Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1950)
PAGE 4 Proposed Union Draws (Kdltor'a note: Thla la tit frond In atrlri of artlrlra dralnnrd to cofiiparr our Mudvnt I nlon Mtlhj other I nluiia In the nation. Information for thin ha brrn obtained by Ihf I nlon Ailvanermeiil committer, thru bullrtlna and Iclterii. Alter publication ol all the fartu, a pull, drulirnrd to ri-ach llw lament nunibrr of aludrata. will determlnr whether or not a I nlon addition will be ronnlrurtrd s part of the pmrnt Inlvrraltj building program.) BY KENT AXTELL. Recently several Ag students met with Duane Lake, director of the Unions, and discussed the possibilities of obtaining a new Ag Union thru a program simi lar as that of the proposed city campus Union expansion. Discussing the situation with the group, Duane Lake, director of the Unions, stated that any problem oi the two Unions should be faced with a realistic attitude and went on to point out the statuses of both Unions in relation to present finances and what could and could not be done. He also explained the government of the Unions and said taht the ultimate decision of any expansion rests with the Students. Lake Presents Figures In the first meeting with Ag Rev. Barnds To Speak At Vespers Speaking on the topic, "Need We Sacrifice to Be Religious?" Rev. William Barnds will speak at the vesper service today at 5 p.m. in Love library audi torium. "Christian students have an opportunity, through attending vespers, to show publicly their interest in Christianity in the University community," stated the religious leaner. REV. BARNDS To address Vespers today in Love Library auditorium. Barnds stated that sometimes students neglected their religion for studies but they should re member that their eternal wel fare is more important than tem poral gain. "You are able to do your studies better if you give some time to worship," he said. Rev. Barnds will be assisted by student leader Kieth Fred rickson. Sponsored by the Religious Welfare Council, the Vesper services will be held on Tues days until Easter. Joan Fickling heads the committee which in cludes Jack Lepke, Sharon Fritz ler, and Dave eKene. Music for today's service will be provided by members of Delta Omicron music sorority. Other music groups will provide music for future services. Speakers and topics for future vespers are: Rex Knowles "How Do You Balance?'' Jean Malone as student leader, and Charles H. Patterson, "What's Your Di rection?" Vladimir Lavko as student leader. The Carillon tower will be used as a call to Vespers with selections played by Prof. My ron Roberts of the music department. .-;..,?.. I w , First Annual Pep Convention To Draw 58 High Schools Fiftv-eight Nebraska h i e h schools will be represented at the first annual all-state pep conven tion at the University Thursday and Friday, March 16 and 17. Sponsored by the University of Nebraska Builders, the conven tion will be held in connection with the high school basketball convention to be held in the Uni versity coliseum this week end. Along with discussions of problems and projects of high school pep groups, other plans for the convention include a mass meeting featuring cheerleader fashions, a welcoming breakfast, campus tours and a mass rally led by the yell squad, and a juke box dance for high schoolers and University students. Tassels and Corn Cobs will lead the discussion group on the following topics: Finance, consti tutions and organization; and skits, yells and rallies. Yell squad members will also participate in Jeading the skits, yells and rallies discussions. Agenda A tentative agenda for the two days includes a welcoming break fast in the Union ballroom Thursday morning at 9 a. m., fol lowed by discussion groups from 10 to 11 a. m. At 11 a. m. films cf the Nebraska card section and a style show of prepster cheer leader outfits. Friday's events will open with a mixer in the Union at 9 a. m. followed by a continuance ot the discussion groups. The 11 . m. mass rally will include yells snd Nebraska songs led by the 1I squad, a talk by Bill Gassford and a tak by Frank Piccolo, yeiry king, and Tom Novak. Campus Tours Each afternoon a Builders Now Discussion students. Luke pointed out that "although there are less than eight times as many students on the city campus as on Ag. ap propriations given the Ag Union amounts to about one-sixth of the funds." After stating the as sets and expenses, Lake said he therefore felt immediate im provement upon the Ag Union is impossible as the situation stands. Fritz Simpson, speaking for the expansion committee stated that the committee is trying to take the initiative in bringing an addition which is definitely needed, and can be made if the students show they favor such. Another Meeting Planned Another meeting is scheduled with no definite date when Dean V. V. Lambert and the Ag group will evaluate and negotiate in order that a decision may be reached. Ttie Union board is representative of both campuses. Twelve students are on the board. Four are from Ag. Reference was made to a let ter written in 194(1 by a four man arbitrary committee ap pointed by the Regents, which stated the space in the Student Activities building should be considered as temporary quar ters only, for a period not to ex ceed three years, after which time an effort should be made to install permanent Student Union facilities in a separate building on the Ag campus. No Change Specified However, the letter did not state officially that a change would be made after three years. The comnvttee was not actually in a position to say what should and should not be done, but was merely offering its viewpoints. An estimated $500,000 has Radio Section Broadcasters Representatives from a dozen Nebraska radio stations W1U i compare ideas and look over new developments in radio at the sixth annual University ra dio conference to be held Fri day and Saturday, March 17 and 18. . , The conference is sponsored by the University's radio tion and Alpha Epsilon sec Rho, honorary radio society. Highlight of the conlcrence will be a Friday evening ban quet in the Union. John Carson, entertainer on WOW and WOW -TV, will emcee the program. L. P. "Jiggs" Miller, program manager of KFAB. will address the banquet. "A Half Century of Radio," a skit written by stu dents Frank Jacobs, Dutch Mey ers and Gaylord Marr will be presented. Marr is directing the skit. Radio Awards Student radio awards for the veiir will be announced at the ; DdnquLi. . , i tour lormei unn . n e TT ..m-.'llu - ! rl 1 O ' students. Tl. fa." A W K Ofl Greenwood. KFOR: Chuck John son, KLMS: and Bill Wiseman, 1 KOLN, will lead a discussion with students on some of the j early post graduate problems j facing the professional radio ! worker. All of the meetings are open to the public. Each meeting will be followed by discussion from the floor. All meetings will be held in Room 27, Temple Build ing. Tickets for the banquet are $2, including the food, speakers and entertainment. Tickets may be obtained from Alpha Epsilon Rho members, the radio student office, or reservations may be obtained by calling University number 3265. Anyone is wel come to attend. Convention Proeram The complete program: Friday, March 17 6:30 p. m. Annual Radio Ban quetWilliam Dempsey. radio and speech instructor, welcome. John Alexander, KODY, North . committee will take interested students on a tour of the NU campus. Tassels who will participate in the discussion groups are Shirley Allen, Joel Bailey, Jean Blaha, Mardelle Buss, Janet Carr, Peggy Judd, Jane Linn, Jo Lishcr, Mary Smolik, Marilyn Vingers, Bar bara Burland and Jayne Wade. Cob discussion leaders will be Dick Kuska, Harry Carpenter, Jerry Warren, A r 1 e n Beam, Chuck Widmaier, Bob Rogers, Burton Holthus, Bill Olson. Bob Parker. Rex Pcttijohn, Bruce Kennedy and Wendy Gauger. Schools. The following is n list of schools that will send representa tives to the convention: Class A schools: Curtis, Falls City, Hastings, Lincoln High, Lincoln Northeast, M c C o o k, North Platte Class B: Auburn. furnra. Bcllevue, Central City, College View, Columbus, St. Bonavcn ture, David City. Lexington, Lyons, Kimball, Nebraska City, Neligh, Ord, Plattsmouth, Teach er's College high, Tecumseh, Wilbur. Class C: Arapahoe, Barneston, Battle Creek. Benchleman, Cedar Rapids, Cathedral, Callaway, Creighton, Dwight Assumption, Friend, Humboldt City, India nola, Keya Paha County. Milford, Oshkosh, Orchard, Scribner, St. Paul, St. Edward, Weeping Water, West Point. Class D: Avoca, Bennet, Brady, Cortland. Crookston. Davenport, Elmwood, Elsie, Nebraska School of Deaf, Hampton, Liberty, Mal colm, Western. Addition been set as the amount that would have to be spent on downtown Union expansion. This means that the present se mester fee of $3 would have to be raised. None of the expense would be met through the University's ten year building program, but con struction would be probably ac complished through the same contractors. Comparison The tentative amount is rela tively small compared with those of other Unions throughout the nation. Following is an outline of 21 other major colleges and universities, all of which have Union fees higher than Ne braska's. Included in the list are notations of the amount, how often collected and how spent. Rrnwn. 112 00 annual, operation. Cornell. J.Vlio quarter, operation-con- Vniverslty of Southern Idaho, 17.50 quarter, conM ruction. Iii.tlann. rt.7i itemester, operation-const ru,M ion, lllinnm. J.'i.oO aemrater. operation. Kunsaa U. I.VUO semester, conntruc- ""Kanrai Slate. " on semester, :l.00 summer session, ennat ruction. Michlpan. J.l 7fi semester, construction. Minnesota. $3.00 quarter. operation const rin't Ion. Montana. 00 quarter, fl.00 aummer session opera t inn-const ruction. Montana Mate. t) la quarter, operation-construction. Ml. Pleasmit iMii'hinan), 6.00 semes ter const ruction. Oklahoma. M M eemesler, construc tion. Oreson. $4 00 quarter, construction. Ohio State. .'i.llO quarter, construc tion. I'ur.lue. JS 00 semester, operation-construction. Southern Methodist. J.Y00 quarter, con struct it. n-operat ion. rtuli J2ti no annual, construction. Western MU'hiKan, ".' Minuter, const ruction. . .. Wisconsin. $.r no semester. 2 25 eum mer sessnn, operation-construction. Wyomlna. J.1 uu quarter, operation-construction. ,n NKHKASKA. S3. Oil "mter. : Hummer session, OEKKATION-C O N STRUl'TION, lo Sponsor Conference Platte revise L P " Jiggs" MllllM, wnu, .iiw. """ and. the liranuaie conegu. juim Carson, WOW, master of cere monies. Saturday. March 18 0:00 a.m. "Women In Radio," panel discussion, Peg Biber, KGFW, Kearney; Martha Bohl son, WOW-TV, Omaha: Mimi Mueller. KFOR. Lincoln: and Bcttv Craig, KOLN, Lincoln. 10:30 a. m. "Recent Trends In Television Broadcasting." Lylc DeMoss, WOW-TV, "The Na tional and Local Programming Picture." Soren M u n k h o f f , WOW-TV, "Special Events and Newsreels." 12:00 noon B roadcasters' All broadcasters present will be guests of public relations. 1:30 p.m. "Radio Serves the Public." Panel discussion, Bill McDonald. KFAB, Lincoln: Charles Vanda, KWBE, Beatrice; Tom Sorensen, KLMS, Lincoln; and Rap Anderson, KFOR, Lin coln. 3:00 D. m. "Successful Alum- . !,,,,,.) p,,npl discussion 111 IW ,. vvi.n OmnW Kon n U tJllllU.-". A. I iWe, Vllill"a Greenwood, KFOR, Lincoln: Chuck Johnson, KLMS. Lincoln; and Bill Wiseman, KOLN, Lin- col n. 7:00 p.m. All radio broad casters will be able to get com plimentary tickets to the finals of the Nebraska High School Bnskctball Tournament. Tassels to Sell Tickets to Film On Tihct Trip Beginning Tuesday, March 14, the Tassels will sell tickets at $1.20 per person for the motion 0( higher education, with no con picture lecture by Lowell Thorn- Isideration whatsoever given any as. ir.. to be Dresented by the Mortar Boards. Thomas will present his motion picture lecture "Out of This World; A Journey to Lhasa," March 22, at St. Paul's Methodist church. On his second transcontinental lecture tour, Thomas will discuss the journey into the forbidden land that he and his father, Low ell Thomas, sr. took. Adventure Story This is reported to be one of the great adventure stories of our time like n trip to another planet, a tale showing the life of the last untouched nation or earth, and a land that may soon be overrun by the Reds in then attempt to gain access to India and its four hundred million peo ple. The movie-lecture tells the story of their struggle throuah the bamboo rain forest of the Southern Himalayas and up steep mountains into altitudes hicher than anv of those in America until thev reached the little known city of Lhasa. At 2fi. the vnitnger Thomas, is a veteran of the recent war and of the atomic homb experi ments at Bikini atoll. Theatre Continued from Page 1 and deftly portrayed by Bill Lino. Through the doctor's treat ment with diucs, he relives his past, showing the causes ot his breakdown. In opposition to Coen, Milt Hoffman enacted the bigoted Corporal Everett. As the drama moved through its three acts, he became more and more despicable and nearly pitiable, a tribute to his realistic portrayal. "Sheer Ability" As far as sheer ability in de livering lines was considered, the acting of Joe Moore, as Ser geant Mingo, was beyond re proach. Perfectly cast, Moore's interpretation of the army Ser geant, embittered over family troublp and army life in gen eral, provided "Home of the Brave" with diverting wit and irony. TH3 DAHfll tTEBRASKAN Pacific University Fees Hiked Again . Pacific university will increase tuition fees for the third time in four years next September when the university collects an addi tional $50 per year making a total tuition and student cost of $475 per year. Dormitory costs will also be upped $25 for the two semesters. The increase will make tuition costs second highest in Oregon. Tri Delta Grant Open to NU Coed Wednesday, March 15, is the deadline for University women to apply for the Delta Delta Delta scholarship award. Applications for the $100 award, open to any University woman student, may be obtained at Ellen Smith hall or at the home economics office at the Ag campus. In the past, 16 awards rang ing from $50 to $200 have been made on this campus. Last year the fund was divided into three awards. Applicants' grades must be made available to the scholar ship committee. Mrs. E. E. Refs hauge is representing Delta Delta Delta alummae; Donna Burley. the active chapter; and Marjorie Johnston and Gertrude Kine the faculty. Final applications should be mailed to Mrs. Catherine Refs hauge. Route 8, Lincoln. The awards will be presented at the University honors con vocation in April. Students to See Air Force Film An air force film, "Flight Plan for the Future," will bo shown in Room 107 of the Military Science building at 2 p. m. and 4 p. m. Wednesday. The film, open to all interested students, is being shown in con nection with the visit of the U.S. air force interview team. The team will be in the Ag Union Tuesday and in the city campus Union Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. College Joe From 'High By Emily Heine Attempts to classify the Amer ican public in culture levels ( have consistently overlooked one sizeable class of people the col lege students. j Articles on the subject have completely missed the scholars ; and the play-boys who inhabit the modern campus. So at the risk of further toe-stepping and I at the expense of a somewhat ; distorted analogy, we compare j college students with the var ous cultural classes. Individuals Tired ot coming unner one simple heading, many of today's "Joe Colleges have done their best to become individuals. Their efforts have been due partly to the huge enrollments of many schools, where it was sink or swim in classes of three to five hundred, with preference given to those who could in some way attract the professor's attention. This is not to say that culture levels or at least differences have not been apparent among college students for many years. The levels themselves are per haps not so well-defined as on the outside. It should be remem bered that this comparison is based on intellectual and cultural tastes and abilities of students as they progress through the period previous financial status, back- round or environment. There are those who would place themselves ahead of their classmates because of their su perior knowledge of the arts ;ind everything else for that mat ter. These highbrows, or geniuses. consider their college term a stepping - stone to a higher plane. This will be reached only after they, through painstaking graduate work, have earned the right to attach a string of capital letters to their name. As a -rule the highbrow is to tally uninterested in the grading mfthods of anv instructor. He ri(ls down his long nose rather disgustedly at the classmate wh asks the prof about "the curve. Choice of instructors and classes, however, is of the utmost impor tance to him. He will gladly ac cept a Saturday or an evening class in order to get a teacher whom he believes to be more competent. Mfdiocre His disdain of mediocre and pedantic instructors, along with his indifference to "college spir it" and the high school antics of his classmates bring him a great deal of unjust criticism and the ignominy of exclusion from var ious hack-slamier cliques on campus. His unpopularity, how ever, is a blessing to him and annoys only the middle-brows who secretly envy and respect him. The belligerent or crusader type highbrow can scarcely con tain himself in classes wncie less fortunate individuals con stantly question the instructor or need seemingly obvious points in the lecture clarified. The low brow's mute acceptance fails to disturb him, but the middlebrow's questions, prompted by a fleet ing look at an article in the At lantic Monthly, never fails to set the highbrow's teeth on edge. On the other hand, the placid or indifferent highbrow remains completely wrapped up in his own contemplation of the world and his own superior ideas, re mains unhampered and unmoved by his surroundings. He usually pursues a highly specialized field of study, such as literature, the Jr. Council to Continue 20 -Year Twenty years ago on the Ne braska campus, the Junior-Senior Prom took its place as a campus tradition. Since that time it has survived depression, war and campus controversy to stand as the annual spring dance which closses the University formal season. The Prom's colorful history will reach its climax March 24 when, on its twentieth anniver sary, it will be highlighted by the presentation of the six 1950 Beauty Queens, another lasting Nebraska tradition. Throughout the years, the two Scarlet and Cream features have never been combined. The 1950 Prom will see something new in University dances. From Queen. In previous Junior-Senior proms, the presentation of the Prom Queen highlighted the last formal dance of the season. In 1930, the first coed with that title made her appearance. The following year, to the music of Herbie Kay's orchestra and the songs of his vocalist Dorothy La mour, the Prom's addition to the social calendar became an annual custom. In 1934, under the supervision of a Junior-Senior Prom commit tee, the Prom Queen was re vealed by Alladdin's lamp. A giant genie rubbed the lamp, and in the red firelight the 1934 Queen made her appearance. Joe Venuti and his "hot" vio lin played for the '36 Prom. A student committee set the plans for the formal that year and conducted a campus-wide con test to find the most clever means of presenting the Prom Queen. The winning coed made her ap pearance from the door of a miniature of her sorority house as the Governor of Nebraska, the mayor of Lincoln and 2,000 other guests watched. Campus Election. A general campus election named the Prom Queen in 1938. She stepped through a giant gold saxophone to be presented to the dancers in the Coliseum. As Griff Williams played, photog raphers from Life, Collegiate Di- Cultural Levels Reach Brows' to 'Low Brows9 sciences or mathematics. Reminders His friends continually remind him of the time, lend him pencils, return his books to the library, and do not seem slighted by his apparent disregard of their pres ence. Unlike his militant com panion on the same plane, the placid highbrow docs not look on the GI Bill as a horrible deg radation of higher learning. The mundane pleasures of rou tine existence are definitely be neath the highbrow's level. This includes dancing Ht any of the more popular places (how these people hate the word "popular"); fraternity and sorority parties few staunch Greeks are equally staunch highbrows: musical com edies and run-of-the-mill mov ies. He likes nothing better than go to some out-of-the-way place with people of his own intellec tual level, where a fire and good wine adds the right "atmosphere" to discussions of Freud, Marx, James. Sartre. Picasso and oth ers. The highbrow wouldn't be caught dead in an argument about the Student Council and the word "faction" simply isn't in his vocabulary. He scorns book clubs, devours the classics and disagrees completely with at least one prominent psychologist. Other End of Scale At the opposite end of the scale we find the college low brows. Lowbrows may be dis tinguished, not necessarily by any degree of intelligence, but by their intention in attending col lege. This class includes the student who is wasting his time and his parents' or the government's money. He has no set goal in sight, nor does he especially care for any. His indifference in class and avoidance of any controvers ial discussion which might over tax his cellophane-wrapped gray matter, affords him an equilib rium of C's and D's. sufficient to keep the allowance coming in regularly. The lowbrow also shows con siderable diligence in the selec tion of his courses and instruc tors. As a matter of fact, he may even turn down a Saturday class in favor of a more exacting in structor. (This only happens when late registration has kept him from pursuing such courses as Basket-weaving and Bead stringing or Early Morning Bird Calls ) Twelve hours per semes ter is the normal load, and only under pressure will he up the limit. He has never outgrown the name-calling stage. A conscien tious middlebrow who expresses his admiration of Wordsworth or Emerson is laughed at and dubbed a "character" or "teacher pet" to mention a few ot tne more acceptable terms. Lowbrows arc also responsible for such remarks as "What prac tical value docs all this history have?" and "What do I need all this English enmp. for?" t'ltcrior Motives People who attend college for various ulterior motives other than the pursuit of cultural and intellectual development, or the mental wherewithal to enable them to make a decent living in the outside world, comprise a great part of the lowbrow class. The fact that such a great per centage of self-styled "career women" marry and quit school in the sophomore or junior year does not mean to imply that they didn't have good intentions at registration. But since chivalry has long since gone out of vogue, those coeds following the out-and-out attack method of the husband-hunting clan are prom Prom Tradition I i ! 4L I , Pr. ' viSr fiii'l -m 1 II i i 1 ! I I i I- UK Y.L 1949 FROM ROYALTY An applause meter chose the 1949' Prom Queen Dorothv Borgens, and her king, Harlan Powley. The Prom king was a new feature of the dance, sponsored by the In nocents society and the Union. The dance, held in the Coliseum, ';-tured the music of the Tex Benekc orchestra. gest, College Humor and other magazines covered the Nebraska dance. Guests at the Prom in '38 danced the College Swing in troduced on the screen by a dancer named Betty Grable. Gene Krupa and his drums set the campus astir in 1939 as the ninth Prom was held on the Uni versity campus. In 1940, Joe Venuti made a return engage ment for the spring formal. The political tunc that year hit on inent lowbrow members. Middlebrow college students can be divided into two sec tions, the lower and the higher middlebrow. The great majority of this type may be defined as the average American college student, if such a phenomena is known to exist. Social activity, a job after graduation and grades, in that order, are the primary aims of the lower middlebrow. This seg ment of college personnel sets the almighty sheepskin and grad uation with reasonably good grades as his future meal ticket. "Ologies" He ho-hums his way through the "ologies" and takes care not to entangle himself in ideas and subjects he considers of no prac tical use in obtaining post-graduate sustenance. Cafeterial dis cussions of philosophy classes bore him to distraction and he consistently tries to change the subject to dances, sports and va rious other college activities. His use of the library is re stricted to preparing cribs or a hasty bibliography from the in dex of the Cambridge History. Between trips to and from the Union he attends classes: he is never, however, opposed to pass ing up a class in favor of coffee or a good card game. The lower middlebrow is hell bent on the rah-rah portion ot college life. He is the advocater of drives, seller of slogans, or ganizer of intramural basketball, softball and everything pertain ing to college activities except education. He considers it his nersonal duty to sell college as the great institution it was de signed to be and can hardly be blamed for his honest efforts to tell the rest of the students what they already know. In this ca pacity, his zeal sometimes runs away with him and he loses sight of the primary objective gradu ation. Oh, well, he maintains, after the tenth semester, a cou ple more months of school won't make any difference. Might ns well hang around and see how the elections come out. Next come the impresscrs or the pretenders. The upper mid dlebrow looks on himself as a traitor to the cause of higher education if he is not well versed in all phases of American life from golf to psychiatry. In the presence of highbrows he is cau philosophies. but with other mid tious of expounding his personal dlebrows and lowbrows he ef fects a slightly "pearls among the swine" attitude. Versatility Versatility is the primary aim of the upper middlebrow, and he is never really convinced that his major is the right choice un til the second semester of his junior year. By' this time he has developed a highly individual istic taste and philosophy. His interpretation of the arts and the classics, though it is often spon taneous and erroneous, is unique in that it is essentially his own. Unlike the lower middlebrow, the higher is cautious in his ac ceptance of fads and seldom ac knowledges trends until they are proved stable to some degree. He is a "grain of salt" Emersonian and heartily approves of scorning convention mentally. Usually, however, he lacks the courage to give his innermost brainchildren free rein. As is to be expected, there are many variations to this classifi cation and the lines of distinc tion are somewhat obscure in many cases. "What's that you ask? Which category do I belong to'.' I really couldn't say. Being a college student, I'm prejudiced." Tuesday, March R 1950 - ts - the retrain, "Elect the Prom committee in an all-student elec tion and not by the Student Council." That melody went over with the majority of University students. In '41, Count Basic made head lines for the Prom. The Inno cents sponsored the dance that year for the first time. "Faction politics' harassed the sponsors by naming only one candidate for Prom Queen. The winner stepped out from behind Scarlet and Cream banners after an election at the door. Basic was the first big name band on the campus for five years. No corsages were permitted at the semi-formal af fair. A coronation similar to those of the Ak-Sar-Ben ball was useI in '42. Also presented at the Prom that year was the first BDOC, best dressed man on cam pus, chosen in a camnus-wide vote. Band hired for the affair was Jimmy Joy. War Clouds As war clouds hovered in 1943. the Prom marked several big changes in tradition. Held on the 73rd Charter day of the Uni versity, the February, the dance was informal, in keeping with emergency. The Prom was held on a Mondiiv evening, with danc ing from 8:30 to 12:00 p. m. Highlight attractions of the eve ning were the presentation of the traditional Prom Queen and the tapping of the next year's Inno cents by the sponsnrs of the dance. It was the first time that the senior men's honorary did not select their new members on Ivy day. With most of the college men in uniform in 1944 and 1945, the Prom was postponed until peace time in 1946. The N-club spon sored the Prom that year and guests danced to the music of Sonny Dunham. The post-war ticket price hike hit rtie Prom with a charge of $3 per couple for admission. Over 1,500 per sons welcomed back the tra ditional Prom in '4(1. A mass meeting of all upper classmen provided the means of electing the Prom Queen in 1947. Junior and senior students also voted to outlaw corsages at the dance. University students of ev ery class attended the affair and danced to the music of Raymond Scott. Prom King In 1948. juniors and seniors vott'fi to select the Queen to reign over the traditional spring formal The Red Cross drive netted all moposed corsage money. The dame was held in February, under the sponsorship! of the Innocents. In '49, the In nocents supervised an election of both :i Junior Prom Queen and a Senior King to appear at the dance. Tex Bcneke played to a record crowd at the Coliseum anil announced the appearance of the royal couple. The twentieth Prom. 1950's, Is the t list to be .sponsored by the junior class of the University, represented by the Junior C'las.s council. Top attraction of the dance, to he held March 24 in the Union ballroom, will be the first introduction of the six 1950 Beauty Queens. Saluting the Uni versity's mid-century graduating class, the class of 1950, the 50 Prom will then take its place as another colorful chapter in Junior-Senior Prom history on the campus. Iliiihlers Paper j Stresses Your II Featuring editm ials ami stories concerning the University of Ne braska as the school for graduat ing high school students to at tend next fall, the fourth edition Scarlet and Cream was put to press last week. The Scarlet and Cream is a monthly paper put out by the University of Nebraska Builders. Classified KOK SAI.l- ( M volume . tn'ally new. jmi.klt .rt llurvunl cluBiirf. Itfil Iralher blndlus. 1'rjo 4 1 VV, iKKIi Mit.innK le tin niml arucln traimlattd? Call 5-SM3. inc? even S.MALI. rfarU for Intormntlon Ituillnf irim.Mirr or my Z'mliiicy 112 note - ii niNr, nni ni IKM nut In V Kial'ff WninrK Call Tom I'nwrll. a-2:ilO. IMAI.K WaillP.I to fch.ru hMKm,,l a,, art. mrnt. Comiiiete. &-11479 adfr P. M