The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 01, 1948, Image 1

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    Vol. 49 No. 13
Lincoln 8, Nebraska
Friday, October 1, 1948
Independents to Select
1948 Hello Girl Friday
The 1948 "Hello Girl" will be
elected Friday at the annual
BABW Hello Dance in the Union.
The "Hello Girl" will be chosen
from 19 candidates selected by in
dependent organizations on the
campus.
The dance will be from 9 to 12
p. m., and the presentation of the
"Hello Girl" will be at 10:30. Free
cokes will be served.
Tickets Sold in Union
Tickets may be purchased for
40 cents from booths in the Union
from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.,
and from 4:30 to 6:30 p. m. Fri
day. However, if students forget
to pick up their tickets before the
dance, they will still be able to
get them at the door. Either stags
or couples may attend.
Candidates for "Hello Girl" are
Kathleen Clement, Sue Bjorklund,
Winnie Douglas, Alice Harms,
Jan Sielaff, Gwen Munson, Mary
Chace, Norma Jean Peterson, Jan
ice Cochran. Pat Foster. June
Hornby, Flo Arnold, Barbara
Bishop, Mary Smolik, Georgia
Sochovec, Jean Blaha. Norma
Spomcr, Audrey Bailey and Mar
jorie Wilburn.
Gillett Elected Last Year
Last year's Hello Girl was Lois
Gillett.
The first Hello Dance was held
in 1943 for soldiers stationed at
the Lincoln Army Air Base and
members of the Army Specialized
Forum Features
Ag Youth Group
The Ag Interdenominational
Youth Fellowship program this
Sunday evening will feature a
forum of college students discuss
ing the topic "One in Ten Thou
sand." After the forum, a cost
supper will be served, followed
by recreation and group singing.
Everyone is cordially invited to
attend the meetings held at 5:30
in the First Evangelical United
.Brethren church every Sunday
evening. The church is located at
33rd and Starr streets, just one
block south of the southwest cor
ner of Ag campus.
Ticket Mixup
I 4
Iowa State game by a non-student who claimed the seat. An inves
tigation of the tickets shewed that they were for the same seat.
Other students have reported the same situation
Training unit at Nebraska.
The dance soon became a popu
lar annual affair. Attendance has
exceeded 800.
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Dr. V. W. Lambert, new dean of Ag college, is greeted on his first
day of duty by Dr. F. G. Keim, who has been acting as dean since
the resignation of W. W. Burr last spring. Dr. Lambert assumes
his new position today.
Pub Board
The publications board will
meet Tuesday, Oct. 5, at noon
for luncheon in the Union.
Editors and business mana
gers of the three campus pub
lications are invited to attend.
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UNIVERSITY OF"
NEBRASKA
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Above are two tickets sold for
the same stadium seat. One was
sold to student Bob Bush, the
other to a non-student.
Bush was confronted at the
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StPT. 1
? 5 f
Tense Climax
As Waiting for Left f a Hit
BY FRANK JACOBS
No punches were pulled last
night as an overflow crowd saw
the Experimental Theatre sue
cessfully open their dramatic sea
son with the intense social drama
of the middle thirties, Clifford
Odets' "Waiting for Lefty."
The drama, a brutal saga of depression-weary
metropolitan life,
was mainly a picture of the strug
gles of desperate taxicab drivers
but was visably inoculated by appropriately-placed
shots of East
ern philosophy.
The stage was the platform of
a typical, smoky, bare hackies
union hall. Uniquely staged
each intense flashback was the
result of superb lighting.
Cabbies Speak
The play began and ended on a
note of brilliant oration; the first
an earnest plea by Joe Mitchell,
played by Jack MacDonald, the
latter a fiery demand by Agate,
Abe Katz.
The skillfully-handled scenes
mounted from climax to climax,
culminating in an unsurpassable
bit of stagecraft by Katz, as
Agate, the man who wore an
empty socket for an eye to de
note his position "deep down in
tthe working class." When word
was brought that Lefty, who is
waited for until the final scene,
had been shot in the street, the
Former
Successor
Dr. W. V. Lambert, an alum of '21, will officially assume his
duties as the new dean of the college of agriculture Friday. Dean
Lambert relieves Dr. Frank Keim who has been Acting Dean since
W. W. Burr retired last spring. The new dean will also be director
of the agricultural experiment station at the University of Nebraska.
Long regarded as an authority in animal husbandry, the new
head comes directly from the post of Director of the Agricultural
Griswold Plans
Talk in Union
Tuesday at 11
Nebraska's former Gov. Dwight
Griswold will address members of
the University student body and
faculty body in the Student Union
ballroom Tuesday morning at 11
a. m.
Mr. Griswold's subject will be
"Report on Greece." As head of
the American Mission to Greece,
Griswold had control of Ameri
can aid to that country and is
recognized as an expert on foreign
aid control.
Sunday's Daily Nebraskan will
carry further comment on Oris
wold's appearance in the Union.
A capacity crowd welcomed the
former eovernor back from his
long tour of duty in Greece at a
chamber of commerce luncheon
sponsored by the Kiwanis club.
Thrills Crowd
crowd Is driven to strike at last.
Perhaps the finest bit of inter
pretation ever heard on Experi
mental Theatre stages was dis
played through Katz's enactment
of the savagely-emotioned Agate.
So stunned was the audience,
after his closing speech, that a
definite hush was noticeable fol
lowing the curtain-lowering. But
that did not prevent the standing
room crowd from claiming the
cast for four curtain calls.
Play Has Realistic Beginning:.
The audience was given an in
deed realistic introduction to the
ensuing struggle. In perhaps, the
all-around best-enacted scene of
the play, MacDonald and Elaine
LarrTphear portrayed a turbulent
scene of domestic furor. As
Edna, a hard-bitten, disagreeable
woman, whose children "had
never tasted a grapefruit," she
gave a hard, almost too hard, im
pression of the depression-exhausted
wife of 1935.
Proving their dramatic merit in
the diversified flashbacks, were
Temple veteran Gay Marr, under
standing in the role of Dr.
Barnes; Gladys Jackson, as the
refreshing producer's secretary,
and John Woodin, sincerely play
ing his part of the spineless
strike-breaker. John McEroy ca
pably carried the main role of the
crooked union official, Fatt,
throughout the production.
Researcher
to
research adminisetration of the
U. S. department of agriculture in
Washington, D. C, sometimes re
ferred to as the "world's greatest
civilian research agency."
Native Nebraskan
The new dean, a native Nebras
kan, has traveled widely over the
U. S. as head of the agricultural
research administration. He has
visited all the land-grant colleges
and has first hand knowledge
of their operations. His job has
been the over-all direction 'of over
200 laboratories and research sta
tions in the U. S. and in some for
eign lands.
"We in Nebraska are indeed
fortunate in having Dr. Lambert
join our staff," Chancellor Gus
tavson said. "He is without doubt
one of the nation's topflight re
search men. He is an able and
recognized administrator, known
in the midwest, and will bring a
wealth of experience to the state
and the University of Nebraska."
Dr. Lambert was born at Stella,
Neb., in 1897, and was brought
up on a farm prior to attending
the University of Nebraska col
lege of agriculture where he re
ceived his bachelor's degree in
1921. Be took his master's at
Kansas State college in Manhat
tan, and his doctor's degree at
the University of California.
Served Many Groups
Dr. Lambert has served on
many national and international
agricultural groups. He was a
member of the United States del
egation to the food and agricul
ture organization of th eUnited
Nations at Copenhagen in 1946
and Pgain at the Geneva confer
ence in 1947.
He is a member of the board
of alternates on the president's
scientific research board, a mem
ber of the government's inter
department committee on science,
a member of the Mexican-United
States agricultural commission.
He belongs to Sigma Xi, Phi
Kappa Phi, Gamma Sigma Delta,
Alpha Zeta, and a host of na
tional scientific groups.
The new dean will reside at
4027 Holdrege street with his
wife and two daughters, Mari
lyn, 22, and Ann, 16. Mrs. Lam
bert is also a native of Nebraska,
and attended school here.
Council Approves
ISA Constitutioii-
The constitution's committee of
the student council approved on
Thursday, the constitution of the
Independent Students association,
according to Chairman of the
Committee Bill Schenck.
Formerly the unaffiliated stu
dent's association, the ISA has
changed its name and amount of
membership dues.