The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 10, 1948, Image 1

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Vol. 49 No. 62 Lincoln 8, Nebraska. Friday. December 10. 1948
Ycaylir Suspends
University students found their"
interest in political party affairs
revived Wednesday and Thursday
by activity on their own doorstep.
Another chapter was added to
the Berman story this week when
the Lincoln Young Democrats
charter was suspended by State
Chairman Vernon O. Taylor, St.
Paul, Neb.
Taylor's action came after Eu
gene Berman, university junior,
attended a meeting of the state
executive committee in Grand Is
land Saturday and sponsored a
motion which would have per
mitted the Lancaster Young Dem
ocrats to register two lobbyists in
the name of the state organiza
tion at the state legislature.
Berman Not Official
Taylor stated that the reason
for rescindfng the motion was be
cause Berman, "who at the meet
ing held the official proxy of an
elected state officer of our organi
zation .introduced a proposal when
he held no official right to do so."
The organization is not in any
way objecting to the proposed fair
employment practices act which
will be the subject of the lobbying
Taylor declared, but he is object
ing to the fact "that a Wallace
man came into the meeting with
out authority" and acquired pas
sage of the motion.
Taylor announced that he had
suspended the charter until the
Lancaster Young Democrats
See TAYLOR, Page 8
Nu Mods Hear
Pfeiffcr Dec. 8
Addressing the monthly Nu
Med meeting Wednesday night,
Dr. LaVerne Pfeiffer, local urolo
gist, discussed the improvements
in surgery of the excretory tracts
of the human body and the ad
vantages of streptomycin in the
treatment of diseases of the di
gestive and excretory system.
Nominations for next semester
Nu-Med officers, made at the
meeting, include the following:
president John Kahle and Tom
Ag College to Present Traditional
Yuletide Choral Program Dec 15
Yuletide festivity will be the
keynote at the annual Ag college
Christmas Program to be held
Wednesday, Dec. 15 at 8 p. m. in
the College Activities building.
Sponsored by the Ag Exec Board,
the program is a traditional affair
on Ag campus.
Bringing the Christmas message
at this year's program will be
Rev. Rex Knowles, resident pas
tor at the Presbyterian Student
House. New this year on the
Nebraska campus, Rev. Knowles
came here the first of September
from Oneida, New York. Rev.
Virgil Anderson will pronounce
the invocation and Rev. John
Wichelt will give the benediction.
Messiah Excerpts Given
Excerpts from Handel's Messiah
will be presented by the Ag Col
lege chorus, under the direction
of Mrs. Altinas Tullis. Solos from
the oratorio will be sung by Oryl
Lee Fischer and Pat Hanlon, Ag
students. The chorus also plans
several other Christmas works in
YM to Show
French Film
At Library
The prize-winning French film,
"Song of the Streets," will be
shown in a series of three per
formances this week-end in Love
Library auditorium. Sponsored
by the YM, the movie is noted
for the symphonic score by the
European composer Hans Eisler.
Specific times for the showings
are 8 p. m., this evening, and 8
and 9:30 p. m., Saturday. The sec
ond viewing will permit specta
tors of the basketball game to see
the movie.
"Song of the Streets" is a film
in which Eisler's characteristic
music is to be heard. It creates
and drives forward the rhythm
of the story. All the terror and
anxiety of a pursued man, along
with his own realization of the
inevitability of his capture, is
projected in the music.
Eisler, who has written the
background music for literally
dozens of European films, recent
ly commented, "To write music
for the movies is of the greatest
importance to the modern com
posers. Through this medium he
is able to reach the largest audi
ence that has ever existed in the
history of music. In the next 20
years the musical taste of the na
tion will be fashioned, for the
most part, by the music written
for the movies."
The film stars the favorite Jean
Pierre-Aumont, Madelin Ozeray,
Vladimir Sokoloff and Marcelle
Jean-Worms.
Powell; vice president Leland
Gartrel, Ruth Johnson, and Jerry
Tyner; secretary Rex Hoffmeis
ter and Bob Long; and publicity
chairman Benny Robinson and
Glenn Sobeslaysky.
The election will take place at
the next meeting on Jan. 12, 1949.
cluding "Sheep and Lambs" by
Homer and "The Penitent" by
Van de Water.
Miss Miriam Bratt will accom
pany the chorus and Garreth Mc
Donald, a music school student,
will play the organ throughout the
program.
Audience Sings Carols
Mrs. Tullis will also lead the
audience and the chorus together
in traditional Christmas carols.
The auditorium in the Activities
building will be decorated with
greenery and will be lit by
candlelight. Betty Bcckner and
Marge Reynolds, senior Ag Exec
Board members, will light the
tapers.
Co-chairmen elected by the
Exec Board in charge of the Pro
gram are Neal Baxter and Betty
Beckncr. Committee members and
their chairmen are: Decorations,
Lloyd Wirth, chairman, Jack
Baird, Alice Boswell and Gwen
Monson; publicity, Louise McDill,
chairman, Phil Kecney and Marge
K
Gene Krupa
Cosmopolitan
Club to Honor
R. G. Gustavson
The Cosmopolitan Club will
hold its annual banquet in honor
of Chancellor R. G. Gustavson in
the Persian Room at the Corn
husker hotel Saturday, Dec. 11,
at 6 p.m.
Among those attending the
banquet will be Mrs. Gustavson,
Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Hoover and
Dr. and Mrs. J. L. Champe. The
banquet is sponsored each year
by the foreign and American
members of the Cosmopolitan
Club.
Plans for entertainment were
announced by the president of the
club, Jacques Levi. Entertainers
include Paul Dzavik of Czecho
slovakia who will sing and play
his guitar. Walter Willi, Switzer
land, Claude Hannezo, France,
and Dorothy Lidolph, United
States, will sing several French
Christmas carols. A piano solo
will be provided by Robert John
son, United States, and a Persian
folk song will be sung by the
Persian members of the organiza
tion. Students planning to attend
the cage encounter between
the Huskers and Iowa Teach
ers, should have activity tick
et number "8" ready for pres
entation at the gate, along
with their ID cards.
Reynolds; and program, Jack De
wulf. Phil Kceney, George Pink
erton, Frank Leoffel and John
Osier will usher.
Bourne Addresses
AIChE Members
Seniors applying for jobs
should consider themselves as
salesmen trying to convince the
interviewer that the company
will be benefited by their employ
ment, according to Dr. R. M.
Bourne, instructor in economics
and labor relations, who spoke at
the regular AlCeE meeitng yes
terday. Speaking on the topic "Facing
Interviewers," Dr. Bourne said
that two preliminary steps are
helpful before contacting the in
terviewer: First, have a general
knowledge of the company, and,
second, have a written detailed
personal history for inspection.
Presentation of Eligible Eight
To Highlight Annual Formal
BY RUTH ANN SANDSTEDT
"Turnabout is fair play" will be the rule Friday evening
for the Mortar Board ball, traditional turnabout dance,
starting at 9 p.m. in the coliseum.
Highlighting the ball will be the unusual presentation
of the eight eligible bachelors at 10:30 p.m. The eligible
Lundquist
To Address
Convo at 11
... In Stuart Theatre
The first in a series of annual
Sigma Tau convocations will fea
ture Dr. Eugene E. Lundquist to
day at 11 a.m. at the Stuart
theatre. Dr. Lundquist is the di
rector of research on aircraft
structures for the National Ad
visory committee for Aeronautics.
Prior to his appointment as di
rector of research for the NCAA
Dr. Lundquist was responsible for
considerable research in aeronau
tics and for his design and con
struction of wind tunnels for test
ing. He will address the assembly
on "The Graduate School of Ex
perience." The purpose of the
series of convocations is to ac
quaint students with outstanding
men in the engineering profession.
Dr. Lundquist is a Nebraska
Civil Engineering graduate, a
member of Sigma Tau, Pi Mu
Epsilon and Sigma Xi. He received
his Honorary Doctor's degree in
engineering from the University
of Nebraska in 1944 and the fol
lowing year was elected a fellow
of the Institute of Aeronautical
Sciences.
The NCAA is an independent
agency of the government and is
responsible directly to the Presi
dent and Congress. It was estab
lished in 1915 to supervise and
direct the scientific study of prob
lems of flight with a view to their
practical solution.
Union Party
To Feature
Talent Finals
The Union participants will
compete for cash prizes Saturday
night at 10 p.m. in the Union ball
room. The six finalists will appear
during intermission of the juke
box dance which starts at 8:30
that night.
The free entertainment event
has been set to begin aftef Satur
day's basketball game in the Coli
seum. Students have been urged
by Al Tully, chairman of the Tal
ent Bureau committee, to combine
the show and game in "an inex
pensive student night."
"Dri Nite" Club Featured
The ballroom Saturday will be
set up with the special features
of a "dri-nite" club, with in
dividual tables and special decor
ations. The six students selected by the
committee for the show are:
Henry Pederson, accordionist; Sue
Kent, blues singer; John McEvoy,
dramatic reader; Jane Simpson
and Mary Jane Lamb, tap dancers;
Eric Herman, cowboy ballad sing
er; and Mary Gaines and Neil At
kinson, pianists.
Although it was originally
planned that only five persons
should appear in the show, the
quality of the top six acts
prompted the committee to extend
the number participating for the
cash prizes.
eint were cnosen irom can-
didates in an all-coed election.
Music for the dance will be
provided by Gene Krupa and
his orchestra. Known as the
"king of drums," Krupa says that
his band, on many tunes, stresses
ballad work - and harmony. He
was among the first to say that
the era of blatent swing has
gone and bands should be fash
ioned to suit dancers. Among
Krupa's honors is his selection on
every au-Amencan swing or
chestra.
Tickets will be on sale at the
door. Spectator tickets are 50
cents and a section of the balcony
of the coliseum will be roped off
for spectators. Ticket takers will
remain at the door until the end
of the ball.
For the Mortar Board Ball,
coeds traditionally do the asking,
escorting, wining and dining. In
addition they present their dates
with corsages of their own design
Before the ball all members of
Mortar Board and their dates will
be the guests of A. Q. Shimmel
for dinner at the Cornhusker
hotel.
Rhodes
Finalists
Selected
Two Nebraska university stu
dents, Ted Sorensen and Eugene
Luschci, both of Lincoln, were
selected as Nebraska's Rhodes
Scholarship candidates late
Thursday.
They will compete in Des
Moines, la., Saturday with ten
other candidates from Iowa, Mis
souri, Kansas, South Dakota and
Minnesota. Four men will be
chosen and will be eligible for
minimum two-year scholarships
at Oxford university in England.
The scholarships at present
amount to about $2,000 per pear
and are granted on a two-year
basis. A third year . of study at
Oxford depends in part upon the
scholastic record attained there.
Sorensen and Luschei were
chosen from among seven Nebras
ka candidates.
The selections were made by
the Nebraska Rhodes Scholarship
Selection committee. Membership
of the committee includes Chan
cellor R .G. Gustavson.
Sorensen, 20 ,is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. C. A .Sorensen of Lin
coln. He is a second year student
in Law college and a member of
the university debate team.
Luschei, 20, is the son of Mrs.
Helen M .Luschei of Lincoln. He
formerly lived at Gering and took
two years at Nebraska Wesleyan
university before transferring to
the University of Nebraska. Lus
chei is now a senior in the Col
lege of Arts and Sciences.
Footballer Novak
Takes Surgery
Tom Novak, standout Corn
husker football player for the past
three seasons, was operated on
at Lincoln General Hospital Thurs
day morning.
Novak's left elbow has been
giving him trouble and doctors
found he had a bursitis condition.