The A1LY Official Student Newspaper of the. University of Nebraska Z-401. VOL. XXXI II, ISO. 66 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, KDNKSDAY. JAM1AKY I. 19.19 EBRASKAN Coward Acts Open Players 1939 Season Three Excerpts From 'Tonight ot 8:30' Billed for Jan. 10 Not one play but three one-act dramas written by Noel Coward make up the bill of fare to be pre sented by the University Players Tuesday, Jan. 10, in carrying their Nebraskan Views, Reviews Campus Events of 1938 (i -am Year's Headlines Pass Into History, Memory Unlike the rest of the world, students on the campus of the University passed the year of 1938 more or less peacefully. However, the 12 months did not slip by with out many unusual and usual inci dents, ocouring. In the following regimes of campus life during the year (with time out for vacations) we will attempt to bring you the outstanding incidents as they ap peared in the Rag . JANUARY Student Union op ening sot for March 1 A weath er report in the "Rag" read: Warmer In Bed. Sam Francis and Bernie Scherer, former N. U. grid stars return from ranks of pro-football. Once again the reg istration mill begins three day grind. Rag scoops papers of the country with printing of diary of a coed's stomach. Three local stores suffer credit disasters as phoney student nips them with fake identification card. Thirty two N. Y. A. students spend month scraping fossil bones in Museum. Sgt. Regler, campus cop, advises students to "watch the fellow in front of the fellow behind you when driving.'.' Exam schedules become literature of the moment. Sarah Louis Meyer, leading Ne braska columnist, Is felled by in eligibility scythe, manned by Dean of Student Affairs. Bruce Camp bell takes over her column spot with famous Chips. Awgwan re veals sex life of the Stork. Many disillusioned students are a re sult. First woman editor in 15 years heads Rag staff as Helen Pascoe takes over editorial du ties. FEBRUARY Birdhead, Ponca Indian chief visits campus. In ex clusive interview with a Rag re porter, answers "Uggh" to all question on European situation. Groundhog makes annual visit to campus, and warns students that spring will be delayed six weeks A sophomore Apollo in engi neering colloge makes campus news when he writes Mary Lane World Merald sobstress, for ad' vice on campus love life. Led by Coach Adams, the wrestling team downs an intoxicated rival. It all happened on a train trip home for the team when they met a drunk who wanted to fight. Rain soaked library book tells tale of woe to student body in Nebraskan article (Continued on Page 4) Lincoln Journal. NOEL COWARD. ..hit plays brilliant, biting. current season over into 1939. This marks the first attempt by the players to give a program of one net plays only and represents sev eral departures In stage design as well. The plays, "Ways and Means," "The Astonished Heart" and "Filmed Oak," are part of a vol ume of nine one-act plavs under the title, "Tonight at 8:30," writ ten by the biilliant and often brittle British playwright to help restore the short play to its "right fu pride." Technical Difficulties. Bemoaning the "fall from favor" of one-act dramas, Mr. Coward wrote the plays "especially," as an experiment "to provide a full and varied evening's entertainment for theat"r goers," as he himself says in a preface to the volume. The "triple bill," one up on the double feature, is not new but will pro vide an interesting experience for rampns playgoer.- Technical difficulties presented themselves when it was found that three stage sets, entirely different, would be necessary. To facilitate changing of the stage, and to cut down on the size of the several sets, Delford Brunner, stage de signer, employed "suggestive real ism," a technique in which the "flats" of scenery represent only the walls of the loom or whatever the setting, with even a hint of a ceiling. Teit Performances. Ret up against a black ryclo- rama which is nothing more or less than a big. black backdrop, and with the scene of action highly spotlighted in contrast to utter blackness beyond, the setting calls upon the audience to use their imagination to a greater extent thsn usual. The bare stage used by the Mercury theatre in their well known presentation of "Julius Caesar" embodies this same Idea to a greater degree to use as little scenery as possible. To test audience reaction, the players will perform in their triple bill Thursday at the reform school and Saturday at the Veterans' hos pital. In rehearsal since mid-December under the direction of Prof. Herbert Yenne, the several casts show promise of being In good form by Tuesday. Faculty Members Give Recital Misses Klinker, Morley Play Piano Wednesday Miss Marguerite Klinker, mem ler of the piano faculty, and Miss Frances Morley, an associate member of the music faculty, will present a two piano recital as a feature of the musical convoca tion Wednesday at 4 p. m. in Temple. This Is the second two piano program to be presented by (he school of music this semester. Because of the high itandard of their former recitals, one of the large audiences of the season Is anticipated. The two Lincoln ar tists will play a program of nine numbers, including an Interesting . collection from both the classical and the modern schools. Both are graduates of the Uni versity o' Nebraska school of music ar ' both have taken work with some of the leading artists. Miss Morley Is also an accom plished flutist. Their program, open to the public, is as follows: I. ltlvllla, 1 Julllfl, Cnuidin. Kri hi and Kukuc, In A minor, IA-h-Hfcur. The Fulmntd Fountain. Arnold Pax. Inc at Mldnhl iHumUi, Daua fcuiriw. le, Poulenr-KIJnker. anationi on a French Kulkiong, M'ruerlte Klinker. Trari Op. .1, ftn. 3, Tarantella Op. 17, No. 4, S. RarhmanlnofC. Dorm Bids Due Friday Proposals for General Contract Let Jan. 6 Bids on the general contract for the two new dormitory units to be erected north of Carrie Belle Ray mond are due Friday at 2 o'clock according to the dormitory com mittee. Following the setting in of the deadline for the accepting of con tracts, the proposals will be pub licly opened and read aloud. The two units will be joined completely on the first floor and basement and the rear units will ne aitacned to the dining room wing of the present dormitory, Raymond hall. The second and third floors of the new units will be entirely separate. The front division of the new structure will house 96 girls and the rear unit will have rooms for 112. The first floor of each unit will hold the office of the house di rector, her living rooms and bed room suite beside private rooms for 24 girls. Each will have com plete equipment In the basement for study rooms, recreation rooms, laundry, shampoo and storage rooms. The architecture of the new building will be the same style as that of Carrie Belle Raymond. Engineer Group Honors DeBaufre N. U. Professor Gains National Recognition In recognition of his many re searches in the field of heat trans fer. Prof. William L. DeBaufre, chairman of the department of en gineering mechanics, has received notice of his appointment to mem bership on the committee on pa pers of the professional division on heat transfer of the American Society of Mechanical Kngineers. Professor DeBaufre has pub lished a number of papers dealing with his research. He is also a member of the sub-committee on heat transfer by radiation of the national research council. At the present time he teaches a course on flow of fluids and heat which is based on a significant amount of information resulting from his years of research In the field. Dr. Patterson to Lead Biblical Oddity Study Dr. Charles Patterson of the philosophy department will lead a series of discussions on the oddi ties found in the teachings of the Bible, beginning Sunday evening a t Westminster Presbyterian church. Ths discussions are part of a fellowship progTam for university students sponsored by the church, and will begin each Sunday at 7:30 following a supper and worship service. Union Opens PhotoContest Cash Prizes Offered For Best Snapshots A rash prize photograph con test enabling enthusiasts to turn their fun into money will start to day, according to an announce ment made yesterday by Mrs. Ylnger, social director of the Union. The purpose of the con test is to obtain illustrations for a booklet dealing with the Union and its activities which will be published in the spring. Two grand prizes of $7.50 each will be awarded to the students submitting the best interior and the best exterior shots of the building. Smaller prizes of $2.00 will be awarded to the students submitting the best pictures of the ballroom and of each of the rooms on the first floor. Interior shots should Illustrate some phase of stu dent activity. All pictures submitted will be judgd on the basis of their photographic excellence and their adaptability to use in the book let. According to the rules of the contest all prints submitted must be at least 3 by 5 inches. The contest will close at noon on Wednesday, Jan. IS. All pictures submitted will be placed on exhibition in the Union. After the contest all of the pic tures will become the property of the Union. No contestant may win more than $9.50. The booklet which Is to be dis tributed to freshmen and prospec tive students will deal with the history, services, functions, poli cies, and social life of the Union. Internotionol Relations Club to Meet Thursday Thursday's meeting of the In temational Relations club will fea ture a discussion of the recent Lima conference, following the usual 6 o'clock supper in the Grand hotel. An invitation to attend the eve ning meeting has lieen extended to undcrraduutes by members of the organization who feel that the students in the university are not taking enough interest in inter national affairs and want to wel come them Into the group. Those wishing to attend the dis cussion are not required to be pi'esent at the supper, but may come about 6:30 o'clock. Fred Evans is chairman for the meeting. Negro Youth Plan Series Of Forums Atlanta Sociologist To Lecture at First Session February 18 Dr. W. K. B. DuBois, noted Ne gro author and lecturer, will de liver a lecture in Lincoln, Feb. 15, under the auspices of the Lincoln Young People's Forum, local Ne gro youth organization. Dr. Du Bois, who is head of the Depart ment of Sociology at Atlanta tint verslly, will speak on "Democ racy," Dr. DuBois is the first of a num ber of nationally known speakers to be brought to Lincoln by the Young People's Forum. The Forum was organized in September of 1937 by a group of stuuenis from the different col leges, universities, and high schools as well as laymen of the three Negro churches in Lincoln The purpose of the organization is to provide means whereby there can be clearer interpretation and better insight into the trends of contemporary thought and the shifting standards of ethics and educational . problems. To Offer Scholarships. Another primary aim of the or ganization is to create a scholar ship fund for the sole purpose of aiding Negro students in their ef fort to educate themselves in the universities and colleges through out Nebraska by providing schol arships. The group Is sponsored by the Newman Methodist Episco pal church and has as its advisor Mr. G. B, Evans, chairman of the board of trustees of the Newman church. The talk by Dr. DuBois will be given at 8:15. Feb. 15, at the St. Paul Methodist Episcopal church. Admission will be 50 cents and tickets are available at the Alumni and Union offices. Unicameral Faces Two Recommendations Vital To Nebraska U's Status White Gives Debate Plans Collective Action For Democracies Is Subject Debate plans for the second semester were announced this week by Prof. H. A. White, debate coach. Subject will be, "Resolved, that collective action on the part of world democracies is necessary to guarantee their survival." Stu dents are eligible to try out for the team who have the rank of sopho more or above. Tentative plans call for trips to Colorado and Chicago sometime during early spring. The Univer sity of South Dakota and several Kansas schools are already sche duled on this second-semester pro gram to discuss the above ques tion. On Jan. 11 the University team will take the affirmative side in a contest with the University of California, while in February Ne braska and Hastings college de baters will stage several debates In various communities. Creighton meets Nebraska Feb. 16 in Omaha, one of the programs arranged at the request of the Omaha Association of Credit Men. The debate will center around the question, Resolved, that the United States should cease giving money to stimulate business. Orchesis to Rehearse Tonight at Seven Orchesis will hold its regular business meeting this evening at 7 o'clock in the dance studio. All members including the new mem bers must be present. Legislators to Consider Ten Year Construction Plan, University Budget Faced by two recommendations vital to the university, the second session of Nebraska's unicameral got under way at noon yesterday. First of these is a ten year state building program calling for the expenditure of approximately $460,000 a year presented by the state planning board headed' by A. C. Tllley. Ninth on the 35-project list of needed repairs, replacements, new additions, and new buildings at va rious state institutions, is the uni versity library. As proposed, the structure would cost $800,000. Propose Budget Increase. A $275,000 building at the uni versity medical college in Omaha Is listed twelfth. In 13th place is a $600,000 engineering building on the Lincoln campus. Ranking above university proj ects arc expenditure-proposals pro viding for equipment, remodeling, replacements and repairs for eight other state institutions. Second of the recommendations is that of University Chancellor C. S. Boucher and the board of regents providing for an increase of $344,663 in the school's budget for the coming two years. Fear for Uni Status. Fearing for the national status of the university, the chancellor and the regents based their re quest upon the needs for: 1. Additional instructors needed to reduce the number ot classes in which enrollments are too large for effective teaching, and to meet the demands for broader offerings in some fields. 2. Small salary increases to some of the best faculty mem bers. 3. Funds for readjustments in some departments, necessary to improve the quality of instruc tion. 4. Laboratory and classroom equipment and books for the university library. 5. Funds with which to pay necessarily increased cost of heating, light, and janitor service. 6. Staff increases and the providing of additional facilities required for ths nursing, social work, and music schools. 7. Coordination of adminis trative departments so that they can function with a greater effi ciency and effectiveness. 8. A bureau of instructional research which will subject the entire educational program to a job-analysis comparable to that employed by commercial and industrial firms for the at tainment of efficiency and econ omy. Of the present status of the school, the regents had this to say: "During the Inst three bienniums. our actual standing and our rela tive standing have been lowered among leading universities. Regents State Reasons. "This has been due to the lark of merely adequate, not luxurious, housing for several important parts of our program: lo the lark of necessary equipment; to the lack of library reference hooks; to the lack of sufficient instructional staffs in some colleges; to the loss of Fome of our best faculty mem bers to institutions able to pay higher salaries and offer facilities for teaching and research; and to our inability to attract faculty members of distinction equal to those lost, or men for new posi tions equal in caliber to those who i V - 1 i - t w I J it? . i leXi A '. JfJ LJ Lincoln Journal. CHANCELLOR C. S. BOUCHER ....appoints research heads. Sgi' -jjf i. . i I Lincoln Journal. DR. C. H. OLDFATHER. ....announces committees. . W. Wallace to Visit N. U. Engineers Plan Fete for Chicago Expert L. W, Wallace, director of the division of engineering and re s.Mch of Crane company, Chicago, and vice president of the Amer ican Association Mechanical Engi neers, will be on the campus Jan. IS to meet members of the faculty and students, and to address the group that evening in Mechanical engineering 206. Wallace is also senior councilor for the Student branch of the A. S. M. E. for rep ion six. Prof. N. H. Barnard of the me chanical engineering faculty, who is in rharce of arrangements, an nounced that a dinner for Wal lace and officers of the Nebraska association will be held in the Un ion preceding the evening address. Engineers from over the state and others interested are invited to hear Wallace speak. The Chicago engineer has had a v,ilc range of experience both as a teacher and as a practicing engineer. He was on Hie faculty for a time at Purdue university won for th? university its place of ""d later was director of the en- distincuon. (Continued on Page 4) Legislators Take Seats at Unicameral Opening ' . ' - r - r V : - ' f , ' 0 a: 0 j The 1939 version of Nebraska's second unicameral legislature set tled to Its seat ten minutes after noon Tuesday ready to sit tight and ride thru what is predicted will be a stormy, yet short, 53rd session. Several hours later, th presum ably non-partisan body, yet report edly composed of a majority of re publicans, choss Senator W. H. Dlers of Greeham, a democrat, for Its speaker, Dlers' opponents, both republicans, were Dr. A. I Miller of Kimball and Edwin Schultz of Elgin. Smoke, both political and tobac so, began filling: the legislative chambers early Tuesday morning as a horde of Job hunters and the truck drivers Invaded the ten mil lion dollar capltol building to make their wants known. Persons aspiring; to any legislative political plum from Serjeant at arms to page boy were on hand to do their bit of private lobbying before con vention time occurred. Truck strikers from Omaha and Lincoln and carrying various signs and placards marched around the capjtol lot, thru the halls, and up 1 oorrldors asking that the anti- dieting law be repealed. In another luxurious, quiet room, far away from ) drone of the legis lative opening, the Nebraska su preme court was holding hearings on the constitutionality of the law. The newness of unicameralism somewhat dulled, the session lacked the spark of promptnoss and forethought as Lieut. Gov. Nate Parsons pounded the gavel for assembly. Behind the expensive marble pil lars sat John P. Sinning, political science professor and one of the fathers of the one house system, chatting quietly with Charles War ner, defeated gubernatorial candi date and speaker ot the first uni cameral assembly two years ago. On the other side of the floor sat H. A. Ftter, who is contesting the Lincoln Journal, election of John Adams of the Fifth district. Near the rear of the room sat Harry Swanson. secre tary of state, whose signature on a list of certified elected members was later needed and held the Ig Islatre to inactivity for 45 minutes. Rev. M. V. Oggel of Westmin ister Presbyterian church opened with a prayer asking that "our chosen representatives vote their convictions not the emotions of the unthinking mob.'' Dr. Boucher Appoints Four Sub-Committee Heads in Uni Research Dean of Student Affairs T. J. Thompson, Physics Department Chairman H. H, Marvin, Dr. J. P. Guilford of the phsychology de partnient, and Dr. D. A. Wor fester, chairman of the depart ment of educational psychology and measurements, were recently named sub-committee chairmen in charge of specific university re sea reh projects. Appointed by Chancellor C. C, Boucher in compliance with the plans laid down by the university committee on instructional policies and practices, their names were announced by Dr. C. H. Oldfather, dean of the college of arts and sciences and chairman of the policies commission, Boucher Backs Plan. Tlie sub-committees which the four will head are; Curriculum, university division, student guid ance, and instruction. The subjects which these com mittees will study have already been the object of research by the individual colleges. In his initial address before the faculty, Chan cellor Boucher emphasized the need for a permanent committee which would guide research In the field of instructional policies and practices. The current program of research Is the result of the ap pointment of such a committee. Study Division System, Heretofore, student guidance has been performed more or less by the various colleges. The sub committee on guidance, headed by Dr. Guilford, will study this problem with an eye to co-ordinating the entire guidance and per sonnel setup with specific em phasis on pre-university counsel. Included will be an analysis of the university's entrance testing pro gram. It will be the duty of Dr. Wor cester's committee on instruction to study present teaching methods. This group will strive to evaluate procedures in use, investigate the efficiency of the present grading system, and study the relative sizes of various classes. Of most immediate interest Is the project of university division, now in the hands of Dr. Marvin's committee. This group will In vestigate the practicability of a one year lower division system similar to that now in use at Yale and Ohio universities. Improves Frosh Instruction. Such a lower division plan keeps all freshmen together during their first year of university work. In this way, it eases their introduc tion to college and facilitates the transition from high school to university. Such a plan also im proves the instruction of first year students and facilitates vocational advice. Such a plan need not imply any changes in the present first year curriculum of the various colleges. Freshmen would pursue essentially the same courses of study, altho they would be kept as a unit and not be considered as belonging to engineering, pharmary, or arts college as they now are. All fresh men would be given aptitude tests from time to time. To determine whether or not they are qualified to enter the professional colleges. Aptitude Tests. Only those students whose tests showed favorable aptitudes and whose scholastic averages were sufficiently high would be advised to enter the various colleges with the beginning of the second year. In this way, students would be In a better position to find out in their first year, not their third, whether or not they can hope U be successful in a particular pro fession. Among the other projects to be considered by Dean Oldfather's committee are ways to accelerate and improve the teaching of su perior students, the overlapping and duplication of courses, the problem of making classes smaller, and the number of courses now offered by the vari ous departments. Union Bookplate Designs Due Soon Award of $5 Goes To Winning Entry With only three days remaining before the deadline in the Union bookplate contest, all contestants are urged to turn In their entries as soon as possible in order to fa cilitate judging. The winning do sign is to be used to identify tne books belonging to the Union browsing room. A prise of $5 worth of books Is being offered to the successful de signer. All students are eligible to compete. Only requirement In the contest Is that all plates In clude these phrases or their equivalent; "Student Union Li brary. University of Nebraska, donated by J. C. Seaccjit." Deadline for the contest ha been set for Friday by the Union library committee. The winning bookplate will be placed in the front of all of the books purchased for the "Book Nook" with the $1,000 donated to the Union by Mr. Seaerest for the purpose ef buying books.