The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 02, 1942, Image 1

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Vol.l.No.4
Lincoln Nebraska.
Thursday, July 2, 1942
MusicStudentsPresentFinalConcert
Union Holds Men 's
Annual Steak Fry
i Staged annually during the university summer school, the
all university men's steak fry will be sponsored by the Union
next Thursday, July 9, at Pioneers park.
Plenty to eat and lots of fun beforehand is the the idea
of the picnic. Starting at 4 or 5 p. m., the men will play base-
ball, volley ball, and horseshoes, then win lui up on sieaics,
potato chips, pickles, buns, ice cream and the like.
The steaks will be cooked over a huge grill, which ean hold
60 at once, under the direction of Allen Lichtenberge, ar? old
steak fryer from way back.
Includes Program.
Following the meal a nrofrram. wil be given, and men will
$ J participate in a community sing
Last year zw stuaenw attenaea mm um umTciaifcjr "iuu.vi
school tradition which is excius-
' Ively and especially for the mas
culine members of the student
u body.
M Committees for the steak fry
include: tickets, J. R. Wlnkel,
Norman Thorpe, Leo Black, and
Ed Lof; steak-frying, Allan Burk
hardt, and program, Walter Beggs,
chairman, E. L. Novctny.
t Tickets for the event are 50
cents apiece and may be ob
tained from the Union office
Monday and at teachers college
and social sciences on Tuesday
to Thursday noon. Deadline for
securing tickets is 1 p. m. Thurs-
day.
Lincoln Alumni
1 Collect Plants
For UN Campus
A list of trees end shrubs need
ed in the campus beautification
program has been distributed to
members of the Lincoln Alumni
club and officers and clubs thruout
the country.
Reporter Finds .
Students Take Various
Articles to Morrill Hall
Morrill hall is a great and won
drous place. Its fame is known far
and wide but just what the h
would you do if you were to be
J marooned within its spacious wans
i for a month? Leonard Dunker,
magnificent mighty one, calmly
. . grunted to us, "Why, it would
just ruin my morals." And my
f rans if to be locked up in Morrill
hall would corrupt the moralsaof
Dunker, what would it do to you?
To find out the glorious truth,
we approached one star-lit night
a certain Mr. Barney Cavitt, a
senior in dentistry and a charm
ing young gent at that. What
would you take with you we
ask him. "My wife," he instant
ly snap out. No harm done, we
mutter, we just thought we
would ask. Barney counts on
just prowling and browsing for
a while and then with his own
little equipment, he is going to
put all of the elephants' tusks
in order. All very commendable
we think and a delightful way
to 6pend a month, maybe even
two months.
A Sweet Man!
Sweet (?) Bill Florey, young
gent behind the Union check stand
is going to take pretzels, steak,
I french fries, and a case of beer,
guess I'll have to burn up a
j few of their fossils for fire," he
J grins. (I had to call him sweet,
j people, considering that he cor-
railed more man nan or my vic
tims for the column but tnen
there could be some truth in it)
A charming trio (Maybe we
could even call them hot) sat
(V steaks and spuds. Dorothy Jor
I dan, Ruth McClymont, Jean
Murray. The three damsels plan
on telling little moron stories
for amusement after they are
and hear a very brief talk.
Board Names
Eugene Lloyd
YM Secretary
Eugene H. Floyd of Hamline
University in St Paul, Minn., was
appointed secretary of the Uni
versity YMCA according to an an
nouncement Tuesday morning by
D. C. H. Patterson, chairman of
the group's advisory board.
Floyd, who is 32 years old,
will assume his duties Sept 1.
to succeed C. D. Hayes, who is
retiring after 16 years as secre
tary. Flody's appointment was ap
proved by the board of directors of
the Lincoln YMCA of which the
university division is a branch.
The new secretary has been
serving as director of placement,
manager of the a cappella choir,
and general student counselor
at Hamline. He was graduated
(See SECRETARY, Page 3.)
1 Stranded a Month
tired of listening to their "solid
jive." "We like to be alone,"
moans Dorothy, brown-eyed
lovely. "No one understands us.
(See HALL, Page 3.)
5
Summer
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Practicing on the University Summer Theatre's first production "Outward Bound" in
the afternoons and spending evenings on their last play, "The Importance of Being Earnest,"
Joe Zimmerman, new director
"Outward Bound" will be
Metz in the lead. In the picture above taken during rehearsal
Ronald Metz, Komulo Soldevilla, Kurt Forjes, Phyllis Overman, Gwen Guest, Leonard Lutt
beg and Mr. Zimmerman.
Classes Meet
Hainan-hour
Later in Fall
Approved at a meeting of the
administrative council of the uni
versity this week, classes at UN
will start at 8:30 a. m. instead
of 8 next fall.
The new schedule was recom
mended for the first semester of
the coming school year, and it
will mean that all classes will
begin 30 minutes later than has
been customary. Morning classes
will run till 12:20 p. m. and
afternoon classes will take up
at 1:30 Instead of at 1 o'clock.
The administrative council acted
upon a recommendation by a spe
cial committee named by Chan
cellor C. S. Boucher to study
schedule changes that would help
alleviate the rush hour problem
of bus and street car services.
Headed by Dean C. H. Old
father, the committee consulted
Lincoln Chamber of Commerce
officials and others before sug
gesting the change in class
schedule.
No Kidding-
The Yearbook
Is Finally Out
To the amazement of the hun
dreds of students who purchased
their yearbooks way back last
year sometime, the Cornhusker fi
nally came out, unexpectedly pre
senting itself on Monday Monday
at 1 p. m. to be exact two days
after the supposedly final dead
line.
Containing 378 pages, the
book presented its 13 different
sections in the promised "six de
licious colors," and the makeup
showed something new in the
way of arrangement. Photo
graphs and writeups presented
the life of a Cornhusker in a
very interesting, fashion. It
showed, as the introduction says:
"September, 1941, began what
seemed to most students another
typical school year... By Novem
ber, everyone realized that things
were going to be different This
Cornhusker records the spirit of
'42 for seniors graduating with
an uncertain future ahead of
them, and for underclassmen faced
with one, two or three years of
(See BOOK, Page 2.)
Theatre
4 to
of the theatre has really had his
presented July 11, one week
n n n n
inJoiJQi y iraD(0)uiia
amiqiuieft
To end their tliree weeks of
high sehool music course students
sent their final concert tonight
One hundred and four students will participate in the
program, beginning at 7 p. m. in the ballroom, and numbers
will be played by the chorus, orchestra, and band under the
direction of various members of the school of music faculty
and guests.
Using "American Youth Symphony No. 3" as its theme
since this is the third summer for the all-state high sehool music
course the banquet will be hold in parlors ABC. Norman Leger
will be toastmaster "Commentator for the event and Dr.
A. E. Westbrook, director of the school of music will be con
ductor and critic.
Patricia Lalir
Reviews Novel
By Frenchman
Captain Antonie de Saint Exu-
pcry's best seller, "Flight to Ar
ras ' will be featured on today s
book review when Patricia Lahr,
assistant director of the Union,
presents the review today at 5
p. m. in the Union book nook.
Next week, on July 9, she will
review Austin Tappan Wright's
"Islandia." A new novel, "Is
landia" is the only work of
Wright and a posthumous publi
cation. A professor at the University of
Pennsylvania, Wright left some
5,000 hand-written pages for the
novel about a never-never land, a
sub-continent similar to Australia,
where the civilization is still in a
semi-feudal state.
Opus 2, Number 1.
There have come to light re
cently several cases of newly ar
rived soldiers having a desire to
hear good music and being some
what at a loss on how to satisfy
that desire. Out of the hundreds
here and the hundreds yet to come
Practices
hands full this summer.
from this Saturday, with Ronald
arc, right to left, Bob Black,
Dream and Van
odd Ududoti
school here at the university
will hold a banquet and pre
in the Union.
Uses Musical These.
Program for the banquet will
all be worked around the sym
phonic theme, and it will include
"Allegro Energico" introduc
tion of thematic material by
Ted Brunson; "Andante," new'
material, by Gerry McKinsey,
"Poco Allegretto," a more care
free mood, by Ava Bromwich,
and "Scherzo, Quasi Una Fan
tasia," a brief glimpse of the
future, by soloist Fred Teller.
"Interlude" musical, of course
will feature the boys' octette
singing "Kentucky Babe" and
"Sophomoric Philosophy"; a vocal
solo, "O Lovely Night" and
"Dance of the Reed Flutes," by a
flute trio.
Tonight's concert program is
divided into four sections, and
finale. First David Foltz, guest
conductor, will lead a selected
vocal ensemble in the spiritual
News," and "Father, Thy Chil
ren Bow in Adoration," by Sul
livan. Emanuel Wishnow of the uni
(Soe CONCERT, Page 3.)
itions
there is bound to be many who
feel similarly about music.
Coudn't the university do
something? How about the uni
versity orchestra? How about
the music room at the Union?
The university has the facilities
and the talent not only to fur
nish good music but other enter
tainment as well. These soldiers
deserve much more than has
been given them.
True, much has been done to
make the soldiers' sojourn here a
happy one, but much more can and
should be done. There are many
soldiers wandering the streets
wondering what to do. Some are
pathetically in need of a tocsin so
that they might feel that the peo
ple for whom they are sacrificing
their whole lives and energies,
their dreams of a happy, peaceful
normal life, and, no doubt, in
some cases, their lives are worth
it.
They're Bored.
The other evening when I was
leaving the Union two of them
stopped me and asked, very
apologetically, if there was any
thing going on in the building.
After showing them around the
building, I left them in the ball
room at the square dance. I was
impressed by their reluctance
to impose on anyone and by
their obvious need for doing
something.
There is more good in giving
one cheerie word to a downcast
soldier than in having never
missed a church service in ten
years. It is not a. question of
whether the soldiers are worthy
of us the question is: are we
proving worthy of them. .Many
people see a few soldiers not play
ing the part of perfect gentlemen
and immediately brand the whole
lot as bad.
Do we as Americans want to
(See DREAM, Page 2.)