Page 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKA Tuesday, February 18, 1947 EDITORIAL COM MENT JhfL Oaih VkbhaAkcuv Member Intercollegiate Press rOKTT-FlFTB f BAB Subicrlptlon rate are 11.50 per semester. $2.00 per semester mailed, or $2.00 for the college year. $3.00 mailed. Single copy 6c. Published dally during the school year except Mondays and Saturdays, vacations and examination periods, by the students ot the University of Nebraska under the supervision of the Publication Board. Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office i i i...m MHr.itka. under Act of Conaress. March S. 1879. and at special rata of nostao' 'Ided for In section 1103. act of October 2. 1917. authorized September 30 EDITORIAL STAFF sr.rtltor Shirley 4nkln llnnaiclnV 'kdltor l'e Novntny, Jack Hill New Klitnr Jeanne Kerrigan, Norm I-egir, Tat Jrniien, Wally Becker. Sue (IoWcd BiM.rU Kdllor tleorse Miller Horlrtv Kdltor 'e enen At News Kdltor '.. Charles Brim BIKINKSS STAFF Rnnlnens Manager lm Van Ijutdlngham AxHlxlant BiiNlnens Managers Gould Flags, Al l-acnian Circulation Munager Keith Jones Nov It's My Turn BY EDDIE McCULLOUGII Stephens College Professor Talks to Artists' Guild Tonite Speaking on "Art as Language," Dr. Arnold Didier Graeffe will address the Lincoln Artists Guild tonight at 8 p. m. in Gallery B of Morrill hall. A Belgian-born art ist, musician and educator, Dr. Graeffe was formerly of Doane college faculty. A traveling lecturer of the As sociaiton of American colleges, he is now a member of Stephens col lege faculty at Columbia, Mo. At tending universities at Munich and Berlin, Dr. Graeffe studied music and art, doing graduate work at the Sorbonne in Paris. In 1936. research took him to British West Africa and to the University of Michigan where he specialized in the art of the far east. Teaching. He spent the next five years teaching at Michigan's Olivet col lege, and during summers of that period studied pre-Columbian and contemporary Mexican art in Mexico. He is considered an ex pert in music and literature as well as in plastic arts. Dr. Graeffe's lecture tonight is one of three programs open to guild members this season, the other two being scheduled later this spring. They will include a panel discussion on the annual art exhibit which opens March 2, and an "art carnival" which will be the last monthly meeting of the school year. Courtesy Lincoln Journal DR. GRAEFFE Speaks to ar tists tonight. Guild memberships are avail able to students at the special price of 50 cents. Yearly fall and spring exhibits are sponsored by the guild. Open.to any Nebraska artist, the spring exhibit will be held at Miller and Paine. Students may purchase guild memberships tonight at the lecture. ' tell you the truth, dear, you'll only think Tm bragging' Reprinted from (he March. 1947 Uiue of uquiu Copyrtght IttT by Esquire. las. Engineer Will Describe Missouri River Program Speaking on "Development of the Missouri River," Lt. Col. Del bert S. Freeman will address members of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific society, tonite at 7:30 in Morrill hall auditorium. Col. Freeman was closely asso ciated with preparation of the Missouri river development pro gram known as the "Pick Plan" and is now district engineer at Omaha. The meeting is open to the public. The strangest thing This Pure City has even seen, no doubt, was this kid up and snapping about in the eerie pre-dawn fog the other day. Someone slapped a new 8 o'clock on my schedule when I wasn't looking, and this is the horrible result. I seem to remember witnessing the sunrise before, but maybe it was only in the movies. Anyway I'm sure I've never seen it since I've been big enough not to. And the whole experience was some thing that shouldn't happen to the Great Unwashed, even. Wait, I'll tell ya all about it, so you can ap preciate your rating as a sack artist. Bis: Ben kicked me in the ear about five minutes, it seemed, after I'd gone to sleep. I opened three sets of eyelids (thus out frogging Life's frog) before I knew why I couldn't see anything it was still dark outside. A few minutes later the boys found me leaning against a tree out in front, eyes closed, shivering, and mutter ing, "Here, sergeant, I'm here, Say, when is reveille over?" They steered me around the corner to the bus-stop. A bright- and-early conversation followed: Me: "Where's the bus?" They: Silence. Me: "Why isn't the sun up yet?" They: Stony silence. Me: "Say, which way does the sun come up from, anyway? They: "That way. South. The sun always goes south in the winter." Me: "Oh, yeah, I forgot." The cold, damp, strictly un friendly fog was still rolling about, and I was already sick of being "up and snapping about." Some where above me a vulture, I guessed it to be, was screaming its head off as it flew around in a circle. Cold shivers ran up my back, because I figured at the time that it was either a vampire bat or Count Dracula himself buzzing town for a last trip be fore dawn. Still the bus didn't come. Two men in overalls stawmped by. As they passed I opened my eyes and looked at them. One was carrying a pick, the other had a shovel. "Grave robbers," I thought sentimentally, in memory of my father, and the iron curtain of heavy eyelids clanged down again. Still no bus. A little girl appeared out of the blog, which is black fog, carrying her little lunch pain and a "First Reader" to the grade school up the hill. She didnt scream at all, but she did gurgle softly for quite a while. Gener- outly I shared her lunch with my friends. But still no bus. Now a strange, wierd sensation came over me. "Hear that?" I queried, "Do you hear it?" Asleep now on the curb, they made no answer. I continued, "That's the sack. It's the sack, I tell ya. and it's calling me. I ain't gonna de sert my sack, not after all, it's done for me!" Joyously I leaped and ran back up the hill, through the blog. I wonder if they took the roll in that 8 o'clock class? And that is why, kiddies, no one has ever seen me before noon. You can come over and wait for me if you want to, but don't make any noise. (I always fire at the first sound I hear before noon.) Just sit quietly and glance through my "First Reader" until I wake up. UNIVERSITY CONVOCATION Percy Chen, Chinese Correspondent "Behind the Chinese Screen" 3:00 P. M.; Thursday, Feb. 20 Union Ballroom Duncan F. Fraser, vice-president of the University Veterans' Or ganization, appeared before a legislative budget sub-committee to urge the passage of LB 209 providing a 10-year "state institutional building fund" and not, as soinadvertently stated in the Sunday ed ition of the DAILY NEBRASKAN, "an immediate hike in the Uni versity appropriation." As stated by one of the Lincoln papers, "Fraser gave the com mittee a graphic description of the overcrowded conditions and lack of facilities in many of the classroom buildings." Certainly the Univet policy in lobbying at the state house is NOT a "more please" policy as your Sunday headline suggests. The lobby furnishes factual information to the Senators and is a barometer of legislative support for a university appropriation tht would make the University among the best of the land grant colleges. The action I will admit is historically unprecedented but who is better qualified to inform legislators as to campus conditions than those of us who experience those conditions? Feasibly the results t Fraser's work could be represntd as to th height of the mercury in a 43 degree thermometer the height of the mercury depended some what on student support. I wonder how many students have informed their respective Sen ators as to conditions at the University that you know of personally that would be remedied by the building program provided for in the Mueller bill? How many have worked to gain support for the Uni versity in their home town? Why has not this paper presented factual information on budget recommendations of Governor Griswold-Peterson, the requested bud get of the University, the plans for future buildings, and. other simi- -lar matters vitally affecting the student? HARVEY PODOLL, Univet Public Relations Chairman. Editors Note: The Daily Nebraskan has made plans to run a ser ies of articles explaining each item in the budget. The series will be gin as soon as possible. It will continue to be the policy of the Daily to support the university and to create opinion in favor of the bud get among the voters of the state through the students. The Veterans Organization is working for the passage of he budget in one way; the Daily will support their stand as long as we f.eel it is in accord with the best interests of the university. Gym Team . . (Continued from Page 1.) contributions from the savings of the team members, assisted by their families and aided by Dan ish educational foundations and the Flensted-Jensen fund. Tickets are now on sale and may be purchased at the athletic office in the coliseum or from the women's phys. ed. department in Grant Memorial hall. Student tickets bought in advance are priced at 50 cents. Door admis sion will be 75 cents for students, one dollar for non-students. IT'S BEEN THAT WAY ( SINCE SHE'S WEARING w DORIS V0DS0NSI J JP', You'll never be in cltn by yourself . . . when you're the girl in the Doris Dodsoa. Junior .tyllng with th.i certain jom.thing . . . that flair fo, flaery . . . means a Doris Dodion Junior Original. Se. 2 N '"''-'TtiiaailasiSiMiiiil