90 Vol. 48 No. Ill Lincoln 8. Masquers Name Davis President Walter Davis, Arts and Sciences junior, was elected president of the Nebraska Masquers, university University stage manager this year, Davis has been active in backstage work for theater pro ductions for the past two years He appeared in "Angel Street" as a London bobby and is a varsity band drum major. Other officers elected by the Masquers are: Clarence Denton, vice president; D. Ann Richard son, executive secretary; Gladys WALTER DAVIS Jackson, recording secretary; Jack Asbyll, treasurer; and Norm Le ger, reporter. Shirley Sabin was named historian, and Merle Stal der and Margaret Huff were elected to the Board of Governors. Masquer pledges made active at the meeting include: Jack Asbyll, Mary Cottingham, Walter Davis, Clarence Denton, Homer Hauptman, Mrs. Betty Laird, Norm Leger, and Eddie McCul lough. New pledges named were: Mil dred Hodtwalker, Frank Jacobs, t'at .rung, I'riscilla Knudsen, Helen Prince, and Marv Lou Thompson. Ivy Day Poems Due At Union by April 21 All entries in the Ivy Day Poem Contest must be turned in to the Union office by Wednesday, April 21 at 5:00. Three manuscripts must be submitted of each poem and none of the manuscripts may have the name on them. The authors name must be placed in a sealed en velope and turned in with the manuscripts. The only specification for the poem is that it shall pertain to Ivy Day traditions. Judges will be Dr. Frantz. Dr. Wimborly and Dr. Slote, all of the English department. Phi Beta Kappa to Announce New Membership Wednesday i ni ueia is.appa and bigma Xi discuss "Science and International nesday. New members selected for the two top academic honoraries will be announced at the dinner. The informal dinner will be served buffet style in the Union ballroom at 6:15 p. m. Wednesday. Reservations Must be Made Reservations should be made by mail before April 5. Plates are $1 each. Non-members may attend. Dr. Ridenour is Dean of the graduate college and a professor of physics at the University of Illinois. He has done extensive work in the field of cosmic rays, nuclear physics, and electronics. During the war he was assistant director of the radiation labora tories at M.I.T. He also was a special civilian consultant to General "Toocy" Spaatz in the European theater. Members Ticked From Senior Class Members for Phi Beta Kappa are selected from one-eighth to one-tenth of the graduating class. In recent years, the scholastic average of those picked has not dropped below 81 percent. Students in all colleges are eligible for Phi Beta Kappa if they have met the group requirements of the ai ts and sciences college. Nebraska. Sunday. April 4. 1948 dramatic honorary, last Thursday. Aussie Minister To Speak at Forum Today Alfred Stirling, Australian Min ister to the Australian Embassy in Washington, D. C, will speak at the Forum sponsored by the Pres byterian Student House at 5:00 p. m. Sunday, April 4. The Forum will be held in the Union ballroom. Stirling, who has served as a member of the Australian delega tions to the Imperial Conference, the League of Nations Assemblies, the UNRRA Conference in At lantic City and the Paris Peace Conference, will speak on "Aus tralia's Place in the International Scene." He will include in his talk the political, economic and social aspects of Australian life today. Stirling was born in Melbourne, Australia and received his edu cation in Scotch college, Mel bourne University and the Uni versity College, Oxford, England. Stirling is the second repre sentative from foreign embassies who has spoken on the campus, being preceeded by Gordon Hous ton, from the English Counsul in Washington, D. C. Delta Omicroii Opens Book Drive Delta Omicron, national profes sional music sorority, is sponsor ing a nationwide UNESCO proj ect to collect books, which will be used to restock two European li braries destroyed during World war II in Belgium and Czecho slovakia. Books are guaranteed to reach their destination by the Commit tee of International Educational Rehabilitation and the American Book Center. Boxes will be placed in Love Library, the Student Union and the School of Music. Students contributing books may leave them at these collection stations any time before 6 p. m. Wednes day. Books needed and acceptable are all kinds of textbooks, Sci ence and technology books are es pecially needed and children's books that are classics and have been printed latter than 1937. will hear Dr. Louis N. Ridenour Affairs," at a joint meeting Wed Med School Diplomas Science Film To Be Shown Twice Today Photomicrography shows Crea tion. It takes a delicate camera and microscope to capture the inside secrets of a puff of smoke, or a leaf, or a drop of water as revealed in the religious-scientific film, "The God of Crea tion." Vivid full-color scenes from astronomy and natural science are featured in "The God of Crea tion," sound motion picture to be shown at 5 p.m. today at the First Lutheran church, 17th and A St., according to the Rev. Alvin M. Peterson, pastor. The film will be shown to Ag students at 6:30 p.m. at 1200 No. 37 St. Large Showing "The God of Creation," pro duced by Dr. Irwin A. Moon in the Los Angeles laboratories of Moody Institute of Science, al ready has been shown to more than two million people in this country and was recently intro duced in Europe. In the opening section of "The God of Creation," the audience travels to the stars to view the complexities of our own solar system. The astronomical photo graphs were taken thru the giant 100-inch telescope of Mount Wil son Observatory in southern Cal ifornia. Photosynthesis Shown Lapse-time photography is util ized to demonstrate the beauties of natural science, as flower buds appear to develop into full-blown blossoms in a few seconds. Pictures of photosynthesis, the mysterious f o o d-manufacturing process resulting from the action of sunlight on leaves, will be shown. Eleetion Poster Rules Declared Poster rules for the coming all university spring elections, April 15, have been announced by Jack Selzer, chairman of the election publicity committee of the Stu dent Council. All publicity posters must be turned in to the Student Union office before 6 p. m., April 12, so that they can be checked by a Council committee. The Coun cil will take care of the distribu tion of the posters. They will be posted as soon as possible after being turned in. The maximum size for each poster will be 14 by 22 inches. Four handmade posters are al lowed to each candidate and six to each party. These are the bnly printed materials which may be used. The four posters will be placed in tne union, Love Library, Ag Union, and one more in any cam pus building. If no fourth choice is indicated, the last one will be put in Social Sciences building. it iewer than four posters are turned in, it should be stated which of the four places they be posted. Further election rules can be found in a box in Tuesday's Daily iNeorasKan. if v rV ) iky fl 1 College Awards UN Grad Honorary D. Sc. Degree Ninety graduates, members of the university of medicine's hist accelerated. wartime class, received their diplomas April 3. Dr. Alfred W. Adson and Miss Josephine Chamberlin received honorary degrees for outstanding work in the medical profession. Dr. Adson, associated with the Mayo Clinic and Foundation for more than 30 years, completed his undergraduate work and received his Mas ter's degree from the University of Nebraska in 1918. He is lamous Aggie Meeting Will Preview Farmer's Fair A preview of the 1948 Farmer's Fair will be held on Ag campus Tuesday, April 6, at a 4 p.m. con vocation. Rick Wahlstrom, Farm ers J; air a o a r d manager, an nounced the preview and said that Ag students can be dismissed from classes to attend the event with the permission of their instruct ors. The convocation, to be held in the Dairy Industry building, will give a picture of the Fair, past and future. Colored movie ac counts of previous Fairs will be shown by Prof. F. D. Keim, pro fessor of agronomy. The members of the 1948 Far mers rair Board will outline the activities for this year's celebra tion. They will discuss the many phases of the annual event. Mrs. Eleanor McFadden, a member of the Board in 1937, will report on the traditional Ag campus Fair of that year. Lake to Advise Area Unions Duane Lake, University of Ne braska Student Director, has been appointed Regional Advisor for the National Association of Col lege Student Unions. The region under Mr. Lake's jurisdiction in cludes all schools in Kansas and Nebraska. Approximately eight new un ions are under consideration in this area, with one of the largest to be at Kansas State, Manhat tan, Kas. The duties of the posi tion call for advisory service with building plans and programs. Mr. Lake has -been chosen as one of the twenty-two Regional Advisors in the United States and Canada, among them are past presidents and officers of the As sociation, and Deans of Students at various colleges. UN Sociology Professor Authors Essay in 'Annals' Dr. J. O. Hertzler, professor ot sociology, is the author of an es say in the March issue of the "Annais" of the American Aca demy of Political and Social Science. Dr. Hertzler's article, "Religious Institutions," opens the volume on "Organized Religion in the United .States." Recently Dr. Hertzler has had reviews of "Can Science Save Us," by Lundberg, and "Under standing Society," by Odum, in the journal. Social Forces, and of "Essays on Anti-Semitism," by Pinson, in the Public Opinion Quarterly. 16 Frosh, 3 Junior Teams Advanee in Moot Court Trials Law college's Moot Court com petition ended just before spring vacation, with 16 frosh and three juniors emerging as victors. The competition to determine this year's final winning senior team will be held later in the spring. Thirty-two freshmen teams participated in the proceedings along with six junior teams. The 16 frosh teams will enter the jun ior competition next fall, while the three junior winners will continue into the senior bracket next fall. The fund for the Moot Court was donated by Thomas S. Allen, a member of the first graduating class of the university Law school. Winners of the freshmen and I for the development ol now oper- ations and techniques that made possible the removal of tumors from the spinal cord and brain. He received an honorary Doctor of Science degree. Honorary Degree Miss Chamberlin received an honorary Master of Nursing de gree. A graduate of Blair high school, she received her certificate in. nursing at Chicago in 1922. During World War I she served overseas with the University of Nebraska Base Hospital No." 49, and was superintendent of the college dispensary from 1919 until her retirement in 1945. Dr. Edward L. Bortz of Phila delphia, president of the Ameri can Medical Association, the main speaker, told the graduates that socialization of medicine would force the medical profession into chains by placing it under govern ment control. He asserted that in every nation where political con trol has been forced upon an un willing medical profession, the standards of medical service have deteriorated, and the public has received a lower quality of medi cal care. He pointed out that in the past 100 years medical science has increased life expectancy from 41 to 67 years. Administers Oath Dean Harold C. Lueth admin istered the Oath of Hippocrates, awarded the certificates to tech nologists, and degrees to Bache lors of Science and Doctors of Medicine. Degrees in Medical Technology were presented by Dr. J. Perry Tollman, and those in Nursing by Irma M. Kyle, director of the School. The charge to the graduating class was given by Dr. R. G. Gus tavson, and Capt. Mitchell D. Matthews administered the oath of office to appointees to the U.S. Naval Reserve. Mu Phi Epsilon Presents Concert Mu Phi Epsilon, national music sorority, will present the first in a series of concerts to be given by three music sororities Sunday, April 14, at 4 p. m. in the Tem ple theater. The program for Sunday will feature an octet singing three numbers, "Dearest Lord Jesus" and "Bouree," by Bach, plus "A Bird Flew" by Clokey. Solo ists presented in the concert will be Florence Nerenberg and Eli nor Hanson, piano, and Patricia Line, Mary Ann Campbell and Kathleen Donovan, vocal. Miss Nerenberg and Miss Hanson will present a piano duet "Sonata in D." Several vocal duets wil be sung by Miss Campbell and Miss Donovan. Sigma Alpha Iota will be sec ond in the concert series with their recital Thursday, followed by Delta Omicron on Sundav, April 21. junior rounds, plus the senior finalists: Senior Finalists R. C. Ouenzel anil K. n. Wilson vs. R. I). Nelson and V . T. Scliwertz. Junior Winners P. C. Krat? and R. A. Shenff W. A. Rundli, Jr., and J. M. Strong H. f. HaKfiort and J. 11. Binning Freshman Winners J. Rrullner and J. Pahlcren . Peters and O. Burr J. Lyle and D. Meyer K. Kratz and R. Calkins J. Hunter, Jr., and M. Johnpon i J. Davis and E. Comerford D. KIIh and R. Luedtke P. Itnyd and K. Zimmerman O. Ktebls and J. Kdstrom J. B rower and C. Erlckson 1). Van Winkle and P. A. Wilson R. Berkheimer and K. Damon W. Mtinson and F. Fucate R. Wilson and R. Coyne J. Nlelson and T. Sorensen R. Simmons and C. Abbott