The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 09, 1947, Image 1

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

    II I I I
r
i
i
it
,
V
I
?,
Vol. 47 No. 62
UNCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Thursday, January 9, 1947
Johrde, Beezley
Engineer Week
Jaul Johrde and Nathaniel
Beezley were chosen co-chairmen
of Engineers' week. Bill Larson,
chairman of the student engineer
ing executive board, announced
today.
, Johrde, a senior electrical engi
neer, 'and Beezley, a junior civil
engineer, will direct the engineers
through Engineers' week which
coincides with Ivy day week in
the spring, and supervise activi
ties which are being revived after
a four year lapse. They were se
lected from a panel of candidates
representing each branch of engi
neering on the campus.
S Mao Board.
Candidates were interviewed by
a board consisting of three mem
bers from the engineering exec
utive board; Professor Blackman,
the board's faculty advisor, and
Dean Green of the Engineering
college. The final choice was
made on the basis of scholastic
standing, academic work load for
the coming semester, outside in
terests in engineering and pre
Publications
Board Will
Select Staffs
A meeting of the Student Publi
cations Board will be held at 8
a. m. Saturday, January 18, in the
faculty lounge of the Union to
elect second semester members of
the staffs of the Daily Nebraskan
and Awgwan.
Students wishing to apply for
positions will pick up their appli
cation blanks at the office of the
School of Journalism in Uni
versity hall, and will deposit their
application forms at the same of
fice. Filings will close at noon,
Jan. 17.
Positions Open.
The following positions are
or in on the Daily Nebraskan:
editor, two managing' editors, five
news editors, ag editor, society
editor, business manager and two
assistant business managers.
Positions to be filled on the
See PUBLICATIONS, Page 2.
Ag Union Plans
Arc Discussed
At Board Meet
The Ag Union Advisory Coun
cil met Tuesdayyevening for the
first time sinceits organization,
which immediately followed the
opening of the union.
Considerable discusion was
made over the possibility of as
signing rooms to various perma
nent ag-activities but appropria
tion of rooms to any certain or
ganization awaits the approval of
the Student Union Board.
An Activities program for the
union was considered and the
eventual outcome seems promis
ing. Sunday coffee hours will
soon be in effect from 5 to 5:45
p. m.; bridge lessons will be given
on Tuesdays at 5, and social danc
ing classes will soon be inaugu
rated. Sunday variety shows, using
the same film shown down town
at a different hour; all ag open
forums on timely topics: and
union sponsored and financed
parties including hay rides, bob
sled parties, or bar-b-que parties,
as the weather may make appro
priate, are also in store.
As yet too many pieces of fur
niture and equipment have not
arrived to permit a reasonable es
timate to be made regarding the
date for the Union open-house
party. Announcements will be
made as soon as a definite date
may be set for. any and all of the
proposed acuviueg.
Appointed
Chairmen
vious experience with Engineers'
week.
Both Johrde and Beezley are
veterans, Beezley having served
with the infantry for three years
and Johrde seeing duty on the
corps of engineers for A2 months.
Includes Pienlm.
This year's Engineers' week
will include an all engineers con
vocation, a picnic highlighted by
the traditional tall story contest
told by the professors and a final
banquet where Sledge, sometimes
called the Engineers Esqrune,
will be unveiled. Open house will
also be held during the week
when actual engineering skills
will be demonstrated.
Larson, executive chairman,
added that although the annual
festival is not to be held until
spring, committees have been
formed and work has begun. The
civil engineering department has
completed work on a supply of
colored souvenir briquettes which
will be passed out to visitors dur
ing the open house.
Ralph Persson
Wins Arcliitect
Society Contest
Ralph Persson, second year
engineering student, won the
grand prize for his gas-powered
model airplane in the Architec
tural Society's arts and crafts
contest which was held Tuesday
night in the library of Architec
tural hall.
Division prizes in sculpture and
ceramics were awarded to Bob
Hecker and George Kuska.
Camera Work.
Rush McCoy's excellent camera
work won top honors in the pho
tography division. A set of pen
and pencil drawings by Hedy
Schultz placed first in the paint-,
ing and sketching division while
Eugene Griffith's work in weav
ing took first place in that cate
gory. Judges.
Judges were Professor Linus
Burr Smith, Department of Archi
tecture; Miss Kady Faulkner, Art
Department, and Fritz Caig, local
architect.
A social with refreshments
served, was held in connection
with the judging. The winning
entries are now on display in
Architectural hall.
Ag Y Members
Hear Reports
Of Convention
Ag college delegates to the Na
tional student assembly at Ur
bana, 111., Lucille Manning, Mary
Louise Helt, Don Meaders, and
Keith Frederickson, gave reports
on their activities at an Ag-YM
and YW meeting Tuesday.
The purpose of the assembly
was to set the policy of the Stu
dent Christian Association Move
ment for the next four years. Fea
tured speakers included Dr. How
ard Thurman of San Francisco,
Dr. Albert Cutler, associate pro
fessor of theology at Yale uni
versity, Mr. Charles Bolte, chair
man of the American veterans
committee and Miss Dorothy Mc
Connell, editor of the magazine
"World Outlook."
Approximately twelve hundred
students representing 914 colleges
in the United States and several
foreign countries were in attend
ance at the conference which
lasted several days.
u
' 1 T
4 y v
.4
i
Rosrlla Ilightower.
Ballet Russe
Scheduled
For Tonight
Tonight at 8:20 p. m., the coli
seum will be the scene of a four
sequence performance by the
original Ballet Russe, under the
direction of Col. W. De Basil.
A company of 150 members and
a symphony orchestra will join
the npted principals in produc
tions of the traditional ."Swan
Lake" by Tschaikowsky, a color
ful story of passion, and h,ate in
an oriental harem set to music
from "Scheharazade" by Rimsky
Korsakoff, an interpretation of
Johann Strauss' "Blue Danube,"
and the Pas de Deux from Rich
ard Strauss' setting of the picar
ard Strauss' setting of the pictur-
Amerkans Dance.
The American ballerina, Rosella
Hightower, will be featured in the
"Don Quixote" number, along
with an "American by choice,"
George Skibine. A native of
France, Skibine fought with the
Americans on the Normandy
beaches and through five cam
paigns in addition to serving as
a counter-intelligence agent for
the U. S. forces. Other solo danc
ers for tonight are Genevieve
Moulin and Vladimir Dokou
dovsky. Navy Announces
New Technician
Enlistment Rules
All ex-Navy personnel dis
charged in ratings of Aviation
Radio Technician, Radio Tech
nician's Mate, Electronic Tech
nician's Mate and Aviation Elec
tronic Technician's Mate may en
list or rc-enist in the regular
Navy in pay grade held at time
of discharge, regardless of length
of time that has elapsed since dis
charge, it was announced recently
hv Chief Recruiter John C. Blairl
of the Lincoln Navy Recruiting
Office.
' This applies to ex-members of
USN, USN-I and USNR, and they
must have served on active duty
in World War IL
I ft
mite T
Reorganization of the .university student health serv
ice and appointment of Dr. Samuel I. Fuenning as director,
was announced yesterday by Chancellor R. G. Gustavson.
- Dr. Fuenning succeeds L. E. Means who remains as
director of the division of student physical education. The
Orchestra
Soloists Will
Give Concert
BY SAM WARREN
When the University Orchestra
appears for the second time this
season next Sunday in the Union
ballroom, it will accompany three
graduate students in a program
of solo numbers, as well as per
form two orchestral selections.
Soloists with the orchestra are
pianist Ernest Ulmer who will
play Mozart's "Concerto in D
Minor;" clarinetist Donald Wenz
laff whose solo selection is a re
cent composition by the American
Homer Keller; and baritone Cleve
Genzlinger who will offer a group
oj numbers including "Di Proven
za," the second act from Verdi's
opera "La Traviata."
Mr. Genzlinger, who plans to
continue his study in New York
City when he receives his mas
ter's degree in January, served in
the army three years and during
the time he was attached to the
chaplain's staff at Ft. Roberts,
CaliL, appeared in numerous op
eretta performances staged in co
operation with MGM picture stu
dios. As an undergraduate here
he sang leading roles in th operas
"Cavalerria Rusticana," and
"Robin Hood" and" in the ora
torios "Elijah" and "Messiah."
Mr. Uulmer served in the Euro
pean theater during the war, and
attended Trinity Music College in
London for three months, study
ing piano, orgm and theory. For
his graduate recital this fall, he
wrote a pi'- -nsta. He aiso
plans further study in New York.
Assistant Instructor
Mr. Wenzlaff who will receive
See ORCHESTRA, Page 2.
JIisl (BiiisA. JauUl,
BY BILL PALMER.
Perhaps you've been wonder
ing for months, even years how
the DAILLY NEBRASKAN gets
to press. Or why?
Determined to satisfy this in
satiable curiosity of student read
ers I invaded the office of this
purveyor of yellow journalism
yesterday afternoon.
Amid the smell of typewriter
ribbons, reporters ran in circles,
while editors stood on desks and
screamed. With a pipe in his
mouth, a copy pencil behind his
ear and a telephone balanced be
tween his shoulder and his other
ear, Jack Hill sat with furrowed
brow. "Say," I heard him ask
tersely, "what was the name of
that blonde that 1 saw at the Dia
mond Grill last night?"
Whee!!
In a crowded corner of the
room three reporters, four men
who thought that the door to the
rag office led to the Men's room
and a janitor were making love
to Gene Jensen while her sister
Pat looked on disapprovingly. But
jealousy gets her nowhere. Near
the door Norm Leger was leading
Jean Kerrigan, Ellie Swanson
and Sue Golden In a cheer be
cause the previous day's paper
Dir
health service becomes a separate
department under the new setup
and will be responsible adminis
tratively to the College of Medi
cine in Omaha, and under the su
pervision of an advisory commit
tee of medical college staff mem
bers. "This is our first step in im
proving a student health service
which now is not adequate,"
Chancellor Gustavson said. "We
hope to make additional improve
ments In the near future. Among
other things we are asking the
legislature for funds to build a
health center, a building which is
needed very badly."
New Appointments.
Also announced were the ap
pointments of Dr. R. O. Garling
house and Dr. Frank Stone to the
health service staff. Other doc
tors now on the staff are Dr. Fred
Metheny and Dr. Ruth Warner.
Mrs. Phil Anderson has been
added to the nursing staff.
Chancellor Gustavson praised
Professor Means on his splendid
work "under trying conditions"
and pointed out that the change
will relieve Means of a good deal
of his load, which he has been
carrying for 18 months.
U. N. Grad.
Dr. Fuenning is a graduate of
the University of Nebraska col
lege of medicine and served in
the navy during the war. Since
last July he has been associated
with the Student Health Service
while doing graduate work and
research. He has received his
bachelor's and master's degrees
from the university.
Dr. Fuenning announced that
the health service headquarters
would remain on the second floor
of the Pharmacy building.' The
universiey has put in a bid for an
nrmy officer's barracks at Sioux
City", la. If this application is ap
proved, the barracks will be con
verted into a temporary health
ceuter and will probably be lo
cated n the Mall between Teach
ers c lege and Andrews hall.
contained only 693 mistake dis
cernible to the unlearned eye.
Managing Editor Mary . Alice
Cawood was standing on the copy
desk and hitting a reporter over
the head with a paper cutter as
I glanced in her direction. The
sound of the thud of the scribe's
falling body was drowned out,
however, as Chief Adviser and
Consultant Bob Gillan and Walt
Simon (lie puts out a magazine
of dirty jokes) began to sing an
other chorus of the Russian Red
Cavalry march. At the climax
of the song Gillan waved his
hammer-and-sickle banner so
strenuously that he fell off the
filing cabinet.
Sh-h-h-!
Ever so quietly I sneaked into
the inner sanctum of the editor-in-chief
figuring that Phyllis Tea
garden must be deep in the throes
of a constructive editorial on the
birds and bees or faculty park
ing. But within her cubicle Dake
Novotny was counting, "One, two,
three, four, One, two " while
the female Pulitzer did sitting-up
exercises.
Completely bewildered but still
undaunted, I picked one of the
lowly reporters off the floor, put
iodine on his wounds, adminis-
See BITTER TRUTH, Pape 2.
I
1
i
if.
i
i
.1,1
;1
I
V,
.
,,t
n
(V-
ti .
i':