The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 07, 1948, Image 1

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    University Symphony Concert
Set Today In Union Ballroom
Under the baton of Emanuel
Wishnow the 75-piece University
Symphony Orchestra will make
its major appearance of the se
mester today at 4 p. m. in the
Union ballroom. ' There is no ad
mission charge. Today's concert of
solely orchestral works will be
followed by three appearances in
April. s
On April 6 the orchestra will
accompany five seniors elected by
the graduating class of the school
of music to appear with the sym
phony in an annual concert at
the Union. On April 20 the sym
phony will perform two numbers
to open and close the Honors
Convocation in the coliseum. And
' on April 25 the orchestra will join
the university Choral Union in an
annual coliseum presentation of a
spring oratorio.
Opera Overture Included.
The overture to Auber's operaJ
"Marseniello, which will open
the program today, is written in
"the best tradition of Italian style
of the middle 19th century," ac
cording to Wishnow. The "Water
Music" suite, from which the or
chestra will play six standard ex
cerpts, was written by Handel for
) 1 ttly
Vol. 48 No. 95 Lincoln 8. Nebraska, Sunday. March 7. 1948
Two Ag Students Chosen
National 4-H Delegates
(picture below)
Two Ag college students were
included in the four young Ne
braskans chosen to go to the Na
tional 4-H Club Camp to be held
in Washington, D. C, next June
16 to 23.
Marcia Adams, North Platte,
and Dick Kuska, Omaha, were
the two Ag students named of
ficial delegates. The other two
delegates chosen by State Club
Leader L. I. Frisbey are Alice
Wolph, Cass county, and Jdhn
Bleck, Kearney county. All of
the delegates "have been recip
ients of various kinds of recog
nition for 4-H achievement.
The four young people will go
to the nation's capitol as guests
of the Omaha World Herald
which annually makes the award
to four Cornhusker state dele
gates. Home Ec Freshman
Miss Adams, 19, is a freshman
student in Home Economics. She
was named the 1945 state home
making champion and went to
the National 4-H Club Congress
in Chicago that year.
With eight years of 4-H Club
experience, Miss Adams has car
ried a total of 11 projects in
clothing, garden, foods, and keep
well. She has been a leader ol
a clothing club and an assistant
leader of a homemaking club.
She was in the Dress Review at
the State Fair in 1946 and 1947.
One of her outstanding accom
plishments as a club member was
the complete remodeling of an
attic room fnto a room for her
self. She remodeled the room
from laying the floor to finishing
the room.
At the university she is a mem
ber of the Home Ec Club council
and the Ag YW cabinet. She
participated in the 1948 Home Ec
Style show March 3.
Former Congress Delegate
Kuska, 19. is a frogman at
Campus Bridge
Tourney Slated
For March 13
Dale Ball, official Culbertson
instructor and Union bridge di
rector, has announced that a
campus bridge tournament will
take place March 13 in Parlors
ABC of the ,Union,; beginning at
1:30 p. m ; j ? '
The Union Games Committee,
under the chairmanship of
Spence Phillips, sponsors these
tourneys, in which all hands are
prepared by bridge experts prev
ious to the games. Each team is
scored on the maximum they
are able to make on the same
hands, as they rotate from table
to table.
The participants in the tour
nament must be registered by
teams in the Union office by
S"urday noon, March 13.
a royal water excursion of King
ueorge i.
As the king's party moved along
tne I names, an orchestra followed
on another barge claying the
suite. The king was reportedly so
pleased that he commanded the
entire suite of 21 pieces to be
played again. The suite was last
performed on campus when the
Minneapolis Symphony, played it
in 1945 at the coliseum.
Professor Wishnow has taken a
piano piece descriptive of ringing
bills and transcribed it for string
orchestra with harp and French
horn featured. Donnie Waddell,
harpist, and first hornist Jack
Snider will take the solo passages
in the Pugno composition.
A contrasting scherzo and noc
turne from Mendelssohn's inci
dental "Midsummer N i g h t' s
Dream" music and Tchaikowsky's
"Romeo and Juliet" overture com
plete the program. The complete
program:
Overture to "MaBanlMlo," Auber.
"Water Munlc," Allegro, Air, Bourrte,
Hornpipe, Allegro declso; Handel.
Tlntementg tie Clochettea; Pugno).
Tlntementa rie Clochettea, Pugno (Mlaa
Wacidell, Mr. Hnfiler and Orcheatra).
Brherzo, Nocturne, "Midsummer Night'
Dream," Mendelssohn.
"Romeo and Juliet" fantasle Overture,
Tchalkowaky.
Jfehrafikatt
Ag college. He attended the Na
tional 4-H Congress in 1944 as
one of the eight national cham
pions in garden work; in 1946
as state poultry champion; and in
1947 as a champion demonstrator
in livestock loss prevention.
He has been in 4-H Clubs for
eight years, completing 19 pro
jects in - garden, poultry, lamb,
swine, and plant disease preven
tion. Competing three, years at
the State Fair, "Tie placed first
in . poultry judging in 1944 and
has demonstrated both as an 4n
dividual and as a team member.
His lambs topped their class at
the 1947 Fair and he showed the
grand champion swine at the Fre
mont district 4-H Fair.
Watklns Scholarship
He is attending the university
on a J. R. Watkins scholarship,
awarded on the basis of hi sac
cumulative 4-H record. He is
the president of the Phi Kappa
Psi pledge class. '
"To be sent to the National
4-H Club Camp in Washington is
the highest honor that can come
to any 4-H member in Nebraska,"
commented State Club Leader
Frisbie at the University of Ne
braska, who named the four
delegates.
Nebraska Representatives
to National 4-H Camp
HysEiers FeimisEn Seeisen;
Down Jayheawlis, 70-64
Profs Sponsor
Poetry (Contest
A student poetry writing con
test to encourage more Interest in
poetry is being sponsored by three
university English instructors,
Walter Kidd, Oliver Evans . and
Miss Bernice Slote. Prizes of $35
and $15 will be awarded the two
best entries.
Judging the contest will be
Robert Penn Warren, Pulitzer
Prize winning novelist in 1947,
Howard H. Corning, former Ne
braskan and prominent poet in
the Pacific northwest, John Ciardi,
Harvard university English in
structor, and Dr. Lowry C. Wim
berley, English professor at Ne
braska and editor of the Prairie
Schooier magazine.
Reynolds, Kopf
Hailed as Ag's
Typical Couple
, 'Marge Reynolds and Harold
Kopf, both of Lexington, were
named "Typical Kampus Kouple"
at the Ag Spring Party held in
the Ag Union Friday night. Jack
De Wulf, master of ceremonies,
produced the couple with a wave
of his magic wand.
The "Typical" couple, repre
senting Love Hall, stepped from a
magician's hat. Miss Reynolds was
presented with a bouquet of
gladiolas and snapdragons.
Activities.
Miss Reynolds, a junior, is a
member of student council, Ag
Exec Board, Tassels and Treas
urer of Phi U. Kopf, a sophomore,
is a member of Alpha Gamma
Rho and N club.
Bob and Doris Perry repre
senting Ag Men's Social Club, and
Berl Damkroger and Vi Vosika,
representing Farm House, were
named runners-up in the compe
tition. " -
Sextet.
Preceding the presentation a
sextet composed of Mavis Mus
grave, Alice Boswell, N Maxine
Brannan, Molly Myhre, Gwen
Monson and Helen Oehsner sang
"Sweethearts."
The Party, sponsored by the Ag
Exec Board, featured dancing to
the music of Skippy Anderson and
his orchestra.
Women's Rifle Club
Elects New Officers
The recently organized wom
en's Rifle Club met Thursday,
March 4, to elect officers. Those
elected were Barbara Gardner,
president; Darlene Henschel and
Nancy Smith, secretaries, and
Jane McCuaJg, treasurer.
They will serve for this semes
ter. The group is sponsored by
WAA.
NU Takes Fifth Loop Victory;
Late Kansas Rally Falls Short
Coach Harry Good's University of Nebraska basket
ball team finished a 24-game season Saturday night by
defeating Kansas University's Jayhawks, 70-64.
Two scoring records were broken during the game.
The conference point-per-game average went by the
boards as the Huskers finished loop competition with a
Greek Woes
Complicated
Says Keller
(Exclusive to tlie Dally NobraHknn)
Americans tend to over-simr
plify the troubles of Greece and
therefore are likely to be disap
pointed in the accomplishments
of the American Mission for Aid
to Greece.
This opinion
was expressed
by Ken R. Kel-
1 e r, .university
public relation
de p artment
staff member,
who returned $
to tne campus
this week after " -il
six months in
Greece. He was Lincoln Journal.
press- o f f i c er Keller,
for the American Mission.
"Before I left for Greece," Kel
ler said, "I heard a good deal
about the task of 'rehabilitating
Greece. Much was said about the
damage and suffering caused dur
ing the war years. I concluded
that the job of the mission was
primarily one of repairing war
damage and erasing the marks of
war suffering, so far as possible.
'I came away, from Greece con
vinced that the problem is not one
of 'rehabilitation. It is one of
building anew. The ills of Greece
are not rooted in the war years.
They run deep into generations of
sub-marginal existence. It's opti
mistic to the point of absurdity to
expect a group of strangers to
dissolve such troubles in one or
two years."
Keller gave these examples of
deeply rooted troubles:
1. Though 65 percent of the 7,
000,000 Greek population is en
gaged in agriculture, the nation
for years has been unable to sup
ply all its own food.
2. Not just since the war, but
for many years, Greece has been
unable to establish a stable, en
during government.
3. Though the war shattered
Greece's educational system, the
system before the war was doing
little, if anything at all, toward
equipping young people for a
realistic and productive life in
Greece.
4. By nature, the Greeks are a
proud people but the necessity of
accepting help from others for
generations has weakened sadly
their ability to produce leader
ship. 5. Understandably, the Greeks
have no confidence in their own
currency hence Greek wealth is
not put to work but kept as liquid
(usually in gold) as possible,
ready for flight.
' These gloomy observations, Kel
ler said, have failed to convince
him that American efforts in
Greece are hopeless.
"You still can t escape the real
ization that without the American
Mission's existence, Greece would
be a Communist satelite today,"
Keller said. "And you know, after
visiting Greece and looking at
mission records, that had it not
been for American aid, starvation
in Greece would be acute.
"If those two things are im
portant in t' eyes of Americans,"
he added, "then in less than nine
months, the mission has done
some good."
NSA Discussion Held
By Engineers Group
The student branch of the
American Institute of Electrical
Engineers meet Wednesday night
in Richards lab and heard discus
sions pro and con on the NSA
question.
fell
1 'i
x r
56.2 point average. Claude Reth-
erford broke the individual scor
ing mark for Nebraska players.
The French Lick, Indiana for
ward hit 23 points against the
Jayhawks to break his own sea
son's record of 245 points. He
finished the season with 259
points.
Eskridge Tops Scorers.
Big Jack Eskridge, 64 Kan
sas forward, was the game's high
scorer with 30 points. Eskridge
failed to hit a single point in the
first half. But the Jayhawker ea
ger set a torrid pace the second
stanza, hitting, pivot shots, tip
ins and jump shots from all over
the floor. Guy Mabry took runner-up
honors for the Kansans
with 13 counters, and Otto
Schnellbacher finished third with
12.
Rodney Cox finished second be
hind Retherford in the Nebraska
scoring with 11 points. Center ,
Dick Schleiger hit for ten and,
Paul Shields finished with nine.
Huskers Take Early Lead.
The game was only 15 seconds
old when the Cornhuskers hit
their first two pointer. Cox took
the tip-off in to give Nebraska
a quick lead. The contest was four
minutes old before Schnellbacher
hit the first Kansas bucket. And
another three minutes elapsed be
fore the Jayhawks could collect
another point. With about 15 min
utes gone in the first half, the
Huskers held a 26-10 lead.
Kansas hit for eight points in
the last five minutes and the half
ended with the Cornhuskers
ahead, 32-18.
Kansas came back in the second
half, as" Eskridge led the Jay
See HUSKERS, page 3.
Six Students
Receive AEP
"Mike" Awards
Six radio students were pre
sented Alpha Epsilon Rho "Mike"
awards for 1947-48 by AEP presi
dent, Betty Jeanne Holcomb, at
the third annual radio banquet
held at the Union, Friday eve
ning. Sponsored by Mu chapter of
Alpha Epsilon Rho, national radio
honorary, the banquet opened the
University of Nebraska Fourth
Annual Radio Conference held
on the campus this week end.
Winners Named
Cups were awarded Margaret
Ann' Huff, Scottsbluff, best act
ress; Bill Wiseman, Omaha, best
actor; Paul Schupback, Lincoln,
best announcer; Gaylord Marr,
Seward, "best writer; Patricia
Heynen, Columbus, best director;
and Ken Greenwood, Lincoln,
most likely to succeed in com
mercial radio.
Serving as toastmaster was
ventriloquist, Bud Levinson, AEP
alum, who introduced transcribed
speeches of A. E. Westbrook, Di
rector of the School of Fine Arts;
C. H. Oldfather, Dean of the Arts
and Science College; George S.
Round, Director of Public Rela
tions; Harry Peck, President of
Nebraska Broadcasters associa
tion; and Paul L. Bogen, Director
of Radio at the University of
Nebraska.
Skit Shown
A skit entitled "The Jukes
Family" was directed by Mimi
Hahn. Banquet chairman was
Patricia Heynen. Paul L. Boge:i,
Director of Radio, is the faculty
sponsor of Alpha Epsilon Rho.
Broadcasters from Nebraska
stations attending included Jack
Lewis, Peg Biber, Anson Thomas;
Station KGFW Kearney: William
Cox; Station KBRL, McCookT Ted
Haas, Mrs. E. Engdahl, W. Sharpe;
Station KOIL, Omaha: Harry
Peck, Jack Huston; Station KFOR,
Lincoln: Jiggs Miller; Station
KFAB, Lincoln: Earl Willms;
Capital Broadcasting Company,
Lincoln: Hugh Bader, Bill Waugh,
Station KOLN, Lincoln.