The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 05, 1954, Page Page 4, Image 4
o 8 v. f v J P V i t - J. K 'U 4 ... 7vi T V'f '; H". ' ' f'l '. , it. V : .Page 4 St Dean Discusses Essential Quality rrIn Love, Marriage Lecture Series Mutual and individual develop ment in four areas of maturity -was stressed as necessary in pre paring for marriage, in a lec ture by Roy M. Green, Dean of .the. College of Engineering and Architecture, in the Love and Marriage series Wednesday night. Green spoke on "Readiness for Marriage" at the seventh in a group of 12 lectures sponsored by the Campus Improvement Com mittee of the Student Council. 'HE LISTED six major factors In determining readiness for mar riage. First, the two persons involved must agree on the type of home they.-are going to establish. They "Should realize that the two indi vidual personalities entering into Health Day Discussion Scheduled Rusk To Serve As Moderator ' A panel discussion on rehabili tation in observance of the sixth annual College Health Day will be held Friday, March 12 in Love Memorial Library Auditorium. Sponsored by the University Convocations Committee and De partment of Physiology, Division of Public Health, the discussion will begin at 2 p.m. . HOWARD A. RUSK, M. D., as sociate editor of the New York Times, will act as panel modera tor. In addition, he will speak on the topics "Economic and Social Significance," and "Personnel in the Field." Dr. Rusk is professor and chair man of the Department of Physi cal Medicine and Rehabilitation at the New York University Col lege of Medicine and director of the Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation of the NYU- Belvue Medical Center. APPEARING ON the program will be J. E. M. Thompson, M. D., Orthopedic Specialist and chair man of the Nebraska State Board of Health. He will address the group on the topic "Medical As pects of the Physical Handi capped." I. William Brill, M. D., Chief of Mental Health Division, Uni versity Health Service will dis cuss "Mental Health Aspects." "Education in Rehabilitation" will be the topic of Dean A. Wor cester, Ph. D., University profes sor and chairman of educational psychology and measurements. Paul M. Reid, Nebraska super visor of Department of Vocational Rehabilitation, will discuss "Re habilitation Facilities and Pro grams Within the State." Discussion is open to the pub lie free of charge. Final Pot Luck Set For Sunday The last "Pot Luck with the Professors" will be held Sunday evening, from 5:30 to 7:30, an nounced Ken Pinkerton, chair man of the Ag Union student Jaculty committee. Special entertainment will be skit entitled, "The Poor Little Match Girl" which will be given by ' Jim Dunn, Ken Pinkerton, nd Joyce Taylor. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Hill are the faculty chairmen for the enpper. The student committee consists of Margie Antes, Althea Blunn, Mark Clark, Del Merritt and Ardie Young. 6 Young Demos Campus Young Democratic officers elected Wed n e s d a y night are (seated, 1. to r.) San dra Daley, vice president; Don ADVERTISEMENT I'llPff-m REIMS I THAT'S NO riRC- A riftE- m-m 'p THAT'S "r A I CRIMINAL. V,a "I V I MASTER OF I r C5 ALCOHOL-C TONCS DRYING OUT YOUR SCALP 7 T GET NON-ALCOHOUC & WILDROOT ressss Areas the marriage relationship are go ing to constantly change. Moral maturity is very impor tant in preparing for marriage Green stated. The two persons involved should develop relatively stable and similar ideas toward life, religion and social problems. GREEN BELIEVES that emo tional maturity is second in im porta nee to moral maturity. The emotionally mature person should be able to control his emotions, think independently and be in dependent of home environment. Intellectual maturity, Green said, includes the ability to suc cessfully hold a job and manage business affairs. The intellectu ally mature person also desires to continue learning independ ently of others. IN THE area of social matur ity, the ability to adjust to chang ing conditions socially is highly desirable, Green added. The ma ture person can meet social situ ations with poise and is inter ested in quiet diversions rather than continual excitement in so cial life. Although no one can be perfect in all these items, Green believes they are important factors in de termining readiness for marriage. He stressed the fact that moral and emotional maturity can build up good social and intellectual maturity. The next lecture on Love and Marriage will be held on March 17. Ag Youth Fellowship Meet Set For Sunday "Meet Your Neighbor" is the special program planned for the Ag Interdenominational Youth Fellowship meeting Sunday at 5:30 p.m. International students are in vited to attend the Sunday friendship supper and program at the Ag Student Center., Sociology Professor Defends Modern Art Abstracts Designed To Protest Abstract art as a form of pro test against the asthetic tradi tion of visual reproduction was explained and discussed by Dr. Paul Meadows, professor of sociology, in a lecture "Art as Protest," Tuesday. First of a new series of art lectures at the Morrill Hall Gal lerys, the talk attempted not to explain modern art so much as to justify and evaluate it. POINTING OUT the dialetic pattern of this modern protest, Dr. Meadows showed how each new form embodies something of the preceeding ones. "The revo lutionary art of one generation becomes the genteel, accepted art of the next, just as a heretic who is burned at the stake in one century is proclaimed as a saint in another," he stated. It is the pattern of art that revolu tionary forms become grafted on to the conservative methods. After expressing the opinion that one of the values of the dialectic pattern has been to accord the appreciator of art the same privilege as the painter, the right to be different and to protest to those who attempt to dictate what the public should enjoy and accept, he enumerated three specific values of art as protest. THE DIALECTIC pattern of art has, Dr. Meadows stated, demonstrated the incalcuable possibilities of incongruities. "It 4tW V v Courtoy Lincoln Star Searcy, president; 'standing 1. to r.) Marshall Kushner, treas urer; Don Wanek, historian, and Bob Spearman and Ed De Mar, executive officers. ADVERTISEMENT HDft-TfiAV I UEVOO WITH THAT I fOt' L romaTTL M Essv hair t-et J ioai-rr ROMANTIC ON E yf iXV&QCtT CREAM-OiL, ll FOOT7' ja Kg y-mm -, . . x Coed Follies Winner Chi Omega's "Madame Flut terby" won first place honors at the Coed Follies show Tues day night. NU students of Jap anese (1. to r.), Bobby Banks Your Church God Has A Place On University Campus METHODIST STUDENT HOUSE Sunday Wesley Fireside, "Christian Economic Answer to Communism," 5 p.m. Tuesday Sigma Theta Epsilon meeting, "Philosophy of the Old Testament," 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Lenten service. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (Missouri Synod) 15 and Q Sunday Worship, 10:45 a.m.; Gamma Delta, beginning with cost supper, 5:30 p.m. Wednesday Lenten worship, 7 p.m.; choir rehearsal, 7:30 p.m.; Christian Doctrine class, 7:30 p.m. SOUTH STREET TEMPLE Friday Religious services, 8 p.m. Sunday School, 10-12 a.m.; youth group, 11:30 a.m. Wednesday Hebred class, 3:15 p.m. PRESBYTERIAN CONGRESSIONAL HOUSE Sunday Forum, speaker is Herbert Jehle, associate professor is good for a human being to be shocked from his loyalty and even devotion to reality," he said, and went on to show how protest art provides this shock treatment through planned in congruities. "Modern art is sometimes lampooned," he admitted, "be cause some artists like Dali overdo this incongruity." Still, he held, emancipation from the strict rigidity of reality is one of the purposes of modern art. Continuing his evaluation of protest art, the speaker said it has shown the intensities of deep-flowing emotions. As a form of psyco-synthesis, art probes the subconscious life within. The third value of dialectic patterned art as explained by Dr. Meadows is to reveal the Esthetic potentialities of the principle of repugnance. This is closely linked to the planned use of incongruities in that it is the planned use of horror to startle people out of their pre judices derived from the tradi tion of reality. NEXT LECTURE in the series will be "Three Contemporary American Artists, P e r e i r a, Gwathmey, and Knaths," by Norman Geske, acting director of the Morrill Hall Gallerys. It will be at 3:30 Sunday in Gallery B, Morrill Hall. The series has been planned to coincide with the 64th annual exhibition of the Nebraska Art Association, presently being shown at Morrill HalL "COELUM (Devil's Paradise) UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA COSMOPOLITAN CLUB CARNIVAL SAT., MARCH 6, 8:00 to 12:00 STUDENT UNION BALLROOM DANCE TO AL HOLBEItT'S BAND Tickets 1.20 Available At Door International Floor Show Door and Costume Prizes Informal, Costume Optional ADVERTISEMENT W-A SMART HYDRANT WOULD RELIEVE DRVNESS WITH WIUMOOT CJULAM- Oil., INSTEAD THE NEBRASKAN Tr5r- ' - x ' b' - a and Nancy Kieger join with Nancy Person and Judy Law rence in a song and dance routine. Delta Gamma won sec- of physicis. 5:30 p.m. Monday Breakfast discussion group on. contemporary ineoi ogical Thought," Rex Knowles is leader. 7 a.m. Tuesday Sigma Eta Chi, 7:30 p.m.; discussion group on "Chris tian Economic Thought in Mod ern American Politics," 7:30 p.m Wednesday "Contemporary Theological Thought," Ag Cam pus section, 5 p.m. Thursday "Con temporary Theological Thought," 10 a.m vespers, 7 p.m.; "Contemporary Theological Thought," 8 p.m. ST. THOMAS AQUINAS CHAPEL Sunday Mass, 8, 9, 10, 11 and noon; confessions before all masses and on Saturdays at 7:30 p.m.: breakfast after 9, 10 and 11 a.m. masses; supper, 5:30 p.m. Monday Religious course, 3 p.m. Tuesday Religious course, 11 n.m. Study club at Newman Center and Ag College Activities Building, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Religious coures, 3 p.m. Thursday Religious course, 11 a.m. LUTHERAN STUDENT HOUSE Friday Visitations, 7 p.m.; travel pictures, 8 p.m. Sunday Bible class, 10 a.m.; (9:45 a.m. at Ag Lutheran House) worship, 11 a.m.; joint Ag and City LSA supper, 5:30 p.m.; "Christian Involvement In the Student Life," Pastor Preus is guest speaker, 6:30 p.m. Monday Coffee hour discus sion, "The Christian Student and His Bible' 3:30 p.m.; married couples, grad club and faculty supper, 6 p.m.; "Christian In volvement In the Intellectual Life," Pastor Preus, 7:15 p.m. Selective Service Applications Due Application deadline for the 1954 Selective Service College Qualification Test is Monday, ac cording to the Selective Service National Headquarters. Applications and a bulletin of information may be obtained at any Selective Service local board. (In Lincoln, Room 202, Veterans Building, 12th and O Streets.) Following instructions in the bul letin the student should fill out his application and mail it in the special envelope provided. The test will be given April 22. Results will be reported to the student's Selective Service local board of jurisdiction for use in considering his deferment as a student, according to Educational Testing Service, which prepares and administers the College Qual ification Test. Harold's Barber Shop V BLOCKS SOUTH OF THE STUDENT UNION Haircuts $1 DIAVOLI It ADVERTISEMENT GIT THIS rWtt ptASTIC DIPENSE WORTH SoC) WHEN W bUI WILWWXJT CRLAM-OIL. A 1.49 VALUE -ONLY 79j MKW. V- MliCUkV.ff . CREAM - OiUCHARUE r- Couitesy Lincoln Star ond place with "Hannah Hits Savannah," and Gamma Phi Beta's "Emancipation Rocks the Nation" won third. Tuesday Coffee hour discus sion "The Christian Student and His Prayer Life," 3:30 p.m.; ves pers, 7:15 p.m., Wednesday Choir, 7:f5 p.m. Thursday Christianity course, 7:15 p.m. UNIVERSITY EPISCOPAL CHAPEL Sunday Holy Communion, 9 a.m.; Holy Communion and ser mon "Questions of Faith," 11 a.m.; inquirer's class with supper, 6 p.m. Wednesday Choir practice, 7:30 p.m. . BAPTIST STUDENT FELLOWSHIP Sunday Lunch, 5:30 p.m.; film, "For a Closer Walk With God," 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. . ' Lutheran House Plans Lent Series The Lutheran will begin the Student House observance of Inspirational Lent with an Series entitled "Christian In volvement" to be held March 7-9. The series will begin with morning worship Sunday at 11 a.m.; topic for the sermon is "God in Christ in Us." David Preus, student pastor at the University of South Dakota, and guest speaker for the local series, will give three addresses. The first of these, entitled "Christian Involvement in the Student Life," will be given Sun day at 6:30 p.m. Monday at 7:15 p.m. the sub ject for the address will be "Christian Involvement In the Intellectual Life." The final address by Pastor Preus will be given Tuesday at 7:15 p.m and will deal with Christian Involvement In the World Struggle." ' - iff i 117 f W I f?C Gray Lady Assistants Direct Bonis, Newspaper State Mental Hospital Patients Given Therapy Directing rhythm bands, teach ing square dancing and helping publish a newspaper are a part of the activities engaged in by Red Cross Gray Lady assistants working at the State Mantal Hospital. Under the direction of chair man Joyce Laase, the coeds work in the wards talking to the patients, writing letters and directing musical choruses. They conduct art and handicraft classes which are held for occu pational therapy purposes. SPEECH ACTIVITIES are also included in the agenda. Coeds . help the patients in drama work and speech therapy. "Hospital Highlights," the news paper published by the patients is also under the Gray Ladies' supervision. Birthday parties are planned for the patients and University talent shows travel to the hos pital to entertain the patients. Before a coed can become a Gray Lady assistant, she must fulfill ' certain requirements. They include a letter of permis sion from her parents, an inter view with the hospital psychia trist and participation in a Worker-training program. COEDS WEARING the gray March 19 tlASS OF '54 J! llO I . 3 MEET YOURSELF lO YEARS FROM NOW Ever wonder what you'll be like when the class of '54 hold its 10th reunion? If you started to work for one of tha Bell System companies after graduation, here's a pretty good idea. INTERESTING, RESPONSIBLE WORK: Perhaps a Commercial Manager, the company's representative and spokesman to as many as fifty thousand customers. Or a Transmission Engi neer, helping to provide the telephone needs of an entire slate. Or a Supervisor in the. Traffic Department, responsible for the speed and quality of local and long distance service in several cities and for the personnel relations of a large number of employees. WE MAKE SURE THERE ARE PUCES TO 60: The number of college men hired is related to the number of administra tive and technical positions expected to be available in the next 10 or 15 years. It is our policy to fill these position from within our organization. ARTS, SCIENCE, BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION AN9 ENGINEERING GRADUATES are among our particular needs. The specific degree is not as important as the total effect of your college training. NO WAITER WHAT YOUR MILITARY STATUS, contact your Placement Officer soon for deta on the oppnrfc nitics for employment with the Bell System. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM Friday, March 5, 1954 Guidance By Coeds and white uniforms of the Gray Lady assistants are Aileen Sehn ert, Nancy Hoile, Shiela Siren, Diane De Vriendt, Phyllis Mc Cullah, Mona Smith, Judy Kraft, Phyllis Kaplan, Vivian Lemmer, Martha Sorensen and Joycs Laase. Main Feature Clock (Schedule Furnished by Theaters) Varsity: "Rob Roy." 1:25, 3:30, 5:35, 7:48, 9:45 ."Pecos Sill,1 1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:15, 9:20. State: "Fighter Attack," 2:12. 4:44, 7:16, 9:48. "Paris Playboys,'' 1:10, 3:42, 6:15, 8:45. NOW ffilayJr wo!t DUnyV mw&eos Biu. J (.L TKHNICOlOt Collier's Basketball All-America "Meet the nation's best basketball players Collier's '54 team se lected by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. Find out how your favorite rates, in The Big New, issue now on salt pr iff ' 1