. After the initial meeting, she de- cided she had been somewhat bam- boozled, and would just forget "the whole thing." But a few weeks later she wrote a "masterpiece" for soph- omore composition, and couldn't resist offering it to the maga- zine. "Th, printed it," she remem- bered. 'At4 they changed the ti- tle. I was so 'i4a4I swore I wouldn't write anything more for them." The next issue contained pages of Nimz-created gags, and she was caught.' When Garg got booted off cam- pus two years ago, Miss Nimz had a great deal to do with its hang- ing on and its subsequent revival as a recognized sheet. "As a joke I suggested we keep publishing it off-campus. When the editor agreed I had to stick it out on principle." Miss Nimnz's description of how she became managing editor smacks a little of her Gargoylian wit. "I was the only one ready for the job," she noted. "We had been publishing off campus in such a small room, not many people could fit in there. So. by the time we The PLACE to GO, for the NAMES you KNOW!! EAnkl (:) FO ICED TO. OUTI -Daly-Malcolm Shatz CASTAWAY-Marjorie (Peg) Nimz, '53, has to take what they will give her at the Gargoyle office these days since she fell off her managing editor's perch. Having finally gotten hold of the galleys 'for the last Gargoyle, she busily reads for errors. *c * * * *# had returned to full status, my predecessor and I had all the ex- perience." ALTHOUGH MISS Nimz would ,often "live" the Garg during pub- lication times-eat, no sleep and talk Gargoylian-those who have a conception of a humor magazine editor as a "funny character" should take another look at this one. Behind the humorous antics lie one of the best business heads in the Publications Building and un- der her reign Gargoyle splashed solidly into the black. A political science major, Miss Nimz doesn't expect to make a career out of humor either. She is speculating now on a future with the government-overseas work preferred. In recognition of her hard work, Miss Nimz last year was tapped by Wyvern, the junior women's hon- orary, and this, year Mortarboard snatched her during their annual midnight tirade. Although her campus career has been varied and successful, Miss Nimz still has one thwarted ambi- tion. Now a first semester senior, she is yet to turn twenty, much less twenty-one. "I'm going to stick it out until I'm legal," she promises. June 4, 1953-everyone's invited." OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FRESH, NEW, SMART SPRING AND SUMMER MERCHANDISE!!! EVERYTHING MUST BE GONE WHEN YOU GO HOME FOR THE SUMMER. L Student Periodical Box 2006 -f m - Agency U mi aus tas ee the G Ot t W bSl . ' I, "the 3 noyj S In a cigarette, taste makes the difference - and Luckies taste better! The difference between "just smoking" and really enjoying your smoke is the taste of a cigarette. You can taste the difference in the smoother, mellower, more enjoyable taste of a Lucky... for two important reasons. First, L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco ... fine, mild tobacco that tastes better. Second, Luckies are made to taste better... proved best- made of all five principal brands. So reach for a Lucky. 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