The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 12, 1946, Page Page 4, Image 4

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Page 4
BY BILL BARRETT AND
BOB MCONAUGIIEY.
Here's the "noose" for all you
faithful "readers who are still
"hanging" around. Don't get
"roped" in as some of the other
lads have.
Betas went all out for pinnings
as Dale Npvotny followed Brother
Jack Cressman over to the DG
house Saturday, and Bill Swanson
tread in Brother Bob Coonley's
footsteps over to the Pi Phi parlor
Sunday night. Lucky recipient of
Dale s diamond was Phyllis Mc
Laren, while Genene Mitchell is
proudly wearing Bill's pin. Con
gratulations to everyone con
cerned.
Seen walking down the aisle
(church, that is) Sunday morning
were Betty Burns and "Squat"
Meyers, while Sister Bobbie Busch
spent Sunday evening with Bill
Lear. Over Alpha Phi way went
Bob Fox to see Pat Warren; seems
as though Gene Weiler has given
up dating for Lent!
Out "shuffling shoes'' Saturday
night at Lincolns big night
spot, the Pike to you that were in
the "groove," were Georgia Wy
thers and Chick Story, Peg Lawrie
and NRO Norrie Cross, and Midge
Holtzcherer with Finn Hallber.
There was much activity in
Omaha over the weekend for
couples attending the Phi Rho
party. Jim Protzman escorted
Lindenwood's Jo Patton, and Vir
ginia Purdham was with Phi Rho
Louis Hanisch. Understand the
Phi Psi "hunters" turned out en
masse.
Some Navy boys home last
weekend were Jim Swanson with
Joan Farrar, Dick Capek with Peg
Ellis. Johnnie Boman with old
flame Jeanne Branch, Gene Deeter
escorting Dorothy Bennison, and
Dan Hergert with Nancy Lawlor.
Thought for the day:
Seen together a lot of late are
Sally O'Shea and Phi Psi pledge
Dick Kruse.
Dale Hatch (ed) on to a date
with Ellie Lykke Sunday night
and followed it up by "coking"
in the Union Monday. It looks
like a good deal!
Newman Society
Plans St. Patrick
Dance Friday Nite
At a special meeting Sunday
afternoon, members of the New
man Club made plans for a "Wear
ing of the Green" dance to be
held Friday, March 15th, in the
CYO hall, 18th and J Sts.
The dance will feature a con
test for the men, with five dollars
as a prize. Tickets, to be sold at
the door, will be 15 cents and
refreshments will be served. All
Newman Club members and their
friends are invited.
Honors .
(Continued from pace 1.)
standing senior women. They
were chosen on the basis of su
perior scholarship and service to
their organizations and the uni
versity. All university women who re
ceived a weighted scholastic aver
age of 85 or above for the year
1944-45 were guests of the Mortar
Boards at the tea.
Members of Alpha Lambda
Delta helped the Mortar Boards
in serving as hostesses. Dean
Verna Boyles, dean of women;
Barbara Griswold, president of
the Mortar Boards; Miss Elsie
Piper, assistant dean of women,
and Miss Mariorie Johnston, as
sistant to the dean, were in the
receiving line.
Dr. Elda Walker, Mrs. J. R.
Thompson, Mrs. A. E. Wcstbrook,
Miss Johnston, Miss Piper, Miss
Kate Field, Miss Margaret Fedde
and Miss Mable Lee poured.-
Housing . .
(Continued from pace 1.)
essary to furnish the 200 apart
ments. FHA agreed to finance the
reconversion work in lieu of 200
fabricated units which had been
alloted the university in Decem
ber and are unavailable.
Apartments as laid out in the
university-FHA plans will include
two bedrooms, living room,
kitchen and bath. Each will have
a' separate entrance.
Final details of the contract for
reconverting the hospital site are
row being worked out between
the FHA, the war department and
the university, Devoe said.
Lincoln Symphony Concert Tonight Features
Graudan Piano-Cello Duo at St. Paul Church
BY SAM WARREN.
Nikolai and Joanna Graudan,
who will solo tonight with the
Lincoln Symphony Orchestra at
8:30 p. m. in St. Paul church,
comprise a unique concert duo.
Having first established reputa
tions as soloists, Joanna as pianist
and Nikolai as 'cellist, these art
ists have combined their talents
with complete success.
In 1938, they came to America,
and toured the Dutch East Indies
as well. Upon their return to this
country, Dimitri Metropoulos en
gaged Mr. Graudan as first 'cel
list with the Minneapolis Sym
phony and Mrs. Graudan as solo
ist with that orchestra. She will
perform Mendelssohn's "Capriccio
Brilliante," recorded under Met
ropoulos' baton by Columbia, to
night with the Lincoln Symphony.
The Graudans continued together
as a 'cello-piano team and in New
York in 1944 they gave two Town
Hall recitals in a single season.
The orchestral and solo num
bers, as listed by conductor Leo
Kopp, comprise the following pro
gram for tonight:
1. Carnival Ovrrturr Dvorak
II. oncriio In A minor for 'Olio
Saint-Snrnt.
MKOI.AI CRM DAN wlfh Orrhrstra
III. Slavonic Oanrr In A flat ... Dvorak
IV. aprtrrla Brilliant MrndHmolin
JOANNA (.RAI IIAN with Orrhrfitra
V. Mothrr ioow Suite Ravel
a. I'avaiw ot the Sleeping- Brant jr
b. Hop-a' my Thumb
c. 1-aldVroniwlle, EmprM of the
I'acoria
d. The Fairy Oardea
Adagio and Allegro Rachmaninoff
MKOI.AI AMI JOANNA ORAl'lt.AN
VI. Pomp aad iiramMaare Klgar
Vacation Dates
Still Uncertain
Says Rosenlof
No action on the Student Coun
cil's suggestion that spring vaca
tion be changed to March 22 to
April 1 will be taken before
Tuesday, March 19, it was an
nounced Monday by Dr. George
W. Rosenlof, secretary of the
University Senate.
"We have not yet decided
whether to take the matter be
fore the Senate," Rosenlof said,
"but no action will be taken be
fore their meeting."
All members of the faculty who
hold the rank of associate pro
fessor or above, make up the
membership of the Senate, and
Chancellor C. S. Boucher serves
as president.
Building . . .
(Continued from page 1.)
In a bad state of deterioration,
the hall served as the only build
ing of the university for many
years, and was the focal point of
the movie "Cheers for Miss
Bishop."
$550,000.
The $550,000 allocated for this
building is part of a fund of
$1,058,000 appropriated for new
buildings at the university by the
last session of the unicameral.
The $300,000 armory included in
the fund is about one-third fin
ished, and a $200,000 addition to
Avery chemistry laboratory is
still in the blueprint stage. The
$8,000 remaining will be spent to
build two new hay barns at the
university's experiment station at
North Platte.
The foods and nutritions build
ing on Ag campus, finished just
prior to the war, was the last
previous builcing constructed , on
the campus through -tax funds
since Andrews hall.
In addition to the new class
building, the university will let
contracts soon for the construc
tion of the first three of a ten
unit dormitory system for men.
The three buildings will cost
about $325,000 and are to be fi
nanced through the University of
Nebraska Dormitory corporation.
WE SOLICIT YOUR
RENT-A-CAR BUSINESS
Please be prepared to estab
lish your reliabiliy and fur
nish deposit. Required age
21 years or more. Maximum
occupancy 4 people.
Thenkt
Established 25 Years
Motor Out Company
1120 P Si., 2-6819
THE NEBRASKAN
(7
Mikolai and Joanna Graudan, who will solo here tonight with the
Lincoln Symphony at 8:30 in St. Paul church, form an unusual
musical duo with their combination of 'cello and piano, respectively.
Their varied concert programs display both the Graudan's solo
virtuosity and ensemble excellence.
Contributions
For Red Cross
Below Quota
Lagging far behind the $2,500
goal for the Red Cross, contribu
tions of approximately $1,000
have been collected as the drive
moved into its second week, ac
cording to AUF Director Jan
Engle.
Representatives in the organ
ized houses are urged by Miss
Engle to turn in their collections
each evening between 5 and 5:30
at the booth in the Union lobby.
Campus Booths.
Booths in Sosh, the Union and
in the activities building on ag
campus are being operated to col
lect donations from unaffiliated
students living in 'Lincoln and
students on ag campus. Any stu
dent who has not been contacted
by a representative may donate
at any of these booths.
Contributions to the Red Cross
will be used to keep up the Red
Cross clubs and clubm'obiles for
occupation troops in Germany
and Japan, recreation for men
convalescing in United States hos
pitals, aid to veterans and civilian
relief in times of national disaster.
Prof. R. H. Moore
Speaks al Rho Chi
Dinner Meeting
Prof. R. H. Moore of the college
of agriculture addressed 17 mem
bers and guests of Rho Chi at a
dinner meeting in the Union last
week. His subject was "Derris
and Rotenone."
Derris is probably the only
plant which would be a commer
cial source of rotenone in that
competitor plants could not meet
derris' high standards, according
to Professor Moore. He also
showed slides of the cultivation of
derris plants.
Clem Stone, pharmacy college
senior, was initiated at the dinner.
Rho Chi is an international
pharmaceutical society composed
of undergraduates, graduate and
faculty members of the college of
pharmacy, according to Prof. A. E.
Swarting, president.
YES, WE HAVE
THE BEST
COFFEE
SANDWICHES
SHORT ORDERS
IN TOWN
The
CLOVERLEAF CAFE
1227 R STREET
YW Delegates
To Give Panel
On Conference
Featured at the Ag campus
YMCA and YWCA joint meeting
tonight will be a panel discus
sion given by four representa
tives who attended the national
convention of the YWCA at At
lantic City last week.
Members taking part in this
panel will be Mary Ann Mattoon,
ex-city campus YW president:
Shirley Hinds, newly elected
president; Carol BridenbauRh, Ag
YW president; and Mildred Tay
lor, executive secretary of the
university YWCA.
Explain Resolutions.
The panel participants will pre
sent news from the conference
and will deal especially with some
of the resolutions concerning inter-racial
policy and political ac
tion in society.
Francis Wagner will conduct
the worship service for the meet
ing which is to be in the Home
Ec parlors at 7:45.
The Count of Lavarre is credit
ed with discovering the reflect
ing power of mirrors.
On January 18, 1924, eight
plane crashes occurred in Mont
pelier, Colorado.
lv- ';'.'! w
FAIRMONT'S
Tuesday, March 12, 1946
YM Will Send
Miller, Jensen
To Conference
Bill Miller, city campus YMCA
president, and Dean Jensen,
chairman of the Faithful Life
commission group, will be dele
gates to the 45th international
convention of the United States
and Canadian YMCA's to be held
in Atlantic City, N. J., next week
end, according to Gordon Lippitt,
"Y" secretary.
The three-day convention,
which opens on Friday, is being
staged to formulate a broad
Christian program through which
the YMCA's of North America
can meet the challenge of world
conditions.
One of the highlights of the
convention, according to Lippitt,
will be a "youth session" under
the chairmanship of Edgar C.
Reckard of Yale university. At
one of these sessions, Bill Miller
will lead the discussion as na
tional student president of the
student YMCA.
Mott Will Speak.
Climaxing the sessions, which
are expected to be attended by
2,000 delegates, will be addresses
by John R. Mott, world,-famed
"Y" leader, who recently received ,
the Prince Carl medal from King
Gustaf of Sweden for his human
itarian activities, and Eugene E.
Barnett, general secretary of the
International Committee of the
YMCA's of the United States and
Canada. Both men will arrive
shortly before the convention gets
underway.
The world challenge to the
YMCA will be voiced by Dr. Mott
at the final session, with Barnett
accepting it in the name of the
American and Canadian "Y "s.
Although the convention is pri
marily concerned with the part
of the North American "Y" in
the world of today, reports of
YMCA work in the far corners
of the earth will be made by "Y"
representatives from Europe and
the Far East.
Early Treatment
Uy Student Health
Prevents Epidemic
Despite the fact that eight uni
versity students were affected by
a contagious disease during the
month of February, no epidemic
developed, due to early diagnosis,
treatment and isolation of those
affected, according to the univer
sity student health service.
During the past month, 682
prescriptions were filled at the
pharmacy dispensary. There were
1,209 daily clinic calls for diag
nosis and treatment and 206 X
ray pictures taken. Twenty ad
vanced ROTC students were ex
amined for promotion to higher
rank and study; while 21 new
university employees were ex
amined, four given examinations
for interneship in hospitals.
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ilk
tills vox
is delicious. A
aiteveiyy
Include Fairmont's
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diet. Call ...... for
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