The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 06, 1949, Image 1

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    7
Li . Li
Revere Ride,
Dinner Head
Drive Plans
A starvation banquet at the
Union yesterday successfully
opened the All University Fund
drive.
Today approximately 15 car
loads of AUF solicitors will ride
from the Mall through principal
campus streets. This Paul Revere
ride will serve to distribute
pamphlets which advertise the
drive. Visits will be made at all
organized bouses.
A 50c TICKET, purchased at
the Starvation banquet, was good
for a cookie and a cup of coffee.
Proceeds were added to other
AUF contributions. The meal was
served between 4:45 and 7 p. m.
in Parlors XYZ of the Union.
Kosmet Klub, with $100, and
Coi n Cubs, with $50, led the list
of organizations making contribu
tions by Saturday noon. At that
time faculty donations totaled
$105. The drive will continue
through Feb. 11.
Peggy Lawrie is head of the
AUF planning committee which
also includes, Ted Gunderson,
head solicitor; Jo Lisher, unor
ganized students solicitor: La
verna Acker, ag solicitor; Fritz
Simpson, publicity director; Neil
Atkinson, assistant publicity di
rector; Mary Helen Mallory, cler
ical; Joel Bailey, special events;
Jane Traphagen, art chairman; Al
Short, YMCA representative; Ar
dith Tilly, YVVCA representative;
and Belly Bloss, treasurer.
APPROXIMATELY 300 stu
dents solicitors will canvas all
University campuses during the
next week. Proceeds from the
diive will go to the World Stu
dent Service Fund, United Negro
College fund, Community Chest
and USO.
Contributions to individual
funds are combined in AUF, the
only drive of this nature to be
conducted this year. It replaces
the usual two campaigns. For this
reason, final receipts are expected
to exceed ' last year's record
breaking total.
Locffcl Tells Dale
For Feeders' Day
Prof. Wm. J. Loeffel, chairman
of the Animal Husbandry depart
ment, has announced Friday, April
22, as the date of the annual Feed
ers' Day at Ag college.
The meeting, sponsored jointly
by the AH department and the
Nebraska Livestock Breeders and
Feeders association, will include
reports on livestock experimental
work.
Evans Wins Author's League
Award for Poetry Contributions
National recognition "for cre
ative contribution to American
poetry" has come to Oliver Evans,
instructor in the English depart
ment at the University.
The Authors' League of Amei
ica has awarded $1,000 to Evans
for his poems, which have been
published in over fifty magazines,
including Harper's and Yale Re
view. He was recommended for
the grant by Tennessee Williams,
author of "Streetcar Named De
sire," and "Glass Menagerie." The
committee of selection included
John P. Marquand, Maxwell An
derson, author of "Winterset," Os
car Hammerstein II, Elmer Rice,
Bernard DeVoto and Glenvvay
Wescott.
IN DECEMBER Evans was
awarded $100 by the American
Literary association for the best
unpublished poem on the Ameri
can scene. His poem, "Honor
Roll," should have special mean
ing to college students.
Honor Roll
Ackennan to Zavala: the list
is finished,
Hangs in the hall where
males once more nr. zander
With only books for arms
against the foe
That frames their feckless fel-
Cagers Maintain
Sunday, Feb. 6, 1949
Arthaud Named
Ag District Agent
Acting Director H. G. Gould
of the Extension service has an
nounced the appointment of a dis
trict agent in the Agricultural Ex
tension service's balanced farm
ing and family living program.
She is Miss Agnes Arthaud, home
demonstration .agent in Fillmore
county.
Miss Arthaud will continue to
assist in the Fillmore county home
demonstration program until her
successor has been named.
NU to Compete
In '49 National
BridgcTourney
An invitation has been received
by the University to compete in
the 1949 National Intercollegiate
Bridge tournament, along with
174 other colleges and universities
across the nation.
During the past two months
three series of preliminary rounds
have been played to select the
four high teams for this contest.
Top ranking players so far are
teams: Barrett and Nordgren;
Longman and Terry Atkinson and
McDermott; Smith and Gotschel.
Only undergraduates are eligible
to play in the duplicate Contract
Bridge event for the title and
silver trophy.
The preliminary round, spon
sored by the Union, will begin
Feb. 23. This round is played by
mail in each individual school,
and the 16 highest ranking pairs
will meet for the face-to-face
finals on April 22 and 23 at the
Drake hotel in Chicago, where
the players will be guests of the
Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament
committee.
To insure representation of all
parts of the country in the finals
the country is divided into eight
zones, with two pairs from each
zone qualifying for the finals. Ne
braska is included in the West
ern Zone, made up of 25 schools,
including North and South Dakota
schools; the University of Colo-
. lows on the wall.
(A sheepskin not exactly bar
gained for,
But summa cum, supremely.)
Talk is all
Of grades and Grable, func
tions and football.
The list's forgotten, but does
not forget.
Behind the profound glass the
nostalgic names,
Grim graduate-guardians of
the senseless scene,
Shrewder than coaches,
deeper than the Dean,
Observe their freshmen with
a filial fear,
Would speak to them, if only
they would hear.
O listen to (he list, the list is
long:,
The list is wise (for books are
not enough)
The list is kind, the list may
save us yet!
"This list we leave you, let it
be the last,
Or else our death's a crime,
and you're to blame.
Your peace is our deathright,
your war our shame.
Consult your consciences! Be
stone, refuse
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
I r:, :: . ''' V--
) . ('. . '
ANTON LAWRY. Husker forward, aims a left hook at opponent
Carr Beseman at a high point in Saturday's game with Colorado.
The action took place in the final minute of the game near the
Colorado basket and precipitated a near riot on the Coliseum
floor. The Huskers were fortunate enough to eke out a 45-43
decision for their fourth straight conference win on their home,
floor. While both teams sunk 14 field goals apiece, Nebraska
dropped 17 charity shots to the Buffs' 15 for the margin of vic
tory. (Daily Nebraskan photo by Bill Poe.)
rado; Colorado School of Mines;
Stanford; Montana State Univer
sity; Universities of Denver, Ore
gon, Washington, New Mexico,
and many others.
The entire nation is being rep
resentcd in the preliminary
rounds-by-mail by forty-five
states and the District of Colum
bia. In each school a local bridge
instructor has charge of the
tournament, which is sponsored
by a group of college alumni and
officials interested in developing
Contract Bridge as an intercol
legiate sport in which men and
women can compete on an equal
basis.
Local tournaments are under the
directorship of Dale Ball, and are
sponsored by the Union Competi
tive Games committee.
The genial lie, and recognize
the truth
In what is rated error for a
ruse.
The weather's worrisome:
outside this hall
The trees are trembling,
waiting on the wind
That lops their limbs and
makes the young fruit fall."
EVANS began to write poetry
while a student at Louisiana
State University. After receiving
his B.A. in 1935 he went to Italy
on an exchange fellowship and
studied Italian literature at Royal
University, Milan. The following
year he taught English at Athens
college in Greece and attended the
summer session at Oxford Uni
versity. Returning to the United
States in the fall of 1937, he
worked on his M.A. at the Uni
versity of Tennessee. After re
ceiving it in 1940 he began study
for his Ph.D. at Ohio State and
Vanderbilt.
Evans spent two years in the
Air Corps and after his discharge
did free-lance writing in New
York City for a year. Now in his
second year at the University, he
teaches sophomore English, Amer
ican literature and advanced com
position.
Big 7 Leadership
Vol. 49 No. 81
Kosmet Klub
Gives Colleges
Library Fund
Each of the ten colleges of the
university will receive $100 to
buy periodicals and books
through a donation made by the
Kosmet Klub, according to an
announcement from President
Norbert Tiemann following their
meeting.
Letters have been sent to the
dean of each college asking them
to choose a list of books, periodi
cals or other material that can
be placed in the library to be used
as reference material in that col
lege. The Kosmet Klub will pur
chase the desired publications and
see that they are placed in Love
Library for use.
Prof. E. L. Schramm, faculty
adviser of the Kosmet Klub, is in
charge of arrangements. The
money to be used for the entire
$1,000 donation will be taken from
the general Kosmet Klub fund.
Last year the Kosmet Klub gave
$50u to the Love Memorial library
for use of purchasing books and
periodicals for general use in the
library. This year it was decided
to give equally to each college so
that reference materials could be
obtained for all colleges rather
than for general use.
Kosmet Klub also has donated
money from their fund to the
Red Cross, AUF and other campus
organizations and charities.
ME Sociely Adds
21 New Members
Pi Tau Sigma, national honor
ary mechanical engineering so
ciety, named 24 new members
Friday from the juniors and sen
iors majoring in mechanical en
gineering who showed marked
ability and outstanding scholastic
records.
New members are:
David Adams
Jt:iy FJellows
Panicl Jones
John Kuser
Franels Marks
Ponald Maser
Charles Moser
Russell Perlenfein
John Peterson
I.eonard Potash
Harold Ralston
Vernon Robeson
Fred Sanbonul
John Westcott.
James Huxton
Robert Cnsari
Wilbur Pecker
Kir-hard Pudek
William Kaston
Oforne Krvin
Robert Krnna
;ernld Halter
Alson Hariri
Don Hodder
Ruffs Topple
By 45 to 43
In Hectic Tilt
BY CUB CLEM.
MuiiukIiik Kditor.
The Marquis of Queensbury
rules were the law at the Coliseum
Saturday night as the Cornhusker
cagers eked out a 45-43 victory
over a tougn
The final score
does not begin
to tell the real
story of the
rough and tum
ble game.
In the final
minute, as an
incensed Buf
falo team was
scrapping for
possession o f
the ball, Carr
Lincoln Journal
Lawry
Beseman, rugged Colorado center,
and Anton Lawry began swinging
fists under the Buff basket. Inside
of two seconds the playing floor
was crowded with players, offi
cials, students and two lone police
men engaged in a reasonable fac
simile of a gang war.
QUICK ACTION by cooler per
sons, especially Colorado coach
"Frosty" Cox and Husker trainer
Buck Barger, soon brought the
crowd under order. Even with this
temporary lull, it took a full five
minutes to run off the final
minute of the game. Before the
final gun sounded, the busy ref
erees called five technical fouls
and disqualified two players,
Beseman and Lawry, from the
game.
Aside from the fisticuffs and
the usual excitement of a close
contest, the game held little in
terest for the fans. Nebraska's
passing game was off, and their
shooting was generally wild. The
teams scored only 14 field goals
apiece.
The victory was the Scarlet's
seventh in a row and their fourth
conference win against no losses.
They remain at the top of the Big
Seven basketball heap.
COLORADO GOT off to a 5-2
lead, and then were tied at six
all before Nebraska went ahead
11-3. A sudden spurt, led by Bob
Rolander put the Buffs back into
a commanding leadat 22-14.
Claude Retherford paced a
Husker rally which set the half
time margin at 25 all.
The game resumed its give and
take ways after the intermission.
When Rolander, the best man on
Cont. on page 3.
Exams Offered
For Federal
Science Jobs
An examination to fill positions
in various Federal agencies has
been announced by the U. S. Civil
Service commission. The jobs,
paying an annual salary from
$2,152 to $3,727, all fall in the
physical science aid and biological
aid departments in Washington,
D. C. and vicinity.
To qualify, applicants must pass
a written test and, except for the
lowest salary level, must have had
additional experience in either
physical or biological science. Ap
propriate college study may be
substituted for the required ex
perience. Age limits for the positions,
waived for persons entitled to vet
eran preference, are 18 to 62
years.
For detailed information on this
examination, interested parties
should see announcement No. 154
in either their placement office or
at any first or second class post
office. Application forms may be
obtained from these post offices,
from Civil Service regional offices,
or from the U. S. Civil Service
commision, Washington 25, D. C.
Applications for the physical
science and biological aid examin
ation must be on file not later
f Vi; i
than Feb. 24, 1949.