The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 23, 1944, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
THE NEBRASKAN
Sunday, April 23, 1943
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Cliff trr. M.M Mailed. Sinfl Mpy. t Cenla. Bntere aa
ircond-fUu matter at tha pastoffice in Lincaln 1, Nebraska,
ndrr Act af Cong-rest March S. IS?, and at special rate ef
tart preTiaed far la Seoti.a U3. Act ( Oeteker S. UH.
Asthoriiea September M, 1921.
Published thre times weekly during school year, ex
cept vacations and examinations periods by Students of
the University of Nebraska under the supervision of the
Publications Board.
We Point with Pride
... to engineering college. Engineer's
Day, abbreviated to a banquet last year,
will be revived in all its glory. With the
exception of the engine-law battle, tradi
tional festivities (including an egg match,
whatver that may be) will continue. Here
is a colorful interlude in the lives of hard
working, slide-rule toting, intellectual type
engineers.
. . to those who turned out for Honors
Convocation. The coliseum would have
held them more comfortably.
. . .to Ma Phi Epsilon, Delta Omicron and
Sigma Alpha Iota, national music sororities,
whose sponsorship of a school of music pre
sentation of Carmen last night should net
a good sum for war funds.
And View with Alarm
. . . the exam schedule. Disregarding the
fact that exams in themselves are alarming,
we view the sad situation of those students
who are confronted with three regularly
scheduled tests and one special exam in one
day. Even the most brilliant student could
V Mail
Clippings
Pat Chamberlin, Censor
Lt. CHARLES THARP has been trans
ferred from Camp Shelby, Miss., to Fort
Mead, Md. He was recently home, in Lin
coln on leave enroute.
Lt. BILL DIXON is now stationed at
Camp Roberts, Calif., "somewhere on ma
neuvers." - w
DALE VV. REES has been promoted to the
rank of first lieutenant at the Roswell Army
Air Field, New Mexico. He joined the army
in April, 1942.
Pfc. CLARENCE R. HEIDENREICH
has been transferred from the infantry at
Camp Roberts, Calif., to a service unit in
Madison, Wisconsin, where he is living in
Barnard Hall at the university.
Cpl. SAM WORSHAM, '43, is with the
756th Field Artillery Battalion, Fort Ord,
Calif.
Students Have Opportunity
To See Ag Foods Building
Ag campus open house next plan and facilities to visitors from
Saturday will afford students and
community members their first
chance to see the inside of the
$160,000 foods and nutrition build
ing which, in the year since its
completion, they have viewed only
from the outside. The new build
ing was completed in March of
1943 and occupied the same month
by the army STAR unit to be va
cated a year later.
Though unequipped as yet, the
building will be open and guides
will be present to explain the floor
hardly hope to work up to his capacity un
der such conditions.
. . .the Nebraska n office. Two energetic
reporters tidied the place up. Now the staff
mourns the loss of six sticky coke glasses,
three antique filing racks, a rags for serv
icemen worker and several assorted love
letters.
Theater Gives Ghost Play,
'The Lady Who Came to Stay9
Climaxing a well balanced sea
son of comedy and drama, the
University Theater, under the di
rection of Berne W. Enslin, opens
this week with "The Lady Who
Came to Stay." a ghost play by
Kenneth White.
The story centers around three
miserable spinster sisters who
have voluntarily imprisoned them
selves in a sinister and sunless old
mansion of the Victorian era. The
youngest is starved to despair
for companionship, the next is
coolly arrogant and cruel, and the
eldest of the three is a witch-like
Regents . . .
(Continued from Page 1.)
tronomy was granted a leave to
go into war work for such time
as the government needs his serv
ices. Dean C H. Oldfather will be
acting chairman of his depart
ments. New appointments included: in
the entomology department, Har
ld A. Hauke, field supervisor; in
the agronomy department, John
N. Mc Henry, assistant professor;
in the college of medicine. Lela
Homquist, instructor in clinical
surgical nursing and head nurse
en the men's surgical floor.
The regents also authorized the
appointment by the chancellor of
a university marshal to be in
charge of academic processions,
to officiate at university recep
tions by introducing guests to the
head of the receiving line, and to
perform similar duties.
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lOT- B urk and err? rrkrr pen some
where between TVrrpif and fri Drue
F.raard. Call Jean Buck?. J-327.
character filled to the brim with
the venom of hate.
The brother of the three has
married against the wishes of the
sisters, and now that he is doad.
his wife and daughter are living
in this house of hate. The eldest
seeks to revenge the marriage by
mistreating the wife, who is driven
to her grave by constant torture,
leaving the young daughter, the
or.ly sy.ark of life in this house of
gloom, alone to face the horror of
living with her aunts.
After the eldest sister is mys
treiously taken to the spirit world,
she and the girls mother haunt
the house; one to carry on her
persecution, the other to circum
vent these diabolical plottings.
The daughter escapes, but her
little brother is forced to replace
her, and he. in turn, is subjected
to torture. Building in momentum
from the rise of the first curtain.
the play reaches a breath-taking
climax in the last scene.
Last Scene Excels.
Not only is "The Lady Who
Came to Stay" intense psycho
logical horror stuff which affords
great opportunity for character
study on the parts of the actors,
but the wind, thunder, lightning
and fire in the last scene make it
a marvel of technical skill.
The cast of characters include
Joan McCagiie as Katherine, Betty
Rhodes as Emma and Blanche
Duckworth and Jean Kinnie as
Sadie. Millie will be played by
Barbara Berggren, with Jo Weaver
Kline as Phoebe. Dorothy James
will appear as Ann, Jeanne Racine
as Roger and Bill Major in the
double, role of the doctor and Roy.
The play opens Wednesday eve
ning at 8 p. m. at the Temple the
ater," and will run thru Saturday.
BULLETIN
I Society . . .
Mass migration to the Pike to
the tune of Will Osburn's swing!
Seen on the dance floor were
Sig Eps, Cap Thiesen and Patty
Welch of Pi Phi fame, Boyd Hecht
and Ann Atkinson. Chi O, Dale
Preston and Sally Bates, Alpha
Fhi . . . Phi Delts, Johnny Jones
and Janice Blakeslee, Pi Phi, How?
ard Chapin and Betty Dick, Tri
Dclt . . . Sigma Nu Louie Kramer
and Chi O Jan Engle . . . Many
other representatives of Love li
brary, sorority and frat huts,
dorm, and Ag campus!
Comin' and goin' . . . Bob Olsen,
Tau, home on leave, seen with
Dorothy Carnahan, Chi O . . .
Charlie Hanford, Phi Delt, whipped
up from St. Louis to see Margaret
Hagan, AOPi . . . Bob Sandburg
ATO, in from the east, to be an
official witness of Betsy Wright
Nate Holman wedding . . . Mary
Sinclair, Alpha Phi off to the Sun
flower state to visit Bill Maurice
. . . Bob Henderson Sig EP, shun
ning the wilds of McCook to bend
a couple with Cliff Bloom, Sigma
Nu . . .
AOPi's moved up to Omaha to
give Janet Shaw a shower in
honor of her approaching weddin'
. . . Ensign Bob Junge arrived at
the Sigma Kappa house to gaze
on Thelma Coppeli . . . Chi O Betty
Ruth Dunlap is taking a winter
vacation to Alabama, to look up
pinmate Cadet Bill Hewitt, Sig
Alph . . . Jean Larson and eight
Alpha Chi buddies charged up to
the city of Homer for a peaceful
rest . . . Theta Marie Farrar Mar
land hopped off at Lincoln en
route to Connecticut . . . Jim
Chatt, Phi Gam, home on leave,
seen with Barbara Fisher, Chi O
. Travel while you may . . .
that organization called OPA is
not far behind! i
Standouts! Phi Gam Hobo par
ty .. . Chi O initiation . . . Union
dance . . . Pike . . . Life can be
beautiful!
Weekend Plans
Include Variety
Program, Dance
Free dancing and a free show
are all included in the Union"s
week end plans for military and
civilian students, according to Pat
Lahr. social director of the Union.
"Kitty Foyle," the motion pic
ture which won the academy
award for G:nger Rogers several
years ago. headlines the flicker
show today at 3 p. m. Information
Please and a cartoon are also
included in the program.
Last right from 9 to 12 p. m.
Russ Gibson's orchestra furnished
the music for a dance which was
open to K,th trainees and stu
dents in accordance with the new
agreement with military heads to
permit civilians to attend army
dances.
MIT MOLM'G BREAKFAST.
TVfcett aw umw totes aaia for the
TWf A aaaaal Mar maraiac Breakfast far
lvertt- mnnwm Ja4 waatwf ra. The prtee
f the tt-fce to Mr m4 mil aVvtrlac to
altead ax arce4 to kjr iMi tiraeta be
fore Tar nay.
PI MU EPSILON.
Prof. O. C. Collina. department of as
tronomy, will talk on Onomonie Pro'ee
tion" at a meetir.t of Pi ku Eptilon to
he hem at 7 p. m . April 25. in room 308
ot UK. Everyone la welcome.
Phys E1
(Continued from Page 1.)
ference the American Association
for Health, Physical Education and
Recreation will hold its annual
convention. Miss Lee will speak
at the college section program and
will serve on the council as past
president.
Miss Lee will 5pend a day at the
national office of the American
Folk Arts association where she
serves as a council member. The
closing days of her trip will be
taken up by a workshop confer
ence to be put on by the American
Youth Hostel association. Miss Lee
is a member of the board of di
rectors of this organization.
rt Department -
Shows Paintings
University senior art exhibit is
one of four galleries in Morrill
Hall sponsored by the department
of art and the extension division
in accord with, the plan of the uni
versity loan galleries to bring art
to the community.
Valued at over six thousand dol
lars the exhibit includes original
work of American painters as well
as color reproductions of repre
sentative paintings by American
and French artists.
The exhibit was shown to pu
pils and patrons of the North
Platte city school on April 21 by
Dwight Kirsch, chairman of the
department of art.
Crime Note: The biggest rob
bery in the history of Massachu
setts State College recently de
prived State students of $400 in
rash plus ration coupons and
iewclry. The one light note in th
otherwise tragic affair was the
case of the cood who had just
washed her hair when she discov
ered the burglar lor burglars) had
walked off with her bobby pin
case!
2 to 4:30 Saturday afternoon.
Prior to this time only a few fac
ulty members and students have
inspected the structure.
Of Georgian style, the building
is made of a light colored brick to
harmonize with surrounding build
ings. There are eight large pilas
ters of white limestone across the
front, complementing the while
trim of the structure.
Planned for Girls.
Since the building is essentially
for women, the interior has been
made as feminine in detail as pos
sible. 'Floor coverings are of light
asphalt tile in two shades of
grayed pink and the woodwork is
blond birch and light grayed oak.
The color of the floor is repeated
in the pinkish terrazo stairway
with a delicate metal railing. The
walls will be painted in various
light pastel shades.
Food service facilities take up
the greater part of the first floor
area. The public cafeteria, and
dining room with a soft drink
fountain at one end of the room
are located here as are an ad
joining tea room and a private din
ing room and small kitchen for
dinner meetings. The large tiled
kitchens and enclosed garbage and
dishwashing rooms occupy the
west side of first floor. A stu
dent lounge is also located on this
floor.
The outstanding feature of the
second floor are two suites of
rooms, including kitchen, dining
room and small lounge. The suites,
complete with doorbells, will be
used by the classes in meal serv
ice. The main reception office,
faculty offices and two student
foods laboratorys are also on the
second floor.
Research on Third.
Third floor will house the equip
ment for the foods and nutrition
research staff. This includes six
research labs as well as a metab
olism room. A large lecture au
ditorium is also on this level.
The only unfinished portion of
the building is the north half of
the basement which has been re
served for student recreation fa
cilities. This area has been ex
cavated and cemented and will
be completed as soon as possible,
according to present plans. Here
will be found a lounge ping pong
room, for quiet games, book nook,
a small committee room and a
cloak room. The south half of the
basement is in storage space.
When asked when the building
would be open for student use.
Miss Margaret Fedde, head of
the department, said that it will
be impossible for the structure to
be put to the use for which it was
intended until suitablet equipment
can be purchased. Difficulties are
being encountered at this time.
"It is hoped that the research
staff may occupy the space on
third floor sometime this spring
or early summer," Miss Fedde
added.
In commenting upon the condi
tion in which the building w as
found when turned back to the
university upon the removal of the
STAR unit from the campus, Miss
Fedde commented. "The walls will
have to ho repainted and a small
amount of refinishing of wood
work will have to be done. The
building was left in quite good
condition, considering that almost
10,000 men went through it in one
year."
Harbara Arnold Speaks
At YW Vespers Tuesday
Barbara Arnold. YWCA secre
tary, will speak at vespers Tues
day, April 25, at 5 o'clock. She will
discuss the place of the church in
our religion.
The last vesper service for this
semester will be held the follow
ing week on May 2. Anne Wellen
siek, president of the YWCA, will
lead the service.
It's here! The ghost ploy you've been waiting for!
April 26, 27, 28, 29 University Theatre
KIM IL&Wy. WlMiP CgAUS f(v
AY
Reserved Seats 60c
General Admission .... 35c