The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, July 02, 1948, SUMMER EDITION, Page Page 3, Image 3

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

    FRIDAY, IULY 2, 1948
THE SUMMER NEBRASKAN
Page 3
Honey-Pollen Plants Group
To Meet July 12 on Ag Campus
The University of Nebraska's
College of Agriculture campus
will be host July 12 to the an
nual summer meeting of the
Honey and Pollen Plants com
mittee of the National Federa
tion of Beekeepers associations.
The official program has been
planned to stress the importance
of the relationship between bee
keeping and the rest of agricul
ture, according to Dr. Ephriam
Hixson, professor of entomology
at the college.
The university chemurgy proj
ect has concerned itself with ex
perimentation with several crops
of interest to beekeepers. One
of these which the committee
will discuss is mountain mint,
which has 'shown promise as a
source of volatile oils.
R. B. Willson, New York City,
committee chairman, will open
the meeting with an introduc
tion. Dr. Carl E. , Claassen of
the university chemurgy depart
ment and Prof. A. E. Schwarting
of the pharmacognosy depart
ment will then discuss new crops
for new uses. !
In the afternoon three mem
bers of the university agronomy
staff will talk on legumes and
Campus Wheel
Described by
Editorialists
BOONE, N. C. (ACP). An edi
torial writer in the Appalachian
of the Appalachian State Teachers
College "debunks the debunkers."
"The campus critizer and de
bunker alias the 'campus wheel'
usually falls into one of three
groups, although the types some
times overlap.
"The first group is composed of
idea debunkers. An idea debunk
er is not always right, but he is
never wrong; any thought or
opinion other than his own,
though it may belong to his pro
fessor, Einstein, or the little
blonde freshman in the seat next
to him, cannot possible be right
and he will tell the world so.
"Second on theh list is the most
ferocious of all criticizers the
female of the species. This is the
'critical eye group. The critical
eye type is found most abund
antly in the cafeteria, at the book
store, at dances and anywhere
there is a crowd. She says little
to her victim but sits in silence
and makes mental notes; when
she gets her chance she lets the
venom fly.
"Last is the largest but least
dangerous group the radical
ravers. It includes reforming, un
happy politicians and jabbering
columnists along with many other
screwballs that rave on just to
hear themselves make a noise."
Classified
FOR the best hrlrcuts In town, ntop at
fuul'i Barbershop, 223 No. 141b St.
VARSITY
35c to 6
ItAMIOMMI
si:ott
"coroner's creek"
In Cirforl
Also! Held Over!
Louis-Walcott Fight Films
Now STATE 44c to 6
BUD ABBOTT
LOU COSTELLO
In
htiik noose
hangs high"
Extra!
'BIO TIME REVIFW"
" "DKMOCKACY'8 DIAKT"
legume seed production. They
are Dr. F. D. Keim, head of the
agronomy department; Mr. G. T.
Webster, associate agronomist and
Mr. Hugo Graumann, agrono
mist. Dr. Hixson and Dr. C. A.
Sooter, university entomologist
will discuss control of injurious
insects in legume crops. After a
dinner at the college cafeteria,
the committee will hear three
soil conservation service speak
ers on the topic of the honeybee
as a conservator. They are Dr.
A. D. Stoesz, regional chief of
the nursery division; M. S. Mc
Murtrey, regional chief of the
biology division, and Kilkie Col
lins, regional chief of the agron
omy division.
Sept. 3 Deadline
For Obtaining
Season Tickets
Season football tickets will be
started on the way to their hold
ers in July, Business Manager A.
J. Lewandowski of the University
of Nebraska, announced.
The deadline for picking up
season books is Sept. 3.
Each person with reservations
will be notified by mail when
their tickets are ready. When
this notifiaction is received the
holder has until Sept. 3 to either
pick up his tickets or send a
check to the Football Ticket Of
fice in the Coliseum.
Individual sales for the Notre
Dame-Nebraska game were shut
off several weeks ago. Sales for
the UCLA and Missouri contests
are mounting, steadily, Lewan
dowski said.
FOR VETERANS ONLY.. . Mystery Letters
MEET JOHN SMllk, CHICAGO VETERAN,
BUSILY WRITING A LETTER. TO TUB
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION
JOHNS LETTER IS IMPORTANT. VA WANTS
70 SEND A SPEEDY ANSWER-BUT WHERE?
MOir; CHICAGO I FVUOFJOMN SMITHS -
LIVING ATSORTfO ADPflrSSES -
HBRES JOHNS LETTER AS RECEIVED
BYVA. ITS SIGNED'JOHN SMITH.;
mTS AU...ATffKAL'MVSTERY LETTEt
THIS ISJOUN'PAWENTVf'wAmNG FOR
HIS ANSWER... HED HAVE HADITL0N6
AGO IF HED PROPERLY IDENTIFIED
HIS LETTER
$f SMART GET QUICKER
ANSWERS' TO YOUR VA LETTERS
BY INCLUDING YOUR -
FULL NAME
COMPLETE ADDRESS
SERVICE NUMBER
CLAIM OH ISWRANCE KUMSf
PATE Of tIKTH
(Popularity costs so little
AT LLOYD'S YOU CAN LEARN
A STYLE OF DANCING THAT
WILL MAKE YOU A POPULAR
DANCING PARTNER.
Lloyd's School of Dancing
1210 P St. Tel. 2-5511
ft
SEE! ... THE WORLD'S GREATEST SHOW!
SIIEItMAN FIELD
BALL PARK LINCOLN 3 Big Doys & Nights
Today
At 8:30 p.m.
SAT.
3 p.m. & 8:30 p.m.
SUN.
3 p.m. Si 8:30 p.m.
See! America's Greatest Cowboys Cowgirls
hi mi i. u imiiim iiiiiiui.imi.hii.
111 U J 1JU Li) yj
BRONC IUDING, BULL DOGGING, BULL RIDING
' COMBINED WITH HOLLYWOOD
Li LJO VJU vJL fet
SUPERMAN IN HIS LEAP OF DEATH
DIG FIREWORKS DISPLAY
DAREDEVILS ROLLING CARS OVER!
mg If vou can rida "Biir Sid"
3IUUUUU the Big Bu . . . 10 seconds, g
Potsy May Add
Game to Fall
Football Slate
One more game may be added to
the 1949 University of Nebraska
football schedule, George (Potsy)
Clark, acting athletic director and
football coach announced.
When Potsy took over at Ne
braska the 1949 schedule was fair
ly well set with eight games. Since
his arrival he has added Penn
State on a home-and-home basis.
'I feel nine games which we
now have are sufficient for any
one season," Coach Clark said.
"However, if the right team is
found we may be playing another
ten-game schedule as we are this
fall."
. The 1949 schedule as it now
stands:
Sept. 24 South Dakota University in Lin
coln. Oct. 1 Minnesota In Lincoln.
Oct. 8 Kansas State at Manhattan.
Oct. 15 Penn State at State College, Pa.
Oct. 22 Oklahoma in Lincoln. .
Oct. 29 Missouri at Columbia.
Nov. S Kansas in Lincoln.
Nov. 12 Iowa State at Ames.
Nov. 19 Colorado in Lincoln.
Nov. 26 Open.
DISCOVERS AMERICA
Marlene Dietrich, one of the
stars of Paramount's "A Foreign
Affair" who spent the war years
entertaining troops overseas, says:
"I never knew the real America
until I discovered it by mingling
with the boys in uniform. Pre
viously, I was familiar with only
Hollywood and New York, and
they are a long way from being
representative America."
Dare Has Taker
KINGSVILLE, Tex. (ACP). At
Texas College of Arts and Indus
tries a fifteen year unaccepted
dare has a taker.
To prove her theory that men
are the conservative sex, Profes
sor Edith Cousins has been chal
lenging male members of her so
ciology classes to wear shorts to
classes for one day. The reward
prof erred was two chicken din
ners (originally an ice cream
soda, the reward has grown with
the years).
The shorts wearer announced
that he was so comfortable in his
white British tropical shorts
with cuffs, that he plans to wear
them to closses again soon.
ELECTRONICS PERFECTS
HORNS
Band and orchestra instrument
manufacturers use an electronic
fault-finder to achieve tonal per
fection. The robot's ear is so sensi
tive to reveals when an instru
ment is flat or sharp by even a
l100th of a semitone.
KODAK
PICTURES
Developing
Printing
Enlargements
Eastman Kodak Si.
1221 O
2-721
Beach-scene stealer
for an exciting Fourth!
ElEACIIERS ....1.00
Fourth Floor
You'll be an aquattraclive scene stealer In this
new Jantzen contour-control swim suit of Lastex
that does a neat de-inching and curve-whittling
job.
995
Others by Jantzen, Calalina and Caltex
8.00 to' 15.95
Beach Towels 5.00
KIDS
50
Any Beat
seept bases.
Oct Tickets Nnr
4
CHEAPPER
DRUG
' 13M O St.
GRANDSTAND . . . 1.50
BOX SEATS .... 2.00
All Tax Inclosed ,