The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 18, 1948, Page PAGE 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Thursday, March 18, 1948
PAGE 2
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
Women's Election Slate
VbJbhoAkotL
AWS
President (vote for one).
Marian Crook
Phyllis Harris.
Seniors (vote for five).
Nadine Anderson.
Helen Jean Dinsmore.
Pat Hamburg.
Carolyn Jones.
Verneal Lundquist.
Mary Mattox.
Jane McArthur.
May O'Connor.
Margaret Stewart
Ann Wbitham.
Juniors (vote for five).
Lee Best.
Suzanne Bockes.
Nancy Glynn.
Donna Lou Johnson.
Katherine Rapp.
. Mary Ellen Schroeder.
Norma Shalla.
Janet Stratton,
Marcia Tepperman.
Wanda Young:.
Sophomores (vote for five).
Joel Bailey.
Joyce Buck.
Clare Dalton.
Virginia Guhin.
Sally Holmes.
Nancy Jensen.
Marg-aret Judd.
Jane Linn.
Laura Lyman.
Charlotte Richards.
BABW.
President (vote for one).
'Sweeper's Son' to Lead Ag
II
wm
Tnicij Sliirls cl Fb Pisfi
Van Tux by
Van Seosen
Here they are haad'ioia
"black-tk dress shirts
collar attached, a two new
low-setting collar models:
wide spread and regular length.
Snowy white pique front and French cuffs, fine handler chief
doth body. Made with Van Cttuca uvsuunhlg in every detail.
Daee Bolyan.
Donna McAuIey.
Seniors (vote for two).
Mary Ann Graff.
Claudia Neuenswander.
Marion McElhaney.
Juniors (vote for four).
Wanda Buell.
Jo Ann Learning.
Edith Roesler.
Pat (Delores) Rolfsmeier.
Eve'yn Wolph.
Sophomores (vote for four).
Peggy Judd.
Gladys Mae Lord.
Marjory McElhaney.
Donna Jean Saum.
Jean Walker.
Jean Wielage.
MAY QUEEN.
Joanne Ackerman.
Jean Cempton.
Mary Dye.
Wilma Elson.
June Gast.
Jackie Gordon.
Joan Fankhouser.
Priscilla Flagg.
Catherine Ham.
Dorothy Ichinaga.
Charlotte Kelly.
Dorothy Meshier.
Marcia Mockett.
Rodala Nelson.
Shirley Schnittker.
Marion Weeth.
Berniee Young.
Lorraine Zahn.
COED COUNSELOR BOARD.
mm
7 4
H i 4
President (vote for one)
Marian McElhaney
Jackie Wightman
Senior Member (affiliated)
(vote for one) a
Nancy Gish
Peggy Lawrie
Senior Member (unaffiliated)
(vote for one)
Virginia Lange
Shirley Sabin
Junior Members (affiliated)
(vote for three)
Dorothy Borgens
Myra Hauge
Jean Ann McLaughlin
Mary Helen Mallory
Pat Nordin
Eloise Paustian
Junior Member (unaffiliated)
(vote for three)
Jean Blaha
Marjorie (Fritzle) Clark
Janice Cochran
Jeanne Malone
Jeanette Sielaff
Marjorie Wilburn
Sophomore Member (affiliat
ed) (vote for two)
Marilyn Campfield
Mary Gaines
Rosemary Motter
Audrey Rosenbaum
Sophomore members (unaffil
iated) (vote for two)
Kathleen Burt
Claire Dalton
Marilyn Dawson
Marilyn Weidenbaeh
Stock Show
s7.rur' thrPP vear
- ,
. , , . 1
the opening ceremonies at the
14th annual Junior Ak-Sar-Ben
show Saturday night at 8 p. m
Mazine Ludwick, a university
coed from York, will ride him,
bearing the American flag.
Developed by the Remount
Station at Fort Robinson, Neb.,
Sweeper's Son is being given to
the university of Nebraska
animal husbandry department
This will be the first exhibition
of the stallion since it arrived
Tuesday.
Major Leo C. Cooksley, a
graduate of Ag college and a
member of the Block nad Bridle
animal husbandry honorary or
ganization, brought the horse from
Fort Robinson. Major Cooksley
has also loaned three flat top
saddles for the coed riding contest
Of the show.
Outstanding Individual.
"Sweeper's Son is quite an out
standing individual,' M. A. Alex
ander, chairman of the depart
ment of Animal Husbandry, som-
mented. "Over a hundred re
quests have been received by the
Remount Station for leasing this
horse. We are very fortunate to
have such a high quality and
popular horse for exhibition and
on Ag campus permanently."
Miss Ludwick will also appear
in other portions of the Ar-Sar
Ben program. She is an accom
plished equestrienne, having par
ticipated in many horse shows.
Stadent Planned.
The Junior Ak-Sar-Ben. to be
neld at the Fair Grounds arena,
is sponsored annually by the
Block and Bridle club on Ag
campus. Student planned and
executed, he show will feature a
hundred university students who
will fit and show animals in
competitive clases.
Five how classes will be in
cluded: Beef and dairy cattle,
horses, swine, and sheeD show
ing.
COLLEGE NIGHT,
Free
Booth
Reservation
Admission only
iu
r -imftfiAriw r i r i i i f iT C .
mr r " -- '
m w m
Member
Intercollegiate Press
rOUTY -SIXTH CEAS
B. II7S. u mt feet ml rmu ar mii
t, 111. satborliMl Brptemoev
M. mi.
Tb Dally Nebraakan
ItaMMfl Til i-TBo.7d
ba fraa fraan editorial omimitsMp an tM P
KbraakaTarrpanwoiUly WnilWe "
aifiTuauai. nui
rA. Oeorw Mlllrr
(.at Editor' Jeaaaa KcttIcm. Mom Le,
SM-Jr? l!T.....C. Or-. T..U. War. Bo CW. Lr. HarrJ Nrdln
--, , ... . ............................. .rita Hlmpaon
Paotanaphfr
MGHI NEWS EDITOR
B
. .. ......... ... ..
Clrratallna
W Qub Dance to Feature
Monroe Orchestra, Show
One of the top bands of the
country will appear in the Coli
seum Saturday night when
Vaughn Monroe brings his or
chestra and stage show for the
"N" Club's informal dance from
8 p.m. until midnight
Featuring the program will be
one of music business' most
rounded stage shows. Besides
Monroe, who sings both popular
and classical tunes, the band has
I 1.. '7:r,r. Tfi on
tUIUCUT SII1CCI f'66J
comedian Frank Fontaine, vocalist
Betty Norton and the quintet of
Texas voca-lovelies, the Moon
maids. Radio Series.
They are featured on almost all
of Monroe's new recordings and
are heard regularly on his CBS
radio series.
This series, the "Camel Cara
van," will be a part of Saturday
night's festivities, coming at 8:30
from the Coliseum stage. The
doors will be closed at 8:10 until
after the show to keep interfer
ence at a minimum. To see the
Kirsch Garifies
In Removal of
BY SAM WARREN.
The haze of rumor and confu
sion surrounding the removal
earlier this week of an oil paint
ing on the grounds of obscenity
from the Nebraska Art Associa
tion's annual exhibit, was clari
tied in an interview yesterday
with Dwight Kirsch, director of
the university art galleries. The
oil is Matta's "Every Man
King."
At a regularly-scheduled panel
discussion held two Sundays ato
in Morrill Hall, James Thorpe
the federal soil survey division
connected with the university
was among the panel members
who discussed the Matta paintlnr
which he found disagreeable and
"obscene." (Thorpe had expressed
general objection te the show
earlier In a letter to the Lincoln
Star.)
"The picture was frankly dis
cussed and well-handled by the
panel members," Kirsch said, "in
regard to its meaning, nature and
definite social significance, and
the problem of the artist's free
dom of expression." Kirsch char
acterized the picture (which pre
sents two sub-human, half insect
like creatures preying upon i
smaller central object) as speak
ing out against mankind's "greed,
Friday, March 19
Couples
Only
$1.50 per couple
jLucruaea
........
published by Che itafenU of the University mt Nebrmika m
arm and opinions only, according axtlek, U ol laa By
onbllraMoni and admlnUtma by the Bort of PabUcaliona.
that
mm HuMlcUoa hall
the Board. a on th part ot an
of (bo atari of The- Dail
" tey W or or euH to b. printed.
... .. .. 9
Bnb Ouli
.LEE HARRIS
BUBLNEM aTTAaT
-Goal ftaj(t
. .Jack tfelwr
Bill WUklaa. Mcrla Btoloar. Irwfet Caesaa
show, dancers should arrive early.
To attest his high national pop
ularity, two of Monroe's more re
cent records have sold more than
a million discs. These are "There
I've Said It Again," and "Let It
Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow."
Black Label Artist
During his first years as a Vic
tor artist, Monroe was assigned to
the lower-priced Bluebird disc la
bel, but as his appeal became
more evident, he was switched to
the exclusive Victor black label.
After the nearly two-year re
cording ban, during which the
musicians' union and the record
companies worked out a new con
tract, Monroe's was the first band
selected to record, for the com
pany. The record was "The Trol
ley Song," and pictures of the ses
sion clanged across every front
pape in the nation.
Tickets for the dance are now
on sale at Schmoller & Mueller's
downtow and at the Coliseum in
the Athletic Ticket office. They
sell for $2 per person.
Background
'Obscene' Oil
struggle and contension."
Tuesday evening the art as
sociation's president, Mrs. John
Whitten informed Kirsch of com
plaints and "demands" that had
come to her for its removal. To
gether they decided that the as
sociation's exhibition committee,
of which Kirsch is chairman,
should meet to discuss the issue.
"As a result of majority vote,
I was asked to remove it quietly,"
he said.
The majority of the committee
seemed to feel that, because of
the school children and general
type or clientele attracted U the
exhibit, the picture by the
Chilean artist should net be
shewn, although Matta's name
was Included en the NAA's list
of artists whose work Kirsrh
could choose. "Every Man a
Hag" Is sn loan from the Pierre
Matisse gallery in New York.
Mrs. Kenneth Snowden, em
ployed for several years by the
Lincoln board of education to
lecture to the school groups had
reported to the Sunday panel
that in the one week the Matta
was displayed the children had
not paid "any attention" to It.
There was no complaint from the
Lincoln schools, although in 1934
two officials as well as members
of the NAA objected to a painting
of two nudes.
Any surrealistic work, he
pointed out, utilizes symbols with
special connotations, including
some Freudian symbols, to be
sure." But since the artist sup
plies no keys to the meaning,
lengthy study and keen analysis
are necessary to interpret surreal- .
istic painting. "As I have viewed
the picture over a -jeriod of time.
Kirsch commented, "I have felt
that what Matta had done was
to use symbols that ordinarily
have Freudian meanines to
achieve broader social meanings.
"If the exhibit were sotelv a
University project, I would go to
bat for the Matta." Kirsch said,
"hut since the show Is In the
name of the Nebraska Art As
sociation, we must abide bjl s
decision. The question has been
brought to the proper authorities
and is la good hands."
I