The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, January 15, 1947, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    Page 4
Home Ec Club
Holds Elections
For Officers
Nominees for offices in the
Home Economics Club were an
nounced at the club Sign Off
Tarty, the final meeting of the
semester. Club members will cast
their ballots in the Home Eco
nomics building, today and Thurs
day.
Candidates for the offices, as
selected by the rominating com
mittce are: President, Priscilla
Flagg and Marianne Srb; Secre
tary, Roberta Joe Faes, Lillian
Locke, Lois Thorfinnson; Treas
urer, Pauline Christiansen, Vivian
Frasier, Donna Rae Gorham
Historian, Donna Lee Johnson and
Irene Wellenseck.
Priscilla Flagg Is Assistant
Manager of the Cornhusker. mem
ber of Coed Counselors Board
Home Ec. Radio, YWCA, Vespers
committee, and Phi Upsilon-Omi
cron.
Marianne Srb, is Editor of the
Cornhusker Countryman, Secre
tary of Ag Exec Board, Member
of the Student-Faculty Council,
Secretary of the Home Ec Club,
Vice President of the State Home
Economics Association, Phi Ep
silon Omicron, YWCA, and mem
ber of th Ag Student Union
Board.
Alpha Phi Omega
Schedules Meet
At Student House
Alpha Phi Omega, national
service fraternity, will meet at
the Methodist Student house at
7 p. m., tomorrow.
Officers of the fraternity, which
was recently revived after an
absence of several years from
the campus, are Don Crowe, presi
dent; Walter Long, secretary;
Raulin Wight, treasurer; and Bob
Hamilton, service chairman.
H. P. Doole, M. A. Alexander,
L. K. Crowe, and F. W. Hoover
have been chosen faculty ad
visors. Alpha Phi Omega completed one
of the first of its increased ac
tivities on December 28th and
20th when Bob Hamilton and
Walter Long attended the national
convention in Kansas City, with
Professor Robert Mills, chairman
of faculty advisors.
All men who have been pre
viously affiliated with the Boy
Scouts are eligible for member
ship and are invited to attend the
next meeting.
Eh line Lauer, Ag
Si u dent, Awarded
Trip to 411 Week
Eluine Lauer, Ag College stu
dent, has been awarded an ex
pens? paid trip to 4-H club week,
the Nebraska 4-H club office an
nounced Tuesday.
Awarded by the Omaha cham
ber of commerce, the trip is given
to the county" 4-H club cham
pions who were unable to attend
National Club Congress or the
Oma'-a Chamber clothing demon
stration. Miss Lauer is a freshman in
Extension at Ag.
1 1M A
CHARM SCHOOL.
Chnrm srhcml mretfl at KHen Smith Hull
lonli;ht at 7:0. Min. Fred (inrden will
IM-Hk m the variety Hi variattou el
nilvernarr.
DAVE HAUN'S
ORCHESTRA
9 to 12 Midnight
SAT., JAN. 18
44c per person
Union Ballroom
FREE JUKE BOX
DANCE
9 to 11:30 P.M.
FRIDAY, JAN. 17
Ag YWCA Members Vote
For New Officers Today
Elections for officers of Ag
YWCA will be held today and to
morrow in the Home Economics
building from 9 a. m. until 5 p. m
Candidates for the office of
president are Florence Armoid
and Bernice Young. Slated to run
for district representative are
Marilyn Lyness and Mavis Mus
grave. Virgene Kovarik and Lil
lian Lock will compete for the of
fice of secretary, and Amy Jean
Mitchell and Lois Thorfinson are
running for treasurer.
There are no specified qualifi
cations for the Ag campus election
as in the city campus balloting.
Any member whose name appears
on the paid membership list is
eligible to vote.
Committee.
A nominating committee com
posed of Betty French, Eleanor
Johnson, Carol Bridenbaugh and
Miss Mildred Taylor selected the
candidates.
Miss Armoid has served on the
YWCA cabinet for two years and
has been music chairman during
the past year. She attended the
district conference at Doane Col
lege in Crete last fall
Completing her second year on
the YW cabinet is Miss Young.
She has been chairman of the
Thursday noon worship program
throughout the last year.
Miss Lyness has comrteted her
first year on the cabinet serving
as publicity chairman. She also
Miller & Paine presents
PAINTINGS by
TERENCE R. DUREN
Famous Nebraska Artist
You are invited to coine often . . until January 25.
AUDITORIUM FOURTH FLOOR
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
was a member of the financial
drive committees.
Editor of the "Magnet" during
her first year on the cabinet was
Miss Musgrave. She also attended
the district conference at Doane
College last year and has been a
member of the party committee.
Another member who attended
the district conference last year
was Miss Kovarik. She has served
on the membership, financial and
"Magnet" committees during the
year. Miss Ixx-k has been the
social chairman in the past year
and attended both the Estes sum
mer conference and the district
conference in the fall.
Miss Mitchell has worked on
both the membership and finan
cial committees. Serving on the
cabinet during the past semester,
Miss Thorfinson has been general
chairman of social events. She
was a member of the financial
drive committee.
WATCH LOST Between campui and
Kilno Ha 11 room, wmtnam Kcwara.
Call Bill Kargen, Phone 2-7831,
LOST Brown billfold, Coliseum Monday.
Ken L. Davis, Pharmacy Collide. Re
ward. O
0
W
7 V
if
Op
era
(Continued from Page J.)
was one of Caruso's most famous
roles t and the aria "Vestl le
guibba" is a concert favorite, as is
the well-known baritone prologue,
"Si Tuo." The opera has re
mained in the permanent repor
tory of the Metropolitan since
1894, the year following its first
performance in this country.
William Farnum, silent day
flicker star, plays himself in Para
mount's "The Perils of Pauline,"
and wears the same western out
fit which he used in making
"Riders of the Turple Sage," one
of his biggest hits. ,
Billy de Wolfe had to bleach his
complexion to lighten a heavy
suntan he had acquired before
starting his role with Bing Crosby,
Fred Astaire and Joan Caulfield in
Irving Berlin's "Blue Skies," the
Paramount Technicolor musical.
A NOTABLE DOCUMENTARY FILM
?;THSE TRUE GLIIY?'
The Story of the American G.I.
4:00 p. m., Wed., Jan. 15
Union Ballroom x
A 60 Minute Film
4
PAd
Wednesday, January 15, 1947
Easterner Club
Will Hear Talk
By C. II. Rhoades
C. H. Rhoades, of the Lincoln
Chamber of Commerce, will b
guest speaker at the Easterner .
club dinner-meeting, this evening
at 6:15 in Parlor B of the Union,
according to president Art Cohen,
Descriptive booklets about Ne
braska, furnished by the Lincoln
Chamber of Commerce, will be
distributed to each member prior
to Mr. Rhoades' illustrated talk.
The speaker is at present the di- t
rector of the Nebraska Employ
ment Service and has been pre
viously affiliated with various
state promotional activities, in
cluding the Department of Re
search of Humor in Nebraska, an
association which will provide a
basis for his talk. .