The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 15, 1947, Image 1

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Vol. 47 No. 116
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Tuesday, April 15, 1947
Roscnlof , Chisholm To Assist
In Occupational Ed. Problems
Two university start members
have been invited by the war de-
fiartment to assist U. S. armed
orces with educational occupation
problems in Germany and Japan.
Dr. George W. Rosenlof, direc
tor of admissions, was asked to
inspect all schools established by
the U. S. for dependents of armed
forces personnel stationed in Ger
many, to evaluate the teaching
program and make recommenda
tions governing accreditation of
courses provided.
Dr. Leslie L. Chisolm of Teach
ers college has been asked to serve
on the staff of General Mac Ar
thur's headquarters in Japan and
School Finance office. The post
has been created to formulate
plans and policies for re-organizing
educational finance in Japan,
and to prepare a long range pro
gram of financial support for all
types of schools in a democratic
system of public administration.
Formal Grad
Miscellany
Now on Sale
Formal graduation announce
ments, name cards, and announce
ment folders go on sale today for
a limited time at campus book
stores, it has been announced.
Seniors may place orders either at
Co-op or Nebraska book stores.
This year, the folders, which list
names of the entire graduating
class, will be bound in red leath
er, available to manufacturers
now for the first time since the
war. Before the war, red suede
was used. Folders will be avail
able in heavy white cardboard
as well.
Personal calling cards, which
seniors will place inside their
announcements, are available in
three styles: engraving, Cofter
craft raised printing, and simple
printing. The Green company of
Kansas City is supplying all or
ders.
Stressing the fact that sales are
for a limited time only, seniors in
rharpp of urraneements urge stu-
students to place their orders
early.
State Museum
Initiates Work
On Excavations
Preliminary excavation wofk of
fossilized remains of pre-historic
animals at reservoir sites in the
Republican river valley has been
started by the university state
museum.
Allen Graffham, a member of
the museum's field staff, is work
inff in co-oneration with the Army
Engineers and the Bureau of
Reclamation at three sites: Har
lan county dam at Republican
f!itv Mprfirine Creek Droiect at
Cambridge and Enders dam on
Frenchman Creek.
Evidence of valuable fossils was
found during reconnaissance work
last summer, according to ux
C. B. Schultz, museum director
and fossils will be removed before
the areas are inundated.
EVENING 8 P.M.
APRIL 17, 18, 19
ALL SEATS RESERVED
KosmetShow
Reservations
Going Fast
Rehearsals with Dave Haun's
orchestra began Monday night for
"Aksarben Nights," tne is.osmei
Klub musicale to be presented
this Thursday, Friday and Satur
day, April 17 through 19.
Ticket holders began exenang
ing their coupons for seat reser
vations Monday afternoon. The
box office at Temple will be open
today from 12:30 until 5 p.m.
Seat reservations are going very
ran iHiv nopordine to Van West-
over, Kosmet Klub business man
ager. There are also aDout one
hundred tickets to the show to
be sold at the Temple boxoffice.
The cast of the musical comedy
returned early from spring vaca
tion and held rehearsals last Sat
urday and Sunday. Written by
students Dave Andrews andBill
Wiseman the show is being di
rected by Max Whitaker, speech
inciMiM-nr nnH an alumnus of
Kosmet Klub. Romulo Soldevilla,
speech instructor, is the musical
director and Donna McCandless.
Orchesis member and professional
dance instructor, will be in charge
of dance numbers for the show.
Nebraskan's
Reporters
To Be Paid
The Daily Nebraskan has been
authorized bv the Student Publi
cations board to pay reporters
who have a minimum of 100
inrhes in nrint each month, at the
rate of five cents per inch, it was
announced Monday.
Tho ripfision was made at the
Publication board's meeting April
4. No limit has been nxea con
cerning the maximum number of
reporters who may be paid.
Thp hoard took no action in re
snort to the Nebraskan's reauests
for wire service and for a review
of the staffs salary scale.
Charles House
To Take Naval
rraining Cruise
Charles B. House, jr., teachers
college sophomore, nas been
chosen as the Naval ROTC stu
dent from Nebraska for the first
training cruise of U. S. Naval
Academy midshipmen to be held
in northern European waters
since the start of World war II,
Capt. M. D. Matthews, professor
of naval science here, has an
nounced.
In addition to the 2.100 mid
shipmen from Annapolis, the
cruise will be made by approxi
mately 200 students enrolled in
Naval ROTC in various colleges
and universities in the nation. The
cruise will include stops in Eng
land, Scotland, Norway, Sweden
and Denmark and will last about
one month.
A MUSICAL
Paul Butler
Will Discuss
Book Magic
Convo Slated
For Thursday
..Dr. C. Paul Bufrer of the New
York Mirror will discuss "Book
Magic" at the university convoca
tion scheduled for 3 p. m. Thurs
day in the Union ballroom.
Editor and manager of books,
churches and schools of the New
PAUL BUTLER.
York Mirror, Dr. Butler is also
author editor of "Best Sermons oi
1943-44." Others publications he
has written include "Best Ser
mons: 1946 Edition" and Modern
College Readings." '
Educational Research.
Educated at Lawrence College,
Drew Seminary and Columbia
University, Dr. Butler did re
search abroad in libraries in
Paris, Heidelberg, Oxford, the
British museum, the Vatican, Ge
neva and Staresbourg.
In the past seven years he has
given more than 600 lectures
Branch Reports
New Fellowship
An annual scholarship of $100
has been established with the
University by the Woodard Farm
Equipment of Hebron, according
to Perry W. Branch, foundation
director.
Recipients selected annually
from the graduating class of any
Thayer county high school on the
basis of scholastic ability, 4-H
club activities, citizenship, future
promise of success and worthi
ness of financial assistance, will
be chosen by the Hebron superin
tendent of schools, the Thayer
county soperintendent, . county
agent and the home extension
agent.
The scholarship will be award
ed to entering freshmen students
enrolled in ag college.
Teller Lists Deadline
For Ivy Sing Entries
Names of men participating in
the Men's Ivy Day sing contest
should be turned in to Fred Teller
by 5 p. m. Wednesday.
Organizations competing in the
event should also pay the one
dollar fee and submit any per
sonnel changes by that time.
;
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KOSMET KLUB PRESENTS
COMEDY WITH AN ALL
TICKETS 75c
UN
T Clfls,Sr&!le,S,
Emergency Structures
To Serve As Classrooms
Eleven emergency classroom buildings will soon go
under construction at various sites on campus, L. F. Sea
ton, operating superintendent, announced today.
The buildings will be constructed of wood, barracks
fashion, Seaton stated, and are made available thru funds
'Pygmalion'
Cast Named
By Director
Cast members for "Pygmalion,"
the University Theatre's last pro
duction of the year, have been
announced by Clarence Flick, di
rector of the show. Playing the
leads in George Bernard Shaw's
five act comedy-romance are
Margaret Huff, as Eliza Doolittle,
and Dean Graunke, as Henry
Higgins, a professor of phonetics
who makes a wager that he can
pass off as duchess a cockney
waif (Eliza) from Drury Lane.
Characters.
Eliza's father, Alfred Doolittle,
will be played by Rex Coslor.
Donald Hall will play the part of
Colonel Pickering, an elderly pho
netician. Barbara Jean Olson has
the role of Mrs. Higgins, Henry's
mother, and Robert Cappel, the
part of Freddy Eynsford Hill, who
falls in love with Eliza.
Two bystanders will be played
by Merle Stalder and Herb
Soence. Others in the cast are
Gladys Jackson, as Mrs. Pearce;
D. Ann Richardson, Mrs. Eyns
ford Hill; Beverly Cummins, Miss
Eynsford Hill; and Helen Plasters,
a parlor maid.
Miss Plasters is the assistant
director for "Pygmalion." Pro
duction dates are April 14, 15, 16
and 17.
Student Cooperation Asked
In Campus Landscape Plan
BY SAM WARREN.
Special Features Editor.
It's here again!
It's name is "Campus Beautifi
cation." That well-known phrase has,
from time to time, prompted var
ious quarters from the adminis
tration down to complaining stu
dents to clamor for more planned
landscaping, more grass-covered
lawns or some at all, let alone
more!
For the first time, the adminis
tration's maintenance and upkeep
department along with a student
service organization is enlisting
the co-operation of all students in
its campaign to beautify the cam
pus thru a definite landscaping
program.
Obstacles.
In past years, four obstacles
have delayed university attempts
to beautify its Campus with living
greenery. The first stumbling
block was the depression of 529
MALE CAST
BOX OFFICE HOURS
1-6 P. M. DAILY
APRIL 14, 15, 1$, 17
released by the national govern-
ment. All eleven are temporary.
he stressed, and will come down
when permanent classroom build
ings can be built. The great num
ber of students which swelled be
yond the capacity of existing
classroom buildings necessitated
the emergency construction. When
and if the Nebraska legislature
passes the Mueller appropriations
bill, permanent classroom building
construction can get under way,
Seaton said.
Student Health Building:.
Four buildings, one of them de
signed to house the student health
department, are now under con
struction on the quadrangle. worK
was begun during spring vaca
tion. Other emergency wooden class
room buildings are scneauieo 10
be constructed the following lo
cations: One at Brace laboratory,
one at teachers' college, one at
the former museum on 12th street,
and four at the Bancroft school.
Construction will be completed by
July. -
Refurbish Love Library.
The derrick in front of Love
Memorial library is being used. to
hoist up materials for the finish
ing of the fourth floor, which has
never een opened. When the li
brary was completed in 1941, it
was turned over at once to the
army for use as a barracks for
A.S.T.P. students. When the train
ing program was discontinued in
1945 and the trainees moved out,
the interior was adapted to house
stacks and reading rooms. The
fourth floor has not until now
been furnished for library use.
Seaton said that other campus
beautification include placing of
shrubs and sod around teachers'
college.
that made funds unavailable. The
second drawback was the parched
drouth years that refused en-a
couragement to any growth. Third
was the war-time scarcity of
labor, once conditions were favor
able. And fourth has always been
the difficulty of securing student
cooperation, despite student de
mands for landscaping.
Today, according to campus up
keep head C. G. Billings,, three of
the four vital factors are at hand:
sufficient funds, favorable condi
tions and adequate labor. Only
the fourth, student cooperation,
remains in question.
"Keep Off."
In an effort to secure that stu
dent cooperation, Alpha Phi
Omega, national service fraternity
will initiate the campaign by plac
ing over the campus 200 placards
bearing slogan reminders. In ef
fect glorified "keep off the grass"
signs, the placards will be placed
See LANDSCAPE, Tag 2.
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