The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 10, 1941, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Thursday, April 10, 19411
8
DAILY NEBRASKAN
x;X trifi Marion Cramer
LSii- 1 ; n
Wo more days tiff vacation
is the chant of the UN populace
as they throw things into a bag
and get ready to clear out for a
few days of fun and frolic, long
overdue and long awaited.
After inquiring the destination
of the rain-drenched lads and las
sies 1 have decided that travel
will be the thing in this five day
interlude which will clear the cam
pus of its usual searchers for
relaxation.
Sig Eps Clint Jurgenson and
Bob Kricac are looking forward
to Denver and all its charms. They
will watch fraternity brother
Robin Searle chuck for our Corn
huskers when they meet Colo
rado U.
Then there are several whose
vacation trippings tend to be of a
romantic nature. Kappa Suzy
Stone will do her dancing at Kem
per military academy for one of
their big parties with an extra
special fellow in Missouri. Though
Gamma Phi, Neda Mae Albrecht,
won't say, we strongly suspect
her reasons for going to Ft. Rob
inson in Arkansas might have
something to do with a soldier.
Pi Phi Jean Craig will travel west
this vacation instead of going east
to her home in Evanston. The
reason in this case is pretty tan
gible. Seems that Phil Grant lives
there. That new. steady affair be
tween ATO Jim Nikola and Kap
pa Mary Runyan must really be
progressing quickly. Mary will
spend her vacation with him in
Norfolk.
Pi Phi Betty McGeachin will
make a very important trip to
Chicago to see the lawyer whose
fraternity pin she wears. Rumor
has it that they will be married
early this summer. Cupid strikes
again.
Far away families
Cause some of the students to
cover a lot of territory. Pi Phi
Miriam Weller will fly to Cleve
land to spend her Easter at home.
AOPi Doris Voigt, sister of Max,
the ATO, will be in San Antonio
as his guest over the vacation. He
is now an instructor at Kelly field.
Convention
in Missouri will take the Sigma
Nus down Stephens way over this
vacation. The fellows are really
planning on having a good time
Frances Kcefer
ivrites on social
service staff
The last Intercollegian, official
national YW-YM magazine, con
tains an article by Frances Keefer,
local YW president on the work
of the local social service staff.
The social service staff was be
gun last fall for the first time
on this campus. The girls in the
social service staff work with the
two community centers in Lin
coln. Each girl volunteer spends an
hour a week leading children in
folk dancing, singing, games,
handicraft, story-telling or a
rhythm band.
Furnish own materials.
The girls furnish their own ma
terials for handicraft and games.
One of the workers gave her
group a Christmas party with re
freshments. Miss Keefer is the correspond
ing editor of the Intercollegian.
Another story about work on this
campus appeared in the Novem
ber issue. The Intercollegian is in
the library, the Union and at the
YW and YM offices.
Militzer writes
chemistry article
Walter Militzer of the chemis
try department wrote "Nuclear
Iodination of Aromatic Amines"
for the February issue of the Jour
nal of the American Chemical So
ciety with two graduate students,
Earle Smith and Evan Evans. Dr.
N. H. Cromwell has written "Al
pha and Beta Unsaturated Amino
Ketones IV. Mechanism Studies of
the Reaction of Secondary Amines
with Alpha, bromo-Alpha, Beta
Unsaturated Ketones" for the
March issue.
renewing acquaintances made
when the Stephens Susies came to
Nebraska.
Original Bachelors
club, which was formed several
years ago in Lincoln, will have a
big reunion this Monday night.
Funny thing about these six, Wil
lard Mertz and Avery Forke are
steady-goers who have their pins
out. Jack Stewart, Bob Sandberg,
and John Mason uphold the tra
dition, having been chosen "Eli
gible Bachelors." Nate Holman is
on the border line as he was
pinned to a Pi Phi last year
though he is a free lancer this
year.
That's al. for now, have a fun
vacation!
Varsity announces
winners of best
uni Jones contest.
Selection of most representative
University of Nebraska Jones by
the Varsity theater and by the
business and editorial heads of the
DAILY last night revealed War
ren Jones, the Jones with the high
est average; Mary Jean Jones and
Gordon Jones, co-candidates for
the tallest Jones, and Marion and
Marjorie Jones winners of both
the best twin combination and the
most beautiful Jones! The selec
tion was made as part of the Lin
coln premiere showing celebration
of "The Devil and Miss Jones."
The above winners will be
picked up at their homes in taxis
at 6 p. m. this evening, will be
entertained at a banquet at the
Cornhusker and escorted to the
Varsity theater for the show.
Visual education
prepares slides K
for departments
R. F. Morgan, director of the
visual education department, re
ferring to the increasing activity
of his department, stated that "we
are preparing to have equipment
and films suitable for the various
departments in the university to
supplement visual class work."
As the new program develops
there may be a plan for meeting
the needs of high schools and sec
ondary schools thruout the state,
Morgan pointed out.
The department is gradually
adding the most modern equip
ment for use in visual education
such as sound projectors and lan
tern slide equipment. 'The equip
ment field is developing so rapidly,
however, that not much equipment
is being purchased and installed,"
according to Morgan.
Paul Kader wins
honorable mention
in drawing contest
Three university architecture
students won awards on drawings
submitted to the Beaux-Arts In
stitute of Design contest held in
New York this year.
Paul Rader. senior, won an
award of mention for his problem
of a military camp, while Shirley
Russel and Mary Rokahr, juniors,
won hall-mention on their prob
lems of a movie star's dressing,
suite.
Three rankings are awarded by
the institute, honorable mention,
mention, and half-mention. Other
drawings are unranked.
Rader's drawing i3 being held
in New York, and will be sent
out with the other selected draw
ings on exhibition tours to various
universities all over the United
States.
No engineering courses
offered this summer
Except for the regular summer
session courses in surveying, there
will be no engineering courses of
fered. The investigation made by
the .Nation Advisory committee
proved it was inadvisable to con
tinue instruction during the summer.
Museum director
goes to New York;
finishes report
Dr. C. Bertrand Schultz, assist
ant director of the museum, is in
New York City for two weeks on
museum business. While there he
will complete a report for publica
tion on Nebraska oreodont fossils
which he has done in cooperation
with Dr. Charles H. Falkenbach,
field and research associate of the
Frick laboratory in the American
museum of natural history. He will
also make arrangements for the
meeting of the Society of Verte
brate Paleontologists at the uni
versity next summer, and show
movies of museum field expedi
tions to a number of groups in
cluding university alumni clubs.
Maxinc Copsey
wins Phi U room
contest award
Maxine Copsey, home economics
junior, was announced winner last
week of the room improvement
contest, sponsored by Phi Upsilon
Omicron, national home econom
ics honorary society. Honorable
mention was given to Winifred
White and Mildred Bauder.
Any home economics student in
terested was eligible to enter the
contest. Twenty girls competed,
representing eight different room3
and homes. A committee com
posed of six girls, Phi U members,
visited the rooms at intervals of
two or three weeks. Rooms were
judged on neatness, cleanliness,
and general arrangement.
Ida Schwieger was in charge of
this contest. Phi U is planning
another room improvement con
test for the latter half of this
semester. Definite plans have-not
yet been made.
Darlington helps
at Mississippi state
teach
ers
meeting
Meredith W. Darlington, as
sistant instructor in school admin
istration and WPA technician in
elementary education, is assisting
at a Mississippi state-wide confer
ence this week considering major
problems of education in that
state.
The Nebraska educator is par
ticipating in the conference as a
consultant on in-service training
of rural teachers. He has been ac
tive in developing such a training
program in Nebraska and will co
operate at Mississippi with Dr.
Earl Armstrong, specialist in In
service education on the staff of
the Commission on Teachers Edu
cation at Washington. Darlington'3
place on the conference program
was arranged by the Commission.
Dr. Worcester
to talk at psych
meeting in Ohio
Dr. D. A. Worcester, chairman
of the department of educational
psychology and measurements, and
several other members of the de
partment will attend meetings of
the Midwestern Psychological As
sociation at Ohio university in
Athens. April 11 and 12.
Dr. Worcester will present a
paper on "Differences Among Ex
aminers Using Stanford-Binet
tests with Subjects of Various Lev
els of Age Intelligence." Miss Le
ona Mae Failor will present "An
Evaluation of Intelligence Tests
Used in Industrial Schools and Re
formatories," and Dr. M. S. Hiskey
will present "A Non-verbal Test of
learning Aptitude for Young Deaf
Children." Dr. I. J. Montgomery
will give a paper on "A Survey of
the Social Opinions of Three Gen
erations." Also attending the meet
ings from the department will be
John Bath and James MacWorter,
graduate assistants.
Faculty members
judge musicals
Several members of the music
department faculty are serving as
critics and judges for spring mu
sic festivals and contests in Ne
braska and surrounding states.
Don Lentz was in Atkinson,
Neb., April 3 and 4, Earnest Har
rison was a judge for the Clay
county contest division held at
Sutton on April 4, and Mrs. Le
nore Van Kirk helped Judge the
Southern Nebraska music festival
in Tobias, also on April 4.
To inquisitive reporter ...
Elusive botany prof vaguely
discloses contents of exhibit
Prof. James J. Fitzpatrick of
the botany department doesn't
care very much for publicity in
the DAILY NEBRASKAN and
hesitates to talk with reporters
for information about his numer
ous collections.
According to Prof. Fitzpatrick
himself, the last DAILY reporter
to question him got thrown out of
Bessey hall herbarium of which
he is curator and where he spends
a lot of time. This DAILY re
porter got by with a verbal hoot
ing. Right now he has an exhibit al
most completed which he thinks
he will present before the Nebras
ka Academy of Science when it
meets in Lincoln during the first
part of May.
Asked about his collections,
Prof. Fitzpatrick answered, "Yes,
I do some collecting have a class
in the history of science, and
you've got to do this sort of thing.
Most unusual collection.
But one of the janitors at Bessey
swears that Fitzpatrick probably
has one of the most unusal sci
entific collections in the world.
The janitor said that at the be-
Ag departments
hold annual open
house Sunday
The third annual lamb and chick
"open house" will be held on ag
campus next Sunday from 1 until
4:30 p. m. The event in the past
two years has drawn upwards of
4,000 people.
More than 150 lambs will be
on exhibition that day in the sheep
barn on the northeastern part of
the campus. Included will be sev
eral sets of triplets as well as
many twin lambs.
Prof. M. A. Alexander of the
animal husbandry department 13
again in general charge of the
day's show. Prof. F. E. Mussehl
and his associates in the poultry
husbandry department together
with the poultry club is assisting
in preliminary plans.
The general public will be in
vited to attend the "open house."
1 ..N, 1
3
U D)
i
m
KJJ
, am
: I
1 1
. . . janitor adds detail
ginning of the year, Fitzpatrick'3
office on the second floor of
Bessey was so crammed with
magazines, newspapers and other
material that you couldn't get to
his desk.
After a few months, the pro
fessor had filed away enough of
the material so that there was a
path through the articles to his
desk, but there still was a lot of
papers waiting to be filed, accord
ing to the janitor.
"Collects everthing."
Altho most botany staff mem
bers take the janitor's description
with a grain of salt, it is common
knowledge that Prof. Fitzpartrick
collects everthing dealing with
science and that his extensive col
lections include every phase of
science.
A retired staff member, he only
teaches one class in the history of
science but spends much time with
his collections and in the herba
rium. In addition, he has lectured
to first year biology students on
rare scientific books of which he
also has a large collection.
Gilmore wins
Block and Bridle
service award 1
Keith Gilmore a senior in ag
college was awarded a plaque for
outstanding service to the Ne
braska chapter of Block and Bridle
club at that organization's meet
ing Tuesday evening.
The selection was made by fac
ulty members of the animal hus
bandry department at the college.
The national organization of Block
and Bridle offers the awards an
nually to outstanding animal hus
bandry students in each state.
Next fall, one of this group of
state winners will be selected for
national honors.
John Schick, junior, was elected
president of the chapter for the
coming year. Other new officers
are Orris Corman, vice president;
Frank Messersmith, secretary
treasurer; and Sam Nisley, ser-geant-at-arms.
ih (CI
SILK STOCKINGS
LASTING LOVELINESS
Mrs.
2.8S
00
Know the Joy of wearing 2, 3 and
4-thread crepe stockings by Sap
phire. Know also the pleasure you
will get out of wearing these
stockings with their smooth, "dull
alive" texture, their exquisite
sheerness, and their sturdy wear
ing qualities.
Sizes SVi-Wz
GOLD'S... Street FL.r.