The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 21, 1944, Image 2

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    Nebraskan Staff
Big Stories of
This being the lest edition of
the Nebraskan for this semester,
the staff hereby presents a recap
of what it considers the ten big
stories of the year for the uni
versity. Most of the stories, nat
urally enough, broke because of
the war or in connection with the
war effort.
One of the biggest success
stories of the year was the close
of the AUF drive December 12.
The all-campus average dona
tion per person was two dollars
and the WSSF and Rags for Serv
icemen benefited to the tune of
over $2,300.
Number one story for pure stu
dent interest was news of the re
turn of 140 ex-Nebraska ROTC in
October. Remember the picture of
the "Hello" greeting between
Marge Christianson and Paul Wy
kert. Also along the army line
was the unanimous consent of
J..200 UN servicemen to a Stu
dent Union membership plan, and
Vol. 85, No. 80
H
ome Ec
elects O
Blanche Reid. home ec major,
was chosen president of the Home
Economics club for the coming
year at an election held last Tues
day and Wednesday. Margie Ruth
Pollard was
chosen vice y
president; Iris r
Baxter, secre- ..? X
tary; Monica s 1 A V
Ann Alberty. -
treasurer ana $
Edith Pum- I
phrey, histo- I ,
nan. ; , vJ
Miss ueia is v - v
a member of
Phi U and Al- a
pha Lambda
Delta. She is Bawwht sm.
on the student council, ag execu
Nebraskan
Positions
Mow Open
Filings for staff positions on
' the Nebraskan must be completed
by Saturday noon, according to
Harold Hamil, chairman of the
publications board.
The board will meet Monday at
3 o'clock to appoint the second
semester staff. Eleven positions
8 re open. All those applying for
the first time should be sure to be
present 'at the meeting. Attend
ance is not compulsory if the ap
plicant has exam conflicts.
Members of the board are: Prof.
Harcld Hamil, director of the
School of Journalism, Dr. David
Fellnn, John K. Selleck, Dr.
Harry E. Bradford, James E.
Lawrence, Julia Rogers and Vir
ginia Stuermer, junior and senior
student members.
AWS Board Announces
Exam Week Regulations
All freshmen and sophomore
women arc to be In their
houses at t:00 p. m. each night
preceding a final examination,
the AWS board has announced.
This includes Sunday, Jan. 23,
and Friday Jan. 28. This regu
lation applies only to students
who have an exam the follow
ing day.
Uppe re Unworn en may have
19:39 nights every night during
exam week.
of
Ne-
Early in December came the
Mortar Board Christmas ball and
reversal of years of campus tradi
tion. This year the men took the
women, and six Christmas stock
ing girls were presented to six
lucky UN soldiers and civilians.
Fall election of student council
members, class president, and pub
board members stirred up the
usual screams of "POLITICS."
Lois Christie became president of
the council, the first woman to
hold this office for a number of
years.
Early in the semester was the
registration story headed "Pint
Sized Frosh Crop" and it was
only 55 percent of normal. There
were 25 percent more women than
men and the total frosh registra
tion was close to 1,000. The Board
Friday, January 21, 1944
Group
icers
tive board, ag student faculty
council and the AUF committee.
She also works in the YWCA.
A member of the Home Ec club
(See HOME EC, Page 5.)
their subsequent purchase
Cornhuskers and the Daily
braskan.
Dance Makes News.
it
Henry Scott, Famed Pianist,
Satirist, Plays Here Sunday
Henry Scott, noted professional
of the ivories, will make his sec
ond appearance on the campus
Sunday at 4 p. m. in the Union
ballroom.
Known throughout musical so
ciety as a born mimic, Scott in
terprets such personalities as "A
Great Concert Pianist,". "Little
Boy Genius Grows Up," "Rhumba
and Swing Tango," "Eccentrici
ties of My Pupils," and "Mittens
on the Keys."
Besides these specialty numbers
the musical satirist has written
and arranged such selections as
"How to Compose a Popular
Song," "Sewing on a Button," and
"Three Styles of Popular Music."
Part one of the program con
sists of three selections of various
styles of music and dances. The
second part is made up of a num
ber of interpretive selections, and
War Show
Production on The War Show
of 1944 has wung into gear with
practices of one or the other acts
being held almost nightly for the
past week.
This show, the third production
given by the war council in as
many years, will contrast World,
Wars I and II and is under the
direction of Jean Swarr and Leo
Martin. Act one is set in a cabaret,
shades of 1918, complete with
"Casey-sent-me" panel, in the
door, wire legged tables and red
checked clothes, the likes of which
have never been seen.
Act two brings the audience up
to date as the scene changes to
Picks Ten
Semester
of Regents okayed a project to
lease land for a memorial child
ren's hospital in connection with
the med school in Omaha.
Nebraskan Drops Daily.
The War Council set a stamp
sales goal of $2,000 for the UN
fourth war loan drive, which be
gan January 18. Earlier in the
year, the council sponsored regis
tration of all women on the cam
pus for war work. Neither the
stamp sales nor the war work has
has the co-operation of all the
campus, as follow-up stories dur
ing the semester disclosed.
Number ten story on the list
was the dropping of the word
"daily" from the Nebraska i head.
Not consistent with the tri-weekly
"for the duration" publication of
the paper, post office officials ob
jected to the flag head. So, the
Daily Nebraskan became the Ne
braskan, in spite of years of tra
dition. Students Talk
hi Radio Forum
Saturday at 5
For the first time since the Ne
braska radio forum of the air has
started its weekly series of broad
casts over KFAB, Saturday after
noons at 5, students will partici
pate ard conduct the round table
discussion.
Dr. Leroy T. Laase will act as
moderator of the program. , Tak
ing part in the discussion will be
Jean Kinney, Bill Miller, Mary
Ann Mattoon and Everett Moles
who will be the guest from Ne
braska Wesleyan university.
The selected group will consider
the student view on the United
States Post-war Foreign Policy.
part three includes several ar
rangements of rhythm.
The program for Sunday after
noon is as follows:
PART I
Three Stylet of Popular Music, ar
ranged by Henry Scott.
Juha Dance, Nathanel Dett.
Second Hungarian Rhapsody, Liszt.
PART II
A Great Concert Pianist, arranged by
Henry Scott.
How to Compose a Popular Song,
written by Henri Scott.
The Three Dances, arranged by Henry
Scott.
Pastoral. Scarlatti.
Sewing on a Button, arranged by
Henry Scott.
Ballad, arranged by Hnry Scott.
Little B'y Genius Grows Up, arranged
by Henry Scott.
Complete Course In Counterpoint,
written by Hrnry Scott.
Rhumba and Swing Tango, arranged
by Henry Scott.
Intermission.
PART 111
Medley, arranged
Waltz
Scott.
Chopin
Harris.
by Hen.
in the Citrus Brit, Edward
(See SCOTT, Page 5 )
Features Nite Clubs
'18 to '44 in Song, Dances
a modernistic night club the
"Wolf Room." Soft lighting ef
fects on the modernistic decor
give a touch of romance to the
scene. It is, on the whole, a night
club such as Lincoln has never
had.
Military Takes Part.
For the first time in the history
of the show military trainees will
take part. The band, which is re
portedly better than professional,
is made up entirely of trainees, as
are several of the specialty cta.
Tickets will be put on sale Jan.
SI, the first day of the second
semester," in the library, Field
66TT
vdUTl
"The Little Foxes," after final
tryonts last week emerged with
promise of both new and old faces
to be seen on the stage of Temple
Theater on Feb. 16, 17 and 18.
Familiar faces in the cast will
Dean's Office
Loses Mrs.
A. Westover
Mrs. Ada Stidworthy Westover,
who has served as assistant to
the dean of women and who has
had charge of part time employ
ment of women students at the
university for the past ten years,
K'
1
J
!
4
From Lincoln Journal
MRS. ADA WESTOVER
. . . resigns position.
will leave Feb. 12 for Cleveland
to enter the field of medical social
work.
She holds a bachelor of arts de
gree from the University of Ne
braska and a master's degree from
New York university, and has
done additional graduate work at
Columbia university and at
Harvard.
An Alpha Phi alumna, Mrs
Westover is also a member of
Mortar Board and Phi Beta Kap
na. She has been active in
A.A.U.W. as well as civic and so
cial organizations of Lincoln
Union Schedules
Regular Variety
Show January 30
Following final exams, a regU'
lar Union variety show will be
presented in the ballroom at 4
p. m Sunday, January 30.
As relaxation for tired, exam
filled minds, the program wMl in
elude hilarious vaudeville selec
tions of the old days. As the main
feature of the variety show, the
film "Suspicion," starring Joan
Fontaine and Cary Grant, and
under the dirctcion of Alfred
Hitchcock, will complete the aft
ernoon's program.
House and STAR unit as well as
on the campus. There will be three
performances, Friday night, Sat
urday night and a Sunday
matinee. There will be only a lim
ited number of tickets sold for
each performance due to the seat
ing capacity of the Union ball
room. Friday night will be etrictly
military, according to present
plans. Tickets are 25 cents each,
including tax. Marylouise Goodwin,
is the business manager of the
show.
Specialty Acts Rehearse.
"Specialty acta will meet by ap
(See WAR SHOW, Page 5.)
be: Phyllis Overman, as Regina,
wickedly clever and socially am
bitious; Janice Marx, as lonely in
timidated Birdie; Don Keough, as
Horace, the ailing husband of Re
gina, beween whom a wide breach
has existed for years; Betty
Rhodes as wistful Alexandra, Re
gina's bewildered daughter; Bill
Major as Ben, seemingly affable,
but really possessive and schem
ing; and Robert Samarick as Os
car, cruel and arrogant.
New Faces Featured.
Among the new faces will be
that of Robert Samarick, Don
Cline and Stanley Cook. Leo, who
is weak and unprincipled will be
played by Herbert Spence, and Ad
die will be played by Helen Pat
rick. The plot centers about the pros
perous, despotic Hubbard Family.
The conflict in their lives has been
caused by Ben's ambition to erect
an enormous cotton mill in their
own town. The sum which they are
lacking is to be obtained from
their brother-in-law Horace, who
quietly refuses to commit himself
regarding his share in their busi
ness enterprise. Desperate, Leo and
his father, Oscar, plan for Leo,
who works in the bank, to take
the money from Horace's deposit
box. Complications follow when
Regina attempts to manage both
the personal and financial life of
her family.
Forty ROTC
Men Receive
Commissions
According to an announcement
received today by Col. J. P.
Murphy, commandant of univer
sity units, 40 Nebraska university
ROTC graduates were commis
sioned second lieutenants, infan
try, at Fort Benning, Ga.
They are: Don Earl Albin, Dale
Lomax Bradley, Gene Elliott
Bradley, Thomas Edward Brogan,
Lester Melvin Buckley, jr., James
Fike Cain, Phillip J. Carlson,
Adrian Barstow DePutron, Ervin
William Dickson, jr., John Jay
Douglass, Joseph Bernard Dressel
haus, Edwin Max Ebeling, Robert
James Fast, Lowe Ricketts Fol
soni. Ward Clayton Freeman, Rob
ert Lewis George, Robert Emmett
Gillaspie, William Raymond Gold
ing, William Henry Greene, Rob
ert Roland Gritzfeld, William
Merton Grossman.
Others graduated are: Charles
McNerney Hauptman, Harold Ray
Herr, jr., Charles LeMoyne John
son, Francis Ralph Johnson,
George Franklin Johnson, jr.,
(See ROTC, Page 5.)
Dental Patient
Dies of Sudden
Heart Attaek
Attempts to revive William T.
Kleine, 41, at the university den
tal clinic proved unsuccessful
when he died of an apparent heart
attack following the extraction of
some teeth early Wednesday aft
ernoon.
Following the usual procedure
at the clinic, Kleine had been told
to rest after the extraction, wWn
Dr. S. D. Miller, one of the staff
dentists, noticed that his condition
was unusual.
Adrenalin, oxygen, and artifi
cial respiration were tried. Leon
ard Schafer, deputy sheriff, said.
Students Pay Semester
Fees January 26-23
Fees for the second semester
aredue to be paid on Jan. 26, 27,
and 28 at Memorial Hall. The
Hall will be open from 9 to 12
and from 1 p. m. to 4 p. m. each
day.
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