i I u Vol. 45, No. 54 LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA Tuesday, February 19, 1946 ultlj-j Boucher Says School Equipment Below Par "The university's investments in building and equipment for each student has been the lowest and our expenditure per student for instructional purposes has been below that judged adequate by accrediting agencies," Chan cellor C. S. Boucher said Sunday, and added that this must be cor rected if the university is to progress. "An enormous backlog of post poned demand for education and training" faces the university, which, the Chancellor continued, is comparable to the present de mand for housing, household equipment and automobiles. New Buildings Essential. Recalling the swift increase in enrollment that followed the first world war, Chancellor Boucher said: "If the university is to meet this present demand of veterans and the new group of youths who reach college age each year, it will be necessary for the leg islature, just as following World War I, to appropriate adequate funds for buildings, for equip ment, and for staff. Future in Youth. "If you look at the investment in the university and its program solely from the point of view of immediate financial returns, you should remember this: it can be shown by members of our staff that' the increase in dollar values of the production of Nebraska land due solely to the introduc tion of new crop varieties de- Eng meeriiiir College Adds 64 Students Sixty-four students were added to college of engineering classes in surveying this week when the university was able to obtain 15 additional instruments, according to Dean Roy M. Green, head of the department. The instruments, which in cluded 11 transits and four pre cise heads, were gained through a surplus property sale at the Glenn Martin bomber plant in Omaha. If the equipment had been unobtainable, Dean Green said, the students would not have been able to take the course. Sinfonia Holds Harmony Hour In Union Today Agenda for the Harmony hour this afternoon at 4 p. m. in the Union music room has been listed by Paul Koenig, who will make the commentaries. Sponsored by Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, men's honorary music fraternity, the hours have re turned to the campus after a war time absence. Hear Russian Composers. Continuing with the works of the "Russian Five" composers, the following pieces will be heard: "Russian Easter O v e r t u r e," Rimsky-Korsakov; "Palovtsienne Dances" from Prince Igor, Boro din; and "Pictures At An Exhi bition," including "Gnomes," "The Old Castle," "The Hut on Fowl's Legs," and "The Great Gate at Kiev." Unaffiliatetl Women Apply for AWS Women students not in or ganized houses, who wish con sideration for nomination on the Associated Women Stu dents board, should make ap plication to the board by 5 p. m. Wednesday, according to Made leine Holzscherer, president. Coeds who apply sliould have a weighted 80 average, with no incompletes or failures on their records. ix rv" -.-4 m . I From The Lincoln Journal. CHANCELLOR BOUCHER. veloped in our Agriculture Ex periment station in the last ten years has been an amount at least equal to all the appropria tions made by the legislature for the support of the entire univer sity since the year it was founded. "Certainly the future of the na tion and of the state is found in our youths; the character and quality of our future depends upon the education and training we may provide for the youths to day, for they are the farmers, ranchers, business men, indus trialists, and professional men and women of tomorrow." K J I L politicA. fiJeuf, TJtafoJL Lord Halifax, retiring British Ambassador to the United States, who will speak to university stu dents at a special convocation in the Union, Thursday at 2 p .m., boasts an outstanding political career. Edward Frederick Lindley Wood, better known as Lord Hali fax, was born April 16, 1881, at Powderdam Castle, near Exeter, the seat of his mother's family, the Earls of Devon. His father was the second Viscount Halifax. During his lifetime, he has been Baron Irwin, Viscount Halifax, Earl of Halifax, and since 1941, the British Ambassador to the United States. He was educated at Eton and at Christ Church, Ox ford, and received his Bachelor of Arts Degree in 1903 and his Mas ters' in 1906. War Veteran. The political career of Lord S Professors Laud I As Above BY JACK CRESSMAN. University professors, summing up three weeks experience in classrooms filled with 2,200 vet erans, today praised the ex-GI's as generally above average. The professors admit they are being "kept on their toes" because veterans, unlike the average col lege student, are not reluctant to ask questions, demand proof, or inject their personal experiences into a discussion of classroom questions. Stimulate Lively Discussions. "They have injected a new spirit into my classes by stimulat ing lively discussions, and when they want to know something they ask intelligent questions which go right to the core of the matter," Prof. J. P. Senning of Group Heads Attend YW Convention Shirley Ann Hinds, city campus president, and Carol Bridenbaugh, ag campus president, will be dele gates to the 17th annual conven tion of the Y.W.C.A. to be held in Atlantic City, March 2-8. Mary Ann Mattoon, vice '. hair man of the- National Student Council of the Y.W.C.A.; Mrs. Ray Rice, advisor for freshman pro gram; and Mildred Taylor, exec utive in the student Y.W.C.A. of fice, will be included in the dele gation from the university. Three Thousand Delegates. Three thousand delegates repre senting world-wide associations will constitute the first convention of the Y.W.C.A.'s since 1940. Bel gium, Holland, India, China, Mex ico, Brazil and other foreign coun tries will tell of their work and their experiences during the war. Dr. Harold C. Urey, atom bomb scientist, will deliver the key speech at the convention on "Atomic Energy, for War, for Peace." Other speakers to be heard during the week are Dr. Bryn Hovde, head of the school of so cial research, New York; Owen Lattimore, writer on China, who was consultant for a time to Gen eralissimo Chiang Kai-shek; Rep resentative Helen Gahagan Doug las; and the chairman of the Y.W. C.A. Industrial Council who is re turning from a visit to England and Russia. Halifax began in 1910 when he represented a sector of Yorkshire in Parliament, but was inter rupted from 1915 to 1917 while he served with the Yorkshire Dragoons in World War I. It con tinued again until 1925 when he was named Baron Irwin. During his service in Parlia ment, the young Britisher served as undersecretary of the Ministry of National Service, Parliamen tary undersecretary for the Col onies; president of the board of education, and Minister of Agri culture and Fisheries. Then, in 1926, he became Viceroy and Governor-General of India. Friend of Ghandi. In his five-year stay in India, Lord Irwin became a firm friend of Mahatma Ghandi. He was the first Viceroy to try to understand and sympathize with the all-India national congress. General the political science department said. "They are definitely more attentive and serious than the average student," he added. William Hice, instructor in jour nalism, reported: "The encourag ing thing about veterans is that they seem to know they are here for a purpose, and know defi nitely what they want." Problem of Readjustment. There is a problem of readjust ment to college life, however, which the veterans must over come themselves. Dean Roy M. Green of the college of engineer ing summed it up this way: "Student veterans have a slight problem of re-adjustment to over come before they will fully be able to settle down to college study. It's too early to determine how our second semester vet erans are doing but those "f last semester are showing a high level of accomplishment and are more ongioneeirs Plauu Jennie Tourel, Metro Soprano, To Sing Here BY SAM WARREN. Jennie Tourel, mezzo-soprano, hailed by critics as "the greatest recitalist to come up in a decade," will sing here Feb. 20, presented by the Lincoln Symphony Or chestra association. A!star of the Paris Opera-Comique until June, 1940, Miss Tourel is a leading so prano of the Metropolitan Opera. Of Russian parentage, Jennie Tourel was brought up in France and Switzerland. She considers herself a Russian by background, and French by education. When Miss Tourel got out of Paris just two days ahead of the nazi occu pation, she left behind her not only a reputation as a great Car men and Mignon but also all her possessions and most of her money. She came to the United States in 1941 and proceeded to start all over again. She didn't have long to wait, for almost im mediately after her arrival she was engaged to sing Carmen and Mignon in Canada and Cuba, and to sing in concert and opera in musical centers thruout this coun try. First Break. But her real break came when Arturo Toscanini engaged her for her debut with the New York Philharmonic in 1942. Unani mously acclaimed at this perform ance as a "great artist," she ap peared twice in rapid succession with the Boston Symphony under Serge Koussevitsky and with the NBC Symphony under Leopold Stokowski. Her singing with three top orchestras and conductors in one brief season was virtually without precedent, especially for a relatively little known artist. It was no wonder, then, that when Miss Tourel gave her first recital at Town Hall in 1943, the hall was packed to standing room and filled with an expectant atmos phere. Reviews the next morning proved original praise of her to be well-founded. Typical of the critics was outspoken Virgil Thompson of the Herald Tribune, who announced her "unequalled among living singers." With such whole-hearted rec ommendations from critics and concert audiences alike, Miss Tourel comes to Lincoln for a re cital that promises to be one of the highlights of the current sea son. For Her program Wednesday, See BAND . . .Page 4. Veterans Average : alert and earnest than the aver age student." Should Not Carry Heavy Schedule Prof. Thomas H. Gooding of the agronomy department at the ag riculture college said "some vet erans are taking more courses than they can handle so soon after battle experience. We encourage them to drop a course which is too difficult and take it up later on when they have acquired the study habit." Prof. Karl Arndt of the econo mics department said the maturity and wide experience of veterans had enabled them, in many in stances, to translate classroom studies into terms of personal ex perience. "We used to be able to lecture for an hour without interruption but no more. The veterans want the answers and we are trying to supply them. It's a stimulating ex perience," Mr. Arndt said. . The Engineering executive board has announced the resto ration of full engineering college activities on the campus with plans already underway for "Engineers' Week," to be held in late April. A general meeting of all engi neers has been called by Lowell Anderson, chairman of the execu tive board, to be held Wednesday evening at 7:00 in the Union ball room, with the purpose of ac quainting new members of the college with the past program and laying tentative plans for this year's "Engineers' Week." Five Reports. Each of the five active societies will present a report on the cur rent availability of materials for the construction of displays and exhibits. Refreshments will con clude the meeting after unaffili ated engineers are assigned to the proper student society. A banquet and also a ball, open to the entire university, will cli max the social events of "Engi neers' Week." Other highlights will be an open house for the general public as well as univer sity students; a special convoca tion, and an athletic field day, featuring competition between the student societies and the faculty. Election. Ai all -engineers' election to select the chairman and vice chairman of the "Engineers' Week" committee will be held March 7 after the executive board has prepared a slate of candidates from nominees submitted by the various societies. The executive board will continue tentative planning until the committee is organized. Speaking of the restoration of "Engineers' Week," Dean Roy M. Green, head of the department, stated: "I am highly pleased that the upper class engineering stu dents have considered this an advisable thing to do this spring. The program in the past has been worked out almost entirely by the students and this practice will continue." National Music Dealer Publishes University Song "Hail Varsity," the university song written about five years ago by two alumni for the use of the school, has been published by Carl Fischer, Inc., a national mu sic dealer, it was announced Mon day by Dr. Arthur Westbrook of the school of music. W. Joyce Ayres, '30, who now lives in Lincoln, and Wilbur Chenoweth, '18, of Los Angeles, wrote the song. Omicron Nu Plans Panel Discussion A panel discussion entitled "Professional Appearance and At titude" will be presented for sen ior girls of the home economics department at the Omicron Nu honorary meeting at 4 p. m. Tues day. The meeting will be held in room 307 of the home economics building. Faculty members lead ing the discussion will be Miss Florence Smith, Miss Margaret Fedde, Miss Mary Guthrie, and Miss Florence Corbin. Moderator for the panel will be Midge Holtz-scherer. VETERANS' CLUB. Men and women interested in forming a veterans' club are urged by Jack Halliburton, or ganizer to meet in Parlor Y Tuesday night at 7 p. m. Aims and purposes of the club will be discussed at that time. . H t (: ' I! I! r '; f .? H 1 1