Tuesday, May 8, 1951 PAGE 4 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Parade of the Presidents .... . ,M .1 - ; ': I t ... ... -f. . .. . , ni-iinmnrn mm. nrrM.-paM QnlMi f Mr ft IHUlntlWff"1 College Student Finds He Isn't Alone in Having 'School Blues (Couriesy of Journal-Star) ASTONISHED PREXY Sharon Fritzler, new Mortar Board president, is still suprised after being the first Mortar Board to be masked Saturday. Nancy Porter, past president, is leading Miss Fritzler to the executive chair. (Courtesy ef Journal-Star) FIRST OF THIRTEEN Jerry Johnson, Innocent's new president, is still a little shaken after the surprise tackle: by Rob Raun, former president of Innocents. Revieiving the Parade . . . I ot" -:.-r,- c -,iJ:N v,-. vv, I! -.1111 '"ral.L. 'ft il VZ. T-.J- TV ,-- . MTK-r-'llliri ! Union to Poll Students For Ideas, Criticisms Student suggestions and criti cisms of present Union facilities will be sought in Union spon sored poll within the next two weeks. Seven hundred students will be asked questions about Union fa cilities. Tt is thp aim nf TTninn ! pnmmittM m a n-. hnvp in moot Vint ter needs of students with facili ties it now posses. Last fall, when Darrell Dapper came down to school from straw berry Corners, he had his mind made up that he was going to be a self-made man. In fact, all through his first semester, he lived in the illusion that he was very different from everyone else. When it rained, he was the only one who got his feet wet or so he thought. Con sequently, he was the only per son who caught cold. Darrell always had the feeling that instructors picked pn him. Nobody else seemed to get the treatment We got, and he resented it. Then too, it seemed to Darrell that he was the only person who ever had troubles with his study ing. 'Why Do I Get Picked On?' "Why is it that I always have to get picked on?" he sometimes asked himself. "Why don't tne instructors ask any of the other students in my classes to answer questions? They always have their lessons. They iiever seem to have troubles like I do." And, so it went all through the first semester of Darrell's college life. He was living in the sad illusion tnat everyone else was getting along fine that no body had any worries. They all flocked upon him like flies. Darrell continued to live in his illusion, wade in his sorrow and swat the flies. Before he knew it, people were talking about final exams and registering for the next semester. Darrell didn't know whether he wanted to go on to school or not. At the same time, he was so scared about his finals that he didn't know which way to turn. Darrel Registers Anyway In spite of it all, Darrell regis- Army Offers Finance Corps Positions to ROTC Students ties has a training camp quota of four students, to be chosen by professors of military science and tactics and college leaders at the schools on a competitive basis, General Foster said. Each university has an ROTC program and each is a member of the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business. To be eligible for attendance at the training camp a student must be enrolled in a course leading to a degree in business administration, fiscal adminis tration, public administration, accounting or law. Horticulturalist Whitney ' The student also must be in r. i . ii j rr the first year of the ROTC ad Explains Hedge 1 rimming Vanced course at his university. Hedges around your yard With his application for attend- The University of Nebraska is one of 25 institutions throughout the nation from which selected ROTC students will be given the opportunity to qualify for re serve commissions in the Army Finance corps, Maj. Gen. Eugene M. Foster, chief of finance, has announced. The program includes a six week Finance corps summer training camp at Fort Benjamin Harrison, near Indianapolis, Gen eral Foster announced. An exact date is to be announced. Tenta tive plans call for an early July opening. Each of 25 selected universi- should be sheared so that they slope in toward the top, accord ing to Extension Horticulturist Wayne C. Whitney of the University. ance at the Finance corps sum mer training camp, the student also must agree in writing to ac cept a Finance corps reserve commission if tendered. Drama Students to Give Excerpts From Eliot's 'Cocktail Party'; Conceerns Salvation Thesis INSPECTION The University's ROTC unit is at its very best during the federal inspec tion which was held Thursday morning for the cadets. Recieving Awards . i s ' . ' n:r;-rt,. - V 1 1 1 1 1 v J M Mj'5i 'f U i 'i 'M' ! if . h:fmP ' 5 1 ? i fju, ; V ' - - . -fc-MSKtf -' 4 - wy' . - i S : j ,. y-'-- '''' '.'- '; ' ' " ' I - 'A ' ft W t " I " . T -, -' a r , t - t . "V - v , '- S ' if i I ' v " ' 11, ' i' 1 " ' if ' l ' t" I j, ;::.:''' T ' :,: ::"-"4 -- k - . ? - Li RCCU Needs Summer Aides Any person who will be in summer school or in Lincoln dur ing the summer months and would like to work with the Red Cross College Unit should noti fy Joan Hanson, 2-2 1 49 or Suzie Stoll, 2-5332 as soon as possi ble. The Red Cross College Unit offers many opportunities for volunteer workers and summer board chairmenships. Children's homes, Tabatha Old Folks Home, Motor Corps, Life saving and in structors, Veterans hospital en tertainment and work, handi craft, Orthopedic hospital enter tainment, publicity, state peni tentiary entertainment, mental hospital entertainment, and oth er expanding fields are offered for the service of the summer students. The. summer work will be tin-. der the chairmanship of Suzie Stoll and Joyce Johnson. They j will carry out the summer pro- j gram just as It is during the school year. , University students will present a second performance of an ex erpt from T. S. Eliot's "The Cock tail Party" Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Room 205, Temple. The first presentation of the play was made Monday night. Under the direction of Richard Garretson, the play stars Marjorie Miller, Wesley Jensby, Cyra Ren wick and Dick Miller. Eliot, a Nobel prize winning poet, has written the drama about a man's need for a goal toward which he can travel. The excerpt being presented is concerned with the central scene of the play, which illustrates Eliot's thesis of salvation. Celia, 'Sophisticated Woman' The play is about Celia Copple stone, a young and sophisticated woman who suddenly finds that the world has become a delusion to her and she no longer believes in her own reality. With the guidance of a psychia trist, Celia brings her problem in to the open. She admits having a vision which she longs to follow. The psychiatrist helps her to choose the way of preparation for her life, and she leaves to join a religious order. In explaining Celia's death the result of this choice Eliot has said, "Everyone makes a choice at one tme or another and then must take the consequences." Lead Taken By Marjorie Miller Marjorie Miller, who plays the part of Celia. has appeared in "Faust," "Glass .Menagerie," "School for Scandal," "Family Al bum," "Antigone," and "Hay Fever." She received the Techni cal Theater Award of 1950. The psychiatirst, Sir Henry Harcourt-Reilly, is portrayed by Wesley Jensby. He has acted in "Ah Wilderness!," "Guest in the House," "Once in a Lifetime," "Antigone," "Caesar and Cleo patra." He received the Outstand ing Freshman award last year. Cyra Renwick, who plays the part of Julia Shuttlethwaite in the play, has appeared in two Cir clet theater productions, "Life With Father," and "The Night of January 16th." Dick Miller, portraying Alex ander MacColgie Gibbs, has pre viously starred in "Guest in the House" and "Three Men On A Horse." tered for the following semester. If he didn't come back, he thought, he won't have lost any thing by doing it. i Finals arrived more quickly than he had intended them to. Nevertheless, he decided that, despite his poor grades, he would try to study hard and see if he could raise them a little with his final examinations. "I'll really show those instruc tors," he thought. However, Darrell's sea of sor row began to turn to quicksand or so he thought after his first final. As' the week progressed, the more he studied, the faster his hopes for coming out with a fairly decent average slowly ebbed away or so it seemed to him. By the end of exam week, Dar rell had almost completely drowned himself in the realiza tion that he was only going to have an 8.999 average. He had been hoping all along for a 9.999. 'What Will I Tell Mother?' "What, will I tell my mother?" he thought desperately. "She will be very disappointed in me." Upon receiving notification of the grade he had received in his. last exam, Darrel walked slowly out of the building. Sulkily, he started for the bus stop. However, as he did so, he failed to notice a fairly intelli gent looking fetllow who came droopily up the walk from the opposite direction. As a result Darrell and he connected in a surprise collision. Books flew every which way. Both of them very self-consciously got to their feet, each brushing himself off and looking at the other suspiciously at the same time. After standing there staring at each other for a moment, they both broke out laughing, stifling it as quickly as it had begun. Expression Shows Same Expression Darrell looked at the expres sion on his face, finding there somewhat the same thing he had felt inside of himself all week. "What's the trouble?" he asked h6pefully. "Oh, nothing much," the stranger replied; "Just a little matter of some poor grades I'm going to have to tell my folks about." "What's wrong with them?" Darrell asked eagerly. "Well," said the fellow rather hesitatingly, "making a 1.2 aver age is no funny matter. I don't exactly know how I'm going to break the news to the folks at home." Darrell was relieved. "And I thought I had worries!" he mut tered under his breath. "What did you say?" "Never mind," said Darrell, tossing it off. "Come on. Let's go someplace for a coke. Maybe we can think up a good story to tell your folks and mine." The two boys turned in the di rection of the drug store, blithly conversing about what they were going to take next semester and their plans for the futture. . . At last Darrell had found that he wasn't the only one in th world who had problems. . . . 3& MWf fl Mfk the vTSyri-! "3 3" Paul E. Moon Indiana lnrrrufr 1 Vi - LUOCIES TASTE BETTER THAN tm OTHER CIGARETTE I Fine tobacco and only fine tobacco can give you a better-tasting cigarette. And L.S.M.FT.-Lucky Strike means fine to bacco. So, for the best-tasting cigarette you ever smoked, Be Happy Go Lucky I How about startin' with a carton today?. WANT ADS LSM-FT- lucky Strike WANT ADS A JOB WELL DONE Pictured above is one of the many events that took place at the ROTC inspection parade Thursday that of giving and receiving awards. The University Coliseum is in the background. Food Production Alternatives Presented by Agronomy Prof Mankind face three choices in Dr. Duley, outgoing president, meeting the staggering problem of addressed the Nebraska Academy feeling a world population in- of Science's general session Fri creasing at the rate of 20 million 1 day night. persons a year. The choices, according to Dr. Frank L. Duley of the University agronomy department and re division of the Soil Conservation Service, are these: 1. Utilizing agricultural science, and widespread public informa tion programs, to develop the productive capacity of every acre of arable land to the utmost. Develop Conservation 2. Develop soil conservation on tn unprecedented scale, for the soil is the lifeline upon which future generations must depend protejns for human and ani. for their food supply. i mal food; developing food plants 3. New excursions into scientif- j in sandn and water cultures; and I methods of producing food may, changing our diet so that some ve to be developed to relieve plants can be consumed directly the burden now borne by the soil I as human food. He said if the world continues to increase in population at its present rate we might reach the limit of our ability to supply food. This may mean, he said, that man in the future will rely on his head as well as his hands to supply the people with food. Conservation Measures He said some possibilities in clude taking wildlife out of the realm, of snorts and makine It a food-producing unit of our econ-('"'ff.J.2!l omy; putting microbes to work to but -.ibit. n loe.i Dot for hon.y develope yeast foods and other i mn orrfui ouob. bi ton nr-! trlelty and a wonderful mountain vi. for detain writ Wn. O. H. Zumwtnkcl, 1474 So. Jackaon, Iwivar, Colo. Miule Jlmmr Phllllpi combo lot formal, bom partln. a-7717 venlnu. lOnTdMniTphi Bta" pin. Call or mal CjamerL award. S-IM7. ' WHEN YOU WANT RESULTS USE DAILY NEBRASKAN WANT ADS CASH RATES : alt On Tv Tbr rar ri War'! Ja DaMDr I Daja Pari j-iajs . JtMjjjUjnMTjiM is-M I " ,M 1 tt' .M Jpn I -T I LIS I I H i.it'i MS M-M .M H ) 1H ) M tM Inrlnde ddrrMr wbeo fifur Inr coat. Bring ad to Daily Nebriakmn boshies office. Student Union, or mall with correct amount and Insertions desired. NO ADS TAKEN BY PHONE VACATIONERS HONEYMOONERS . ' ' "yVfKf . . dzj i'l 10k ' I v; w 1 Vfl I Vvf ? , -c t X- Mbtsnt rnirwltd; Is L.S.M.F.T-1 Richard A. Yocom Univtnhy ol New . i . 4a school r-Zl ru that on tr way " ( Paul H. AMini Clark Vniraraity cci TBf aiataiCAH Tc MarU r