Friday, April 30, 1948 ' THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Page 7 Union Traces Growth, Tells Plans for Future Union Facilities Praised Birthday Party Saturday By Lee Best. Ten years ago May 8 an experi mental lab was opened on the UN campus to discover the solution of the social and recreational prob lems of University students. This lab, the Student Union, has in its first decade designed one of the most efficient and complete pro grams in the country for student entertainment. Six directors and ten student faculty .boards have built from a comparatively narrow program for five thousand students a new eight point expansion plan which will house the activities of more than ten thousand. If a replica birthday cake is on display in 1955, it will no doubt include space for bowling alleys, billiards rooms, tennis courts, an expanded auditorium, a faculty club and dining room, additional student lounges, study space, cloak rooms and office. To meet the increased interest in manual arts and in fine arts, a completely equipped craft shop will be available, and a Fine Arts studio is planned. The Fine Arts studio will be separate from the present music and library facili ties, which will also be increased. It will be used for actual creative work, while the other two depart ments will devote their programs to art appreciation. Plans for increased food facili ties, to accommodate more than 75,000 students who eat in the Union each month, are underway immediately, with provisions for a garbage disposal plant. The pres ent plant has become obsolete with the increased service carried on since the war's end. Other addi tions in food service will parallel the complete expansion pjrogram. Union officials are also advocat ing moving the offices of the Dean of Women and Dean of Men to the Union, in order that they may be nearer the center of student activ ities. A greater number of student organizations should also oe able to hold their meetings in the building. Science Convo Will Present Demonstrations This year's annual session of the Junior Academy of Sciences will offer discussions, demonstra tions and exhibits by 66 Nebrask a high school students 'and is expected to bring 150 science teachers and young scholars to the University campus Saturday. The program, covering a va riety of 32 scientific subjects, will be given Saturday at Avery lab oratory auditorium, where Julius D. Young of Lincoln Central high school will preside. High schools to be represented with demonstration teams include: Lincoln Central, Lincoln North east Omaha Benson, Auburn, Lexington, Tecumseh, Omaha Central, Holdrege and Bellevue. The meeting will include a joint luncheon at the Chamber of Com merce with members of the Ne braska Science Teachers association. hotel r; CORNHllIllI IS PROUD TOM HOST TO Sifnia Kappa V formal Sigma Phi Epsilon banquet Saturday May lg under sciiriii v fctaBClW 1 This 8-point plan is scheduled for 1952 when the present union bond matures, and when materials are available to add high-quality improvements. The Union is sup ported by student and faculty fees, and its bond is being paid at the rate of $17,000 per year. Duane Lake, sixth director of the Union, estimates according to his April travel check that approx imately 6,500 students use the Union daily. The attendance fig ures for the month of January are presented here as an example of the use of the building's assets. tanr 1,111 rtam 64t Ctwrrtl 4N Msvtra t.A Strmta imnlts ?H Caffe kauri IU Bri4( Ill Hprrial parties IS Mtimra .! IjMiehraaa i.m Dtaaen I. MS Crtte io.il fanpmllM IS.SI2 Kmpfcijr' n ferula I.W1 TnUBlac talite IS Mala dlaiag room 4,748 Break rant CM TOT A I, 87,18 With the completion of the new sports, food, social, and arts facil ities, the Union board will be able to attain its goal of providing every student with the activity which will best meet his needs, tastes, and obligations to the University. YM Sponsored French Movie Opens Tonight Another week-end of interest will be the YMCA-sponsored showing of the French prize winning film, "Life Dances On." The movie will be shown twice, at 8 p. m. on April 31 and May 1, in the Temple theater and Love Library auditorium, re spectively. For the 50c admission charge, university students, faculty mem bers, and friends can see the winner of the 1938 Venice Bi ennial Film Exposition award. Great French Actors. A dramatic extravaganza, "Life Dances On" stars seven of France's greatest actors. They include Raimu, Henry Bauer, Louis Jovet, and Pierre Blanchar. The movie is directed by Julien Duvivier. Known to French audiences as "Un Carnet De Bal," the movfe tells the story of a widow and her first ball. The woman, whose husband has died recently, dis covers the program from her first ball with the names of seven past lovers on it. She decides to search for each one of the seven who pledged undying love at that ball, and see the effect of the years. Seven Lovers. In her travels, she meets the I seven lovers, played by the famous BY LEE BEST Where would the campus be without the Union? No Crib for the bold 'n brave who are cut ting their classes to drop in for a coke. No free coffee and brown ies on Sunday night when "pop" hasn't come through with steak money. There would be no bridge tour naments or ping-pong games for the campus intellectuals. And no busy looking guys and jjals run ning around with pencils stuck behind their ears and a mad look in their eyes, getting copy for the Rag, Cornhusker, or Corn shucks. Ten Year Birthday Ten years ago this week the campus passed cigars at the birth of its favorite offspring, the Union. It has been growing up through a crowded program of French actors.. Each scene is an almost separate episode contain ing varying moods characterized by the men. New Republic has called the film "Real film work ... brilliant" Time said it "richly deserves the prizes it has won." In the review by the critic of The Nation, the film was estimated as "worth go ing to any theater and seeing." movies, dances, lectures and con ventions ever since. For five years it saw a mecca of khaki and multi-clad students invade its three dining halls, establish a canteen, and set up a student defense pro gram. Its patronage has more than doubled since its opening. Now after a colorful decade of campus-wide services, its tenth anniversary will be celebrated by a collossal birthday ball, Satur day, May 1. Fun at the ball will include all the pet activities built up through the directorship of student and faculty committees. Professor L. B. Smith and Nancy Garey, president and vice president of the Union board, and all board and committee mem bers will be on hand to witness the cutting of the cake, which is being baked in replica form of the actual building. Easter Committee The general entertainment com mittee, head by Bob Easter is co ordinating the program of danc ing, visual and active entertain ment, with prfzes and refresh ments for all those attending. There is no charge for the eve ning, and ID cards will be check ed at the door. The party begins at 8:00 p. m., and a schedule of various entertainments will be on display in the lobby. CELESTE tV'edte In GreeB ar..l Red leather sw.. r Grey and Black suede. J51U ALCY Cros-strap sllnr back In Brown and Black calf. SIO GOOD SPORT ML? 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