The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 07, 1946, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Th'urs'day, March 7, 1946
Page 2
THE NEBRASKAN
EDITORIAL " COMMENT
.
1 '
FORTY-FIFTH TEAR
Subscription rlm r 11.00 per aemeiter r 11.50 for th oMr
mailed. KiiuU copy, S cenla. F.ntered aa aecond-elaaa matter at the pout office in
Lincoln. Nebraska, under act of Coflirtii March 3, 18". and at special rata !
pottage provided for in iectlon 1103, act of Ootober . 11)17, aulhorlicd September
ao, w:.
EOITOBlAi. STAFF
jMlbir Bett t Bnatooi
JManaalnV Editor' Thyllla Teaaardcn, Hhlrlc.T Jenklna
JKtw Edllora MJ AHc Cawood, rhyllla Mortlock, Jack Creaamaa,
Dale Kovotny, Maxthella Uolcomb .,.
PporU Editor
(Xwlrty Editor
B181NKSS
Itnaliwaa Manager
Ailant Bualneaa Manairr
Alstant AdvertiHlng Manager
Queen for a Day . . .
Another suggestion which recently came to us from a
student was that all campus coeds who are nominated for
the honor of serving as any of the various campus "queens"
be a senior or junior woman.
Nebraska produces an abundant yearly crop of female
monarchs, ranging from May Queen to Beauty Queen, Pep
Queen, Nebraska Sweetheart, Prom Girl, Goddess of Agri
culture, to Dandelion Queen. This student felt that the
honor would mean more to a junior girl who could reign
her senior year or to a senior than it would to an under
class coed.
We think this would be a fine idea, especially as it
would cut out some of the competition and give every
senior woman a better chance to be a queen. We ourselves
are very bitter because we have spent almost four years in
the university and have never been asked to be a queen,
not even "Queen of the Union Basement Trash Cans." We
feel that there should be a few more such positions added
to the UN list of nobility so that our motto could be: "A
queen every week," or "Every senior woman a queen at
least once." .
Engineers Vote
For Chairman
Of Celebration
Engineering students vote to
day for chairman and vice-chairman
of Engineers' Week, accord
ing to Bob Coonley, member of
the Engineering Executive Board.
Candidates for the chairman's
position are Phillip Massie and
George Kuska. Massie is an elec
trical engineering student and
Kuska is studying architectural
engineering.
Irwin Cone and Herbert Simons
are. candidates for vice-chairman
of the planning committee. Cone
is in mechanical engineering
school and Simons, in chemical
engineering.
Polls Open at 8.
Sophomore, junior and senior
engineers in all branches are eli
gible to vote at the polls in me
chanical arts building. The polls
will be open from 8 a. m. to
4:45 p. m. and are located on
first floor.
A banquet and Engineers ball
will climax the social events of
the week, which will held late in
April. Other events will be an
open house for the general public
as well as university students; a
special convocation, and an ath
leic field day.
Union Weekend
Includes Dance
Saturday Night
Friday night's activities in the
Union will not include a dance,
because of the U. S. A. dance but
there will be a juke box dance in
the ballroom Saturday from 9 p.
m. to 11 p. m.
Sunday afternoon at 3 p. m.
there will be a free variety show,
"Follow the Boys," starring
George Raft, Orson Welles, Mar
lene Dietrich, and Dinah Shore.
This Universal picture is a his
tory of show business from vaude
ville to the present time.
The Union will sponsor a coffee
hour at 5 p. m. Sunday in the
lounge.
FRENCH CLUB.
The French club invites all
students of modern languages
to see movies on Canada in
room 315, Union, tonight at
7:30. Canadian skiing, fishing'
and scenery will be depicted.
It is common knowledge in
Northeastern New South Wales
that the Mugwump has become
extinct. .
UTV-1 .
1'at Toof
STAFF
lrrJn Abramaoa
Dorothea Roienberr. Donna Pfteron
.''lii;' tMii
Mabel Lee, PE
Head, Accepts
National Post
Miss Mabel Lee, director of the
women s physical education de
partment, has recently accepted
an appointment as chairman of
a national committee to help find
jobs for ex-eervicewomen who are
trained in the physical education
and recreation field.
According to. Miss Lee, this
committee does not personally
recommend women to positions or
positions to women, but merely
serves as a contact committee to
help ex-service women get in
touch with job possibilities in
civilian life.
"Long lists of candidates and
still longer lists of job openings
are now pouring into the commit
tee," Miss Lee declared. "Directors
of the WACS and SPARS have
been keeping us informed of
names and addresses of recently
discharged women trained in our
field. Now we are also able to
establish contacts with girls being
separated from the USO and
American Red CrosS units."
The committee has received re
quests for women from high
schools, recreation centers, hos
pitals, YWCA's and colleges all
over the country.
High School Principals
Meet on Campus March 15
In the first session of the De
partment of Superintendents and
Principals of the Nebraska State
Education association since 1943,
about 250 high school superin
tendents and principals will con
vene on the campus March 15
and 16.
Four major educational ques
tions will be discussed at the two-
day meeting: Veterans education
al problems, general education
problems, the association's ' pro
gram of state aid and visual edu
cation. Roy E. Nelson of Alliance,
department vice-president, will
preside.
WE SOLICIT YOUR
RENT-A-CAR BUSINESS
Please be prepared to estab
lish your reliabiliy and fur
nish deposit. Required age
21 years or more. Maximum
occupancy 4 people.
Thank
Established 25 Years
Motor Out Company
1120 P St., 2-6819
Letterip
To The Editor:
Doughnuts and coffee cost
money. Lots of money. So does
blood plasma, telegrams, prisoner
of war boxes and rehabilitation
work.
The Red Cross has done plenty
of that. Servicemen will for a
long time remember places like
Rainbow Center in London, the
Hollywood Canteen and the Stage
Door Canteen.
But the Red Cross has not
confined its activities to the serv
ing the armed forces in the last
five years. Look at the current
drive for funds in a selfish way.
A bad fire, a flood, or in fact
any type of disaster could put you
in need of plenty of help, and
when you need that help, it will
be the Red Cross that will be
there at the right time.
Two-bits won't buy you in
dividually a lot to eat, but take
the two-bit pieces from all over
America and they will do a lot
toward helping someone. Think
it over. It isn't only a question
of sewing a rip in your blues
as the Red Cross has done so
often. It might be a question of
your getting out of an accident
alive. Let's all give just a quar
ter or anything we can to the
Red Cross as this is not only
for America, all of Europe is in
need of help and each of us in
our own small way can do some
thing. The Red Cross is for all
of us and don't forget it.
W. C. HUNTER
J. A. HILL
NROTC
High Schol Paper
Workers Compete
For Key Awards
Awards for meritorious work
will be presented to Nebraska
high school newspaper reporters
and editors by the university's
school of journalism in co-operation
with the Lincoln Star and
Lincoln Journal.
Writers of the best news stories,
editorials and feature articles ap
pearing in the Nebraska high
school press during the current
academic year will be given sil
ver keys for their work.
Similar awards will be made
on the campus with all students
in the university eligible to com
pete. School papers will be divided
into groups based on the size of
enrollment.
Closes May 1.
The coptest closes May 1, and
rules are now being sent to all
high schools, according to Prof.
F. C. Blood, director of the school
of journalism.
Entries will be judged by a
committee of representatives from
the Star and Journal, and a fac
ulty member of the school.
Nebraska Masquers
A meet of the Nebraska
Masquers tonight at 5:10 in
room 154 of the Temple build
ing: has been announced by
Blanche Duckworth, Masquer
president. All actives and
pledges are asked to attend, ac
cording to Miss Duckworth.
Lightning does strike twice in
one place.
Tike orden in soar nW
Beautiful Hollywood creations
monogrartimed stylet. Sell quicklyl
Selection of fine paper, white or
tinted in regular or air mail weight.
Order any quantity.
EARN OP TO SSI WEEKLY
ooni otwr. wain ton fu saus kit.
HOLLYWOOD
J
4Wi Mullen Avenue
m AhiiIm 41,
V
i v f . . -j. i
twin if r i
V
want nuoNa. hounrooo n '
lnT 1
The Ash Can
by
Marthella Holcomb
irtrct rnntrihution in the camp
us Red Cross drive this week
came from Eva Lashinsky's pal on
Guam. If he can take the trou
ble to mail it all this way, surely
you can get up steam enough to
stop by the desk in the Union.
- Independence Is back, per se:
One zoo student in lab the other
day was asked if he'd made a
slide of a Paramecium. "Nope, but
I've seen one," he said. When
the teacher asked him why he
didn't make a slide himself, he
retorted, "My eyes are tired," and
the teacher went her way in
peace. Has anyone here seen the
Murine?
Great things are In the offing
for Friday, we've been told. Since
the fractional representation boys
put over a fast one while their
girls were attending the follies,
the barbs have cooked up some
real entertainment for themselves
while the Interfrat ball is rolling
downtown. Come see me swing
ing from the balcony to get a
good look at Ginsburg.
And to think, after all those
back-handed titters and genuine
guffaws, that there aren't any
good jokes floating around the
campus. Eavesdropping bits of
conversation in the Awgwan of
fice informs us that they aren't
satisfied with the entries in their
life-saver joke contest. Deadline
isn't until 3 p. m. today, in case
someone knows some good, com
paratively clean anecdotes they'd
like to drop in Korb's lap.
Campus character showed us
one fine trick a few daze ago.
Carefully laid a Nebiaskan on the
floor, placed his headgear on it,
topped same with another issue,
and proceeded to stamp up and
Theatre Players
Schedule Matinee
Of 'Twelfth Night'
A matinee showing of Shake
speare's "Twelfth Night" has been
scheduled for Saturday at 2 p. m.
in the Temple theater by Dallas
Williams, director of the Univer
sity players.
Reducing the performance time
to about an hour and a half, the
play has been cut to 15 scenes. All
grade and high school students in
the Lincoln area are invited.
There will be an admission charge
of 35 cents.
'While most grade and high
school students must study his
plays, Shakespeare really belongs
on the stage. He wrote his plays
to amuse audiences," Williams
said. "Perhaps our performance
Saturday will help students visu
J.
awlPea oats
This is the shipment we have been waiting
for Genuine Navy Pea Coats 100
wool This sensible, practical jacket
gained fame during the war.
WARMTH
WITHOUT
WEIGHT
Use Our Convenient Lay-Away Plan
UNITED ARMY STORE
'028 0 ST. 1 1028 O ST.
down on top of the heap. Mean
while he sang a monotone ver
sion of "I go for a man who
wears an Adam hat." Sequel was
a careful dusting, reshaping, and
out he crawled, good as new. Hat
couldn't look worse, you know
that.
Then there's our mutual friend,
the reserve man. Not Western
Reserve, bonded reserve.
Fights for surplus bids to the
navy ball have already begun.
Theme may turn out to be black
and navy blue. So many hand
some men in those good-looking
uniforms will no doubt make the
Union ballroom March 22 look
like Brenda and Cobina's happy
hunting grounds.
Yes, the weather Tuesday was
cold so I brought a blanket and a
coat to school. Most popular spot
in the Union on rainy days is the
checkstand, where the girls can
borrow a scarf from lost and
found.
What a disillusionment, we dis
covered after the intramural box
ing matches Tuesday that that
heavyweight battle wasn't as hor
rible as we thought. They aren't
honest-to-goodness enemies at all,
John Sedlacek and Don Wait
grew up together in Seward. Don
didn't even fracture his skull.
And that thrill that comes once
in a lifetime was denied Ed Mc
Elligott when the judges wrongly
announced that Finley Helleberg
had won their welter go. After
they'd left the ring someone re
counted on their fingers and
found Ed was the better man. We
suspected something of the sort,
but we'd been putting our money
on Glenn Presnell, the third man
in the circle.
alize the things they read," he
added.
Red Cross . . .
(Continued from Page 1.)
dent prevention, nursing service,
and civilian blood donor service
will always be directed and con
ducted by Red Cross workers.
Volunteers help in nurses aid
work, motor corps, production
corps, and hospital corps. This
work will also continue until the
armed forces and civilian agencies
have no further need for them.
Charter obligation of the Red
Cross are to furnish aid to the
sick and wounded of the military
branches in time of war; to act as
a medium of communication be
tween the people of the United
States and their Army and Navy;
and to mitigate the sufferings
caused by pestilence, famine, fire,
and flood, and to devise means of
prevention.
S THE FAD
$(o95
(2)