The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 12, 1948, Image 1

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Vol. 48 No. 99 LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Gala "Dri-Nite Club" Opener
Slated for Tonight in Union
The Union ballroom will take
on a slightly different appearance
tonight with the opening of the
first Dri-Nite club of the season.
The club, which will offer Fri
day night's nite-clubers nearly all
the conveniences of an actual up
town nite-club with few excep
tions, will offer the music of
Johnny Cox and his orchestra.
To top this off a special floor
show featuring Juan Illeuca will
be presented to all those lucky
persons who succeed in obtaining
one of the first 150 tickets. The
management, headed by By Hoop
er, has announced that only the
first 150 couples will be allowed.
An added feature attraction-for
those who indulge will e
old fashioneds," "cocktails," and
"martinis" served in soft style.
Cigarette girls will also be in
cluded. This will be the first in a series
of Dri-nite clubs with new enter
tainment being planned for each
night of the club.
Head waiters, cigarette . girls
and special menus will also add
to the general atmosphere of a
night club, where only parties of
four or more will be admitted to
the tables.
Tickets, selling at $1.50 per cou
ple, are going fast and sales will
soon reach the 150-couple limit of
the night club, according to the
chairman of the dance committee.
Ed Trumble, Student Union
board member, and sponsor of the
dance committee, is in charge of
the "Dri-Nite Club" dance.
UN Chemurgic
Expert Leaves
For Far East
Dr. E. V. Staker, associate pro
fessor of agronomy at the Uni
versity of Nebraska, is leaving
Nebraska Friday for the Orient
where he will serve as a soil fer
tility specialist with General Mac
Arthur's Far East command in
Japan and Korea.
In his new assignment, Dr.
Staker will have the responsibil
ity of determining fertilizer needs
and assisting with importation and
distribution of fertilizers. The job
is scheduled to continue for a
minimum of two years.
Since he came to the Univer
sity of Nebraska in 1945 from
Cornell University, Dr. Staker has
played a major role in chemurgic
research.
Mrs. Staker and their two sons,
Francis Dale and James, expect
to join Dr. Staker in Korea in
about eight months.
"Playboy" Pranks .
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hearsal, play Director Robert Black (right) runs over his charac
terization interpretation for "Playboy of the Western world,
comedy by the Irish playwright J. M. Synge, which opens Wed
nesday, March 17 in Temple Theater. Chuckling over the con
versation are leads Rex Cosier, left, who portrays the title role,
and Pat King, center, who plays Pegeen, an inkeepers daughter.
"Playboy" is the fourth production of the University players, and
will run for five performances, including a Saturday matinee.
Tickets will be available daily at Temple box office after 12:30
beginning Monday.
Study Shows
Puhlic Chooses
Police Stories
Police and fire news stories,
either t)lain or fancy, seem to im
press newspaper readers more
than other local government
stories such as those from the city
hall, court house or federal build
ing. This conclusion comes from an
analysis made by the University
School of Journalism. The
school's study, however, used sur
vey material from outside Ne
braska 144 stories from 11 pa
pers. Women, the study revealed, re
member illustrated and feature
stories much better than stories
treated in routine style. The same
is true of men, but the contrast
is not so great.
William H. Hice, university
journalism instructor, explained
the study was limited to local
stories coming from police and
fire coverage, from the city hall,
court house and the federal
building. The objective was to de
termine the extent of reader in
terest and the effect of illustra
tions and feature treatment on
that interest. No attempt was
made to determine the percentage
of readers attracted to the stories
from various sources.
Grads Carry on
St. Fas Parly
Minus Freshmen
An ironic twist of fate has been
interpreted by the Graduate Club
as "just the luck of the Irish!"
Discovering that the regular
meeting day fell on March 17,
Saint Patrick's Day, the club
council reached for its member
ship list to find an Irishman to
saddle with responsibility for the
party plars.
Looking over the names, the
council members found Hansen,
Johnson, Markkussen. Would that
do? Never. They spied Svoboda,
Dzavik, and Kropotnik. These,
too, were useless. Other names
were Coppley, Stauffer, and
Locke. Where, they wondered,
were the O'Halligans, the Mur
phys, and Fitzgeralds?
The brutal answer was that not
a sin;;le Irish name adorned their
list. The 7:30 St. Patrick Day
party in the Union with its Irish
games, dances, flutes, and tasty
dishes would have to carry on
anyway. This, they announced,
was their Shamrock decision of
the month!
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Friday, March 12, 1948
Ag Seniors
Go to Valley
FFA Meet
To Audit, Judge
District Coulest
Thirty senior men at Ag Col
lege will go to Valley Saturday,
March 13, to observe and help
judge at a district Future Farm
ers of America meeting, according
to an announcement made today
by H. E. Bradford, chairman of
the department of Vocational Ed
ucation. High Schools Enter
FFA members from 10 high
schools in district III around Val
ley will attend the meeting and
participate in the contests. Intro
duction of the State Farmer appli
cants and several entertainment
sessions are also included in the
meet's program. The district FFA
chairman will preside over all
sessions.
Three contests will be judged
by the Ag College students. Rib
bons will be awarded for three or
more places in each contest.
The first contest will be an
FFA proqect book contest. Each
high school chapter may submit
one project book that has been
made and completed in a Voca
tional Agriculture class during the
current year. The blue ribbon
book will be entered in the state
contest.
Ag Seniors to Judge
Each chapter may also enter
one member in the district public
speaking contest. Several Ag col
lege seniors will be on hand to
judge this contest and award rib
bons to the winners.
A district parliamentary proce
dure contest will be the final
contest of the meeting. Each chap
ter may enter one team, and the
high scoring team will be eligible
to enter the state contest. Each
team, consiting of five FFA men
and an adviser, will go through
the various forms of parliamen
tary procedure, including opening
ceremony, motions, minutes, and
the closing ceremony.
The district meeting Is a 'pre
liminary meeting to the State FFA
convention to be held at Ag col
lege on April 9 and 10.
D. Barrymore
To Play 'Joan'
Tonight at LHS
Anderson's Play Makes
Second Showing Here
University play-goers will re
ceive their second chance to view
"Joan of Lorraine," Friday at the
Lincoln high auditorium, 21st and
St.
The Maxwell Anderson drama
was first presented in the Temple,
Oct. 29. 30, 31, and Nov. 1. Fri
day evening, a cast made up of
personnel from the New York
and Boston companies and headed
by Diana Barrymore in the title
role, will give their version of
the play. Curtain time is 8:30.
Ingrid Bergman appeared in
the original Broadway production
of "Joan" which was acclaimed
by both the critics and the public
as one of the outstanding dramas
ever to appear on Broadway.
An interesting factor is that
"Joan" is a play within a play.
The story is centered around a
New York rehearsal of a play
dealing with the life of the titled
heroine. What the audience sees
is made up of rehearsals of the
play-within-a-play and contro
versial discussions regarding the
philosophy that Joan of Lorraine
might have had.
The drama's author, Maxwell
Anderson, is well remembered as
the author of such outstanding
theatrical epics as "Elizabeth the
Queen," which starred the Lunts
In 1930, Mary of Scotland with
Helen Hayes in 1933 and such
contemporary hits as "Saturday's
Children," and "The Eve of St.
Mark."
Fob- Firoslu peons
Nlexlt Wednesday
Seniors Go Before State
Supreme Court in Finals
Thirty-two freshman law teams will compete in the
first round of the Freshman Law Competition beginning
next Wednesday, March 17.
This meet will mark the first actual contest between
the freshman Law School students, though a practice
round was held last fall. The sixteen cases will be pre
sented before and judged by local attorneys and judges.
Holy
Week Set
To Begin Here
Next Week
Holy Week, an annual religious
observance, sponsored by the Re
ligious Welfare Council, will be
held this year from March 21
through March 25.
The main features of this period
will include daily early morning
worship periods at the various
student houses and the Temple
building, an all-campus convoca
tion at 5:00 on Wednesday in Love
Library auditorium and other de
nominational meetings and house
visitations. In addition, the Reli
gious Welfare Council urges all
students to attend the University
Singers presentation of Brahm's
Requiem on Sunday, March 21, at
Plymouth Congregational church.
Holy Week is one of the sev
eral projects presented by the Re
ligious Welfare Council in a con
tinuing program of religious edu
cation for the campus.
'TobaccolancT
Will Be Shown
At Ag Tuesday
Siesta Film Hour at Ag Union
will begin at noon Tuesday to
show the color film "The New
Tobaccoland, USA," sponsored by
the campus representatives of
Liggett and Meyers Tobacco com
pany. The film, produced by the for
mer producer of "The March of
Time," shows the processes of to
bacco growing and manufacturing.
It is one of the few films accepted
for endorsement by the Farm
Film Foundation, a non profit
education institution dedicated to
bringing better motion pictures tc
rural America. Other short films
on the Siesta program induce:
"Soprt Spellbinders," "Saundie
B," and "American Cop."
Sunday's program at Ag Union
begins with the Matinee Movie,
"Topper Returns," starring Joan
Blondell, Rolland Young, and Pat
sy Kelley. The movie, beginning
at 3:00 p.m., will be followed by
Coffee Hour at 5:00. Piano re
quests will be played and free
coffee and brownies will be
served.
University Photo Laboratory
In West Stadium
Takes Wide Variety of Pictures
A set of teeth, a cantaloupe
filled with breakfast cereal, foot
ball players and a scrambled egg
with parsley have all had their
pictures taken at the University
Photo Lab at the West Stadium.
The photography lab, under the
direction of Mr. Wendall Hoff
man has taken pictures of all
kinds for every department on the
campus and performs other serv
ices far. the University on a non
profit basis. The college of den
tistry, the drama department, the
Cornhusker and many other de
partments are be.ng served with
the fully-equipped modern photo
graph lab.
.21,699 pictures have been en
tered on the photo-lab's books
up to date.
Slide Projectors.
Photographs for slide-projectors
to be used in classrooms are
also made in the lab! Micro-filming
is another service.
Movie cameras are used to film
movies of the Husker football and
"Moot court will be held at
1:30, 3:30 and 7:30 every week
day until March 25. The cases
will be heard in Room 204 of the
Law School, and are open to the
public without charge.
Actual Practice.
The competition is planned an
nually by instructors to give the
opportunity for actual practice by
law students before courts, in
writing briefs, and in meeting sit
uations that arise in court.
The first one, to be heard at
1:30. March 17, will be Druliner &
Dahlgren vs. McAneny & Starrett,
with the first named the Appel
lant. It was announced today that the
Junior Allen Competition third
round cases will be heard March
22 at 3:30 and 7:30 and at 7:30,
March 24. Those remaining in the
competition and the pairings are:
Kratt & Sheaff. vs. Harper &
Moore; Jorgenson & Curry vs.
Rundle & Strong; and Jeffrey
O'Leary vs. Haggart & Binning.
Finals Soon.
The finals in the Allen Appel
late Competition will be held soon
before the Supreme Court of the
State of Nebraska. The teams
that will meet are winners of the
previous senior law students con
tests. They are Wilson & Guenzel
vs. Nelson & Swartz.
Both the Junior and Senior Al
len Competitions are named for
Thomas Stinson Allen, in whose
name a plaque was presented to
the Law School last year. The
names of the winning team in the
contests will be inscribed upon it
annually.
"Whoopsie!"
Oh somewhere men are laugh
ing. . .And somewhere men are
gay. . .but there is no joy in Phi
Delta Phi. . .Ben Bucacek went
the wrong way!
Phi Delta Phi and Delta Theta
Theta Phi, two law fraternities,
were engaged in a championship
basketball game in their league.
Delta Theta Phi had just sunk a
basket and Phi Delta guards took
the ball out from the sidelines.
Ben Bucacek, Phi Delta Phi guard
waited for his mate to pass the
ball.
Ben was going to sink a basket
or die in the attempt. The ball
was snapped to him and without
further ado, Ben made a magnifi
cent pivot-shot that won the ad
miration of the spectators. But it
didn't win the admiration of the
team for Ben had Just made two
points for the opponents. It was
the wrong basket.
basketball games by Rex Ross,
one of the four photographers and
are lent to the athletic depart
ment for reviewing important
games.
Another Interesting piece of
photography equipment is the
photo-micrograph, which takes
pictures as seen by the eye of it's
telescope of all types of cells and
bacteria. The camera and tele
scope are all part of the same
machine.
Multl-Lithing.
"Multi-lithing" is another type
of photography that the lab
boasts. The picture is burned into
a metal plate which may be used
on a ditto machine indefinitely.
Public-relations work for the
university is also performed by
the photograph lab, which prints
pictures publicizing phases of edu
cation at the University.
Pex Ross, Caz Tada, Charles
Stiverson and Lyle Eckley are the
four photograph men for the lab.
Ihey are sup ervised by Mr. Holt-man.