TDTrh r J L UUTLIU Vol. 49 No. 160 LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA Friday, July 1, 1949 Choir to Present Summer Concert m. "? t J . if ' : : - ;; .... m (Di to id The Summer Session chorus will present its annual concert on July 7 in the Union ballroom. The program will begin at 7:30 p.m. The chorus, under the direc tion of J. Day ton Smith, of the school of j music, is open f to regularly en- i rolled students. This summer- me cnorus is 1 1 i c o m p o s ea 01 a p proximately 50 members. , ' II THE CHORAL f I I Yepertoric will"- consist of a Smith. Bach number, done in the man ner of a iugue, and two numbers by F. M. Christiansen, director Alums Rename Advancement Committee All members of the University of Nebraska Advancement Com mittee have been reappointed for another year, according to Wil liam L. Day, Lincoln, president of the University's Alumni Associa tion. The Committee was organized in 1946 by the alumni group to advance the general welfare of the University, and to' serve as a medium for disseminating infor mation about the University and giving voice -io suggestions and criticisms expressed by Nebraska people. Committeemen represent 20 districts covering the entire state. Four agricultural advisors were added to the committee in 1947. James H. Anderson, Nebraska at torney general, was chairman during the past year. Committee members are: Ellsworth Moser, Omaha; Morton Steinhart, Ne braska City; J Stewart Elliott, Beatrice; Otto Kotouc, Sr., Hum boldt; Robert R. Moodie, West Point; W. B. Sadilek, Schuyler; John Riddell, York; Arthur J. Denney, Fairbury; Earl Moyer, Madison; H. A. Prince, Grand Island; Ray Hall, Petersburg; James D. Conwrv Hastings; Bar low Nye, Kcan.u; Thomas T. Varney, Jr., Brolin Bow; Mrs. Guy Cole, Emmet; Roland Lar mon, McCook; Gerald Gentleman, North Platte; Dr. George Racely, Valentine; James H. Anderson, Scottsbluff; R. O. Reddish, Alli ance; Neal Barbour, Scottsbluif; Harry Pumphrey, Wisner; and Paul H. Stewart, Omaha. Mew As the orange girders which will one day support the Elec trical Engineering building scrape the sky, the university's ten year plan takes its second stride for ward on city campus. The EE building will be the first addition to the college of engi- J ncenng since lain and marns mt completion of the schedule set up lor 1948. Another project on' the 48 agenda was Burnett hall com pleted last fall. When the plan has been com pleted a '49 graduate will scarcely be able to find his way about the campus. The building committee which will execute the ten year plan found that some of the exist ing buildings are either dangerous and worn out beyond economic re conditioning or are completly unsuited to possible future use. University hall, razed to make way for the new Electrical Engi neering building, now under con struction, was in this class. Others which eventually will have to be removed include: Nebraska Hall, the Geography building (former museum). Pharmacy li-U, the of the famous "St. Olaf choir. For the light touch, the chorus will do a Lyn Murray arrangement of the spiritual "Roll Jordan Roll," and two other spirituals. The chorus will be assisted by guest artist, Dale Ganz.. Ganz, a baritone, is an instructor in the school of music. Mary Barton will accompany the chorus and Margaret Shelley will accompfinv Ganz. And He That Doth Search the Hearts, J. S. Bach. . . Lo Now, So Is the Death of the Juit Man. Jscobun Callus. Pone Afar, Ole Billl-Chrint (n.en. Today There is Kinfcing. V. M. Chris tiansen. Chnnis Invocation1 de Orfeo from Euridice. Pert. Zur Run, Zur Run. Wolf. W imunc. Schumann. Chanson Bachique, Thomas. Jr. Canz Four Folk Sons, Set by Johannes Brahms. I'd Enter Youi Carden. The Fiddler. How Sad Flow the Streams, At Night. Chorus Nocturne, Michael Head. Silent Noon. Ralph Vaughn Williams. How Do 1 live Thee. Rob Roy. The Glory Road. Jacques Wolle. Mr. Can Ain--A That Good News, Spiritual Wm. L. Dawson. Mary Had a Baby. Spiritual Wm. L. Dawson. How High the Moon, Morgan Lewls Stickles. Roll Jordan. Roll, Spiritual I.yn Murray. Classes Out For July 4 Monday is the Fourth! The crib will be locked up and the Union will be .closed. Classes are dismissed making the week end a three-day holiday. Although ' there is no official dismissal time, the Registrar's of fice reports that students are free to leave as soon as classes for the week are completed. University residences will be closed in many cases. The en tire campus will be deserted. The Fourth of July weekend is the only official vacation of the summer session. It marks the mid-point in the summer term, which ends July 30. Classes will resume at 7 p. m. on Tuesday, July 5. Grades from last term and scholarships for the coming term will be announced shortly after students return from the Fourth of July holiday. The staff of the Daily Ne braskan will also leave the campus for the Fourth weekend. As a consequence there will be no paper on Tuesday, July 5. The next Daily Nebraskan will appear on Friday, July 8. Munt . . . The Daily Nebraskan omitted the name of Don Munt from the list of those law students who passed their bar exams. (Ed note: The Daily Nebraskan is terribly, terribly, terribly sorry.) old Electrical Engineering build ing (partly razed), the Observa tory, the city campus Greenhouse, Ellen Smith Hall, and the old power plant (highway testing lab). On the college of agricul ture campus, these buildings should be removed: Home Eco nomies Annex, the Poultry build i.ng, the Extension Annex and sev eral outlying sheds. AS IT NOW stands, this is the committee's priority list fon con struction in the remaining nine of the ten years covered by the plan. 1949 Dairy Research Center, Have lock Farms; Insectary, Meat Lab oratory, Agronomy Building, Corn Research Green house, all College of Agriculture; Botany Green house, City Campus and Animal Facilities (remodel room for re search), College of Medicine. 1950 Demonstration High School, city Campus. mi Laboratory - Adminiration buildings at each North Platte and Courtesv The Lincoln Journal. DALE GANZ, baritone, will be a guest artist on the Summer session choral program July 7 in the Union ballroom. Ganz is an instructor in the school of music and is doing graduate work. All-Staters Leave Campus; Activities End "Just a minute. Mother, I have to say goodbye to Joe." "Has anybody seen my horn case?" "But I left the music right here on the piano " AMID CRIES, confusion and the blare of horns, All-Staters gathered up their belongings yes terday and left the campus. An unbelievable amount of clothes, all dirty, were taken from the closets of four sorority houses as the All-State girls packed their suitcases. The male members of All-State turned their parents grey, too, when these fond in dividuals discovered an amazing number of hats and shirts all en scribed with All-State. And so they left. THE CORRIDORS of Morrill Hall echoed the lone footsteps of one or two who had forgotten brushes and paints. The sounds from the school of music were no longer filled with "jive." And even the Temple looked deserted without them. A final banquet in the Union, last night, followed by a final con cert in the Coliseum was the part ing gesture of these 256 boys and girls who have been living and working on the university campus for the past three weeks. g Pairti ccritrs 1 i V iiiz i f, !i- , p . THE NEW electrical engineering building will look like this, when its now-naked girders are covered. Work on the building was be gun this month. It is a part of the university's ten-year building plan. Mitchell Experiment Stations; Ma jor Addition, Teachers College, City Campus. 1952 ' i Liboti tory and Cl&srom Held Tie Teachers Discuss Plans For Class Guidance The second in a series of Guidance Clinics, sponsored by Teacher's College, was held yesterday. The clinic, "Guidance Services for Good Teaching," was held in Love Memorial Library. Galon Saylor, professor of secondary education, opened the general session. Those attending the conference also with Banquet THE SPEECH department wound things up with a debate and two three-act plays. Art paid its parting tribute with an exhibit. Three concerts marked the end of activities for music students. Jobs were done for nine Univer sity students who had acted as counselors. They were over, too, for Morris Hays, Scottsbluff music director, and Walt Olsen, Fremont music director. And, of course, the host of University faculty mem bers who aided in the program. THE ALL-STATE Fine Arts course is held each summer for boys and girls of high school age from all over Nebraska and a few from outstate. Students are selected for the course by applica tion. They are chosen on a basis of ability and balance for the large musical groups. This year's All-State marked the introduction of a new group the art students. Sixteen boys and girls worked under the direction of the art department for the duration of the course. The All-State project was origi nally founded for music students only. In 1946 the speech division was added. This year speech spread its wings, too. For the first time, speech students gave three-act plays, instead of the usual one act variety. ? Teoi-Yeair Plann building, College of Agriculture; Recondition Mechanical Arts building, Addition, Brace Labora tory (for physics research), Addi tion, College of Law (for library). ancs heard Don D. Twiford, state supervisor, division of guidance services, department of voca tional education, Arthur A. Hitch cock, of Harvard and Douglas H. Fryer of New York University. The first of the guidance series was planned for superintendents. Over three hundred attended the sessions. This clinic is especially for teachers. AFTER THE opening session the clinic participants were di vided into groups to discuss var ious problems which confront the average teacher. These included discussions of kinds of counseling, pupil aptitudes, time, parents, why pupils don't learn and plan ning guidance with classroom work. At noon, members of the clinic attended a luncheon at the Lin coln hotel. The luncheon was marked by a round table discus sion on "Experiences in Working with Guidance." THE CLINIC'S second session was held in Love in the afternoon. The same general patte 1 of dis cussion was employed. The sessions were closed at 4 p. m. by Ralph C. Bedell, profes sor of Educational Psychology and Measurements, Bedell said that the clinic for teachers was the largest and most important of the series. The program was available to teachers all over the state of Ne braska and was conducted by members of the university faculty aided by graduate students in Teacher's College. THE THIRD program of the series is planned for July 14. This will be a teacher-training pro gram. The guidance clinics, under See Second Clinic, Page 3. all City Campus. 1953 Addition, Conkling Hall (nurses residence) College of Medicine; Agricultural Chemistry and Che murgy, College of Agriculture; Pharmacy-Bacteiiorogy building, City Campus. 1954 Major Addition, Unit II to Uni versity Hospital, College of Medi cine; Garage-Service building. College of Agriculture. 1955 Auditorium (1,000 parity) and Speech seating ta Depart merit, City Campus. 1956 Admini.-.tiation-Libraiy build ing, College of Agriculture. 1957 Women's Physical Education building, City Campus. THE COMMITEE bho recom mended that the following build ings be constructed from non-tax sources: City Campus Student Health.. Center, probably linanced by ath- Sec "Tea Year Ta 1