i 1 i 'i i l - i i t- A 'J ' , i r '.if 4 'J -t v I - ,Mk i f ' 'i Page 4 Tickets 'Goi n g Fast' Brubeck Began Jazz Combo In Ticket sales for the Dave Bru beck jazz concert to be held in the Union Ballroom Jan. 18 are going 'quite fast," said Judy Caplan,, Union activity director. Brubeck will give performances at 4 and 7:30 p.m. Matinee tickets are $1, and evening tickets may be purchased for $1.50 or $1.25. The jazz combo, which last year won Down Beat magazine's popularity and critics' poll and Metronome Magazine's 'All-Star" Big, Barbed Barnacles Bite Hard It wasn't all sun light and swim ming pleasure for Cornhusker vis itors in Florida for the Orange Bowl as one scratched and bumpd Nebraska band member will testi fir. Freshman engineering student Don Holyoke from Hastings came back with legs, arms and torso a criss-cross of painful scratches after a short, but sharp encounter with underwater- barnacles grow ing on pilings of an ocean front pier near St. Augustine, Fla. Holyoke, drummer in the band, was one of many Huskers who made use of Florida's miles of beach front to ride ocean waves as they came in. He said he had gone out "quite a ways" to practice his surf riding when he heard a call for help. "I looked in front of me while I was com ing in," he said, "but didn't see anyone. I thought maybe I just imagined hearing the call. But the voice came again louder this time with some other people joining in. "This time, I looked behind me," Holyoke said, "and saw a group of people standing on a pier. There were a lot of people pointing down at the water to one of the pilings under the pier. When I looked again I saw a fella I knew hang ing on to one of the piers. I swam over to help him, but couldn't get him to let go of the piling he was hanging onto. "Then it happened," Holyoke con tinued. "A big wave broke just a little way away from us and swept me under the pier and into the pilings which were covered with these sharp barnacles. I avoid ed the first few pilings, but I was Sting so fast that I finally hit one a them allmost head on. "I put my arms around it to keep from going farther, but that didn't keep me from getting pretty well cut up." Holyoke said that no more big waves, at least as big as the one that pushed him into the pilings, came along. "A boy from St. Augustine was In the water by now, and we managed to help my friend out of the water onto the beach. "They took me to a hospital St. Augustine," Holyoke said, "and the doctors started to work on my cuts. First I got some tetnus shots (the barnacles were poison ous) and then they poured al cohol over all my cuts. Then the doctors put some sort of 'goo' over my arms, legs, feet and chest." Holyoke is now wearing slippers and short-sleeved shirts to make his "latticed" appendages as com fortable as possible. He says his cuts should heal up in a matter of days. International Performer Pmppeteeir Cindlycfs fylarioiraeffle Cyirse By GRACE HARVEY and BARB CLARK Interested in puppets? If so, register for an extension course in puppetry taught by Marjorie Shanafelt, assistant to the director of the Morrill Hall Museum. The third session of the pup petry course will open the first Monday in February. Miss Shan afelt instructs her students in the art of constructing and manipu lating the different kinds of pup ets and marionettes. During the last summer school iession, Miss Shanafelt presented a shadow puppet show, "The White Cloth of Fantasy," as a part of the Summer Artist Series. She manipulated her shadow puppets in a composite fairy tale and shad ow circus featuring both animals and people. Cloth Screen She said that the secret of shad ow puppetry is the use of a light behind a white cloth screen which is 60" wide by 34" high. The pup ets are manipulated by long wires. The simplicity of the set can be magnified by the use of music, ' theatrical dimmers, color wheels, spotlights, duplicate, lights which cast double shadows. Miss Shanafelt explained, "I am ti-vine. with these shadows, to in troduce something that teachers can use toward an idea of great er beauty in the classroom." She added. "When I perform before a croup, I attempt to adapt the ta the needs of the I' ' " O ' - . FI-OIIO." Basically a string puppeteer, Miss California poll, has Brubeck at the piano with Bass Player Bob Bates, Alto Saxophonist Paul Desmond and Drummer Joe Dodge. Described by many critics as the most exciting new jazz artist at work today, Brubeck has de finite ideas about how his audi ences should behave. He feels there should be no loud joking or talking while his group is per formjng. He has been known to leave the bandstand in the mid die of a number and threaten a noisy customer. In the past five years, fans of the combo have grown from a small West Coast clique to a coast-to-coast crowd with Bru beck's main popularity existing on college campuses. The first Columbia record made by Bru beck and his group, "Jazz Goes to College," for four months out sold any single album by any other pianist. By the time he was four years old, Brubeck was playing the piano. While studying to be a veterinarian at the College of the Pacific at Stockton, Calif., he be gan playing jazz piano in night clubs. He played in Army bands on the Coast during World War II, and then, in 1946, he decided to be come a composer and studied at Mills College. But instead, he formed his own quartet in Cali fornia in 1951 when American jazz was being revived. In regard to his ambition of being a composer, Brubeck said, "I have yet to find the composer who I think is happy. In jazz you can perform what you compose. When I get inspired, I'm the hap piest guy in the world.'" Goodwill Visits To High Schools Planned By Ag Trips to Wahoo, Mead and Te- cumseh " ' 'schools have been planned i Builders public re lations ( n i 1 1 e e during the month o. . ...luary. Chairman Bill DeWulf announced that the purpose of these trips is to put forth the advantages of the University, and the Ag College in particular. A coed and a male student will accompany a faculty member on each of the coming visits. The first trip will be to Wahoo Tuesday, January 11th. Mrs. Keeler, assistant professor of vocational education, DeWulf, Larry Connor, Sharon Egger and Linda Buthman will make the trip to Wahoo. DeWulf said that 6nly three persons will go on succeed ing visits. Panel To Discuss Foreign Tongues The importance of foreign languages to the citizens of the United States will be discussed at the meeting of NUCWA Tuesday at 7:15 p.m. in Union Room 316. Members of the discussion panel are: Charles W. Colman, associate professor of Romance language; Lloyd D. Teale, associate profes sor of Romance language and John Winkelman, assistant profes sor of Germanic Languages. Foreign students are especially invited to attend, said President Sharon Mangold. Shanafelt car. work with as many as 100 shadow puppets at a time,. She added that, in addition to beine used for entertainment, pup pets are now used as therapeutic devices, and for educational work. "Puppeteerla" Miss Shanafelt has been working with marionettes for approximately 21 years. She said, "Puppetry is an avocation for me I use it as an expression of art, in stead of music, painting or sculp ting." She has given special programs all over the country. Among Miss Shanafelt's shows in Europe were request performances, which she gave at the Palace in Copenhagen, Denmark. Miss Shanafelt refers to her home in Lincoln as "The Puppet's House." The room in which the puppets are displayed is called the "puppeteeria," and it's walls are covered with approximately 175 puppets used by famous puppet eers. Her marionette collection has included as many as 250 pup pets. Recently she sent a selec tion of them to Puerto Rico for the purpose of aiding enthusiasts and prospective puppeteers there. The first records f the use of shadow puppets date back to 121 B. C, and since then they have been used in some form in nearly every country. Puppetry reached a height of popularity in France during the reign of Louis XIV when everyone went to the shadow shows. Chinese Art Nowadays shadow puppets are cut out of cardboard. However, Your Chunk God Has A Place On Campus By BABS JELGSRHUIS Church Editor Methodist Student House Sunday 3:00 p.m. Kappa Phi Degree of Light; 5 p.m. Fireside Club with a discussion on ''Be liefs of a Protestant." Student Fellowship of Baptists and Disciples of Christ Sunday 5 p.m. will be a supper and fellowship meeting. Dr. Wil liam Brill of the University stu dent health service will speak on "What It Means To Be 'Nor mal.' " Tuesday 7:30 p.m. the study group will discuss "the Unfolding Drama of the Bible." Wednesday 7:30 a.m. chapel service. Lutheran S TUDENT House (National Lutheran Council) 535 North 16th Friday 7 p.m. visitations. Sunday 10 a.m., Bible Hour; 11 a.m., worship; 5:30 p.m. LSA. The topic for LSA on city cam pus will be "Bible Forum on Prayer" led by Pastor Peterson. There will also be an election of officers. On Ag campus the topic will be "Are Creeds Necessary?" Election of officers will be held. Monday 6 p.m. Grad Club. Wednesday 7 p.m. vespers; Parade, Game NUers Brave 'Mist' For Rose Festival By JUDY BOST Staff Writer Rain-drenched Nebraska s t u- dents who attended the Rose Bowl returned with one conviction rain or no rain they wouldn't have missed the parade or game for anything. "I loved it even though we walked miles through puddles to our ankles," Lil Kitzleman, sen ior in Teacher's College said. "The parade was one of the most beautiful and elaborate produc tions I've ever seen," Audie Jones, sophomore in Teacher's College, said. Snarled Traffic It was necessary to feave at 7 a.m. in order to find a parking place within 8 blocks of Colorado Boulevard, where the five mile parade marched, Miss Jones said. Traffic was snarled ana crawling at a snail's pace, Miss Kitzleman said. Her party was forced to walk to the stadium through ankle deep puddles. Britain Opens Universities To Americans British universities in England and Scotland offer American stu dents an opportunity for study programs during the summer of 1955. Fields of study to be offered during the six-week summer ses sions will include English history, literature, art, music, drama, phil osophy and politics. Graduate students and qualified juniors and seniors are eligible to apply for admission. Expenses for the six weeks of study will average approximately $200; travel from $340 to $470. A few scholarships are available which provide for the remission oi part of the tuition fees. Further information may be se cured in the Graduate Office, So cial Science in. the peak of their beauty was seen in China in the early centuries where they were made of colored transparent skin, the coloring process of which is a lost art. Most of the shadow puppets used in modern times are solid, black, projected figures, but Miss Shanafelt's shadows are based on the beauty of the old Chinese pup pets. The figures are translucent and a glow of color is created by the use of vari-colored papers and plastice. A charter member of the Pup peteer of America, Miss Shanafelt has been a member of the group's council fon the past two years. The purpose of the council is to make rules, solve the problems of pup peteers all over the nation and publish a quarterly newspaper en titled "The Journal." Miss Shanafelt will demonstrate shadow puppets at a special booth and give people attending the con ference an opportunity to observe her techniques. CHICKEN Open Seven ' 115 So. t PHONE 5-2178 Free , Delivery Lincoln, Nebraska 7:30 p.m. choir. St. Thomas Aquinas Chapel Sunday masses 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 a.m. Weekday masses 6:45, 7:15 a.m. with a daily Rosary at 5 p.m. Religion classes Tuesday and Thursday at 11 a.m., Wednesday and Thursday at 7 a.m. Friday 2 p.m. Graduate Club. Wednesday 8 p.m. and Sat urday 1 p.m. choir 'practice. Sunday will be the Communion Breakfast at the Mayfair Grill following the 9 a.m. mass. The guest speaker will be A. B. Winter of the political science depart ment. South Street Temple Friday 8 p.m. sermon on "The Life of the Early Settlers." Tlffereth Israel Synagogue Friday 8 p.m. regular week ly service. University Lutheran Chapel (Missouri Synod) 15th and Q Sunday 10:45 a.m. worship and election of assembly officers. At 5:30 p.m. will be the Gamma Delta supper and meeting with the topic, "Consolations of Wor ship" by Prof. Rosel of Seward. There will also be election of of ficers. "My brother-in-law explained that Pasadena had an inadequate drainage system, which seemed painfully obvious to me," she con tinued. Dignitaries Present Both girls commented on the dignitaries present at the parade. Chief Justice Earl Warren, Roy Rogers, the Shah of Iran, Tab Hunter and Hopalong Cassidy were a few of the participants in the parade. Film star Ann Miller, wearing a pink mink stole to match her gown, rode on one of the floats. Art Miller of Omaha rode in the parade on his prize-winning Palo mino parade horse. It is the second- time both girls have attended the Rose Bowl fes tivities. Miss Kitzleman attended two years ago when Wisconsin played Southern California and Miss Jones saw the Nebraska Rose Bowl game. Raincoats Sold "It was a thrill to see one of my Theta sisters on the Big Ten float, she was ' Miss Michigan," Miss Kitzleman said. There were raincoats on sale during the game. They were Army surplus panchos, a cape-like gar ment used by. the cavalry. "I bought one, and the khaki paint ran all over everything," . Miss Kitzleman said. The announcer kept referring to the rain as a mist, Miss Jones said. "The statement was inac curate, because I have never seen such a downpour," she continued. People slept . in the streets to see the game and parade, she added. One family even built a fire in the gutter to arm them selves, she said. .Miss Jones listened to part of the Orange Bowl game in the car, be fore the Rose Bowl game. She said they walked from the parade to the stadium in high-heeled shoes and rested in the family car, which had been parked at 7 a.m. Horse Costumes Miss Jones' party entered through the wrong gate and walked around the entire stadium before they reached their seats. Halftime performances were very elaborate according to Miss Kitzleman. The Southern Californ ia Band - members wore horse costumes to carry out the Trojan theme. They formed a merry-go-round, with band members repre senting the horses. "Even the trip home was not free of rain" Miss Jones said. "I had planned on retuning to a clear Nebraska and no rain from clammy California, but 20 min utes outside of Kansas City all the passengers on the plane were awakened and told to fasten their safety belts. "We were entering a severe rain storm and the stewardess claimed it , was a safety measure. We bounced the rest of the way to Lincoln on air currents," she con cluded. Beginning Debate Five University debate teams will attend a one-day invitational debate conference for beginners at 'Hastings College Tuesday. Those, participating in the con ference are Joan Vecera, Darrina Turner, Kay Williams, Diann Hahn, Connie Hurst, Barbara Sharp, Frank Tirro, Roger Watt, Dick Andrews and Bob Frank. DELIGHT We Now Serve Chicken Delight 135 Dinner Chicken Delight 35 Shrimp Delight Dinner 135 Shrimp Delight g5g Snack Days A Week 25th. St While Hunting Sailfish rsU TrodflDDces By FRED DALY Staff Writer One small cry of triumph was heard from a few Nebraska root ers New Year's Day, in spite of Duke's victory in the Orange Bowl. Nebraska unofficially beat Duke in deep sea fishing. Led by Jerry Miller, who acci dentally performed' a feat rare in Mimal fishing circles, a Ne braska contingent of three over whelmed a scrappy one-man Duke team, 12-0. The Duke team be came ill during the contest and had to lie down. The great event of the day came College Art Featured faculty Works Included In Morrill Hall Exhibition Exhibitions of art works of Uni versity faculty members and old master drawings and prints from England will be held until Feb. 6 at the Art Galleries in Morrill Hall. Members of the Art Department will have their recent work on exhibition which exclude paintings, sculpture and ceramics. Some unusual works being ex hibited show the college technique. (Collage, a French word, means pasted or plastered down.) Rusty pieces of metal have been used and different colors of rusty metal combined with black and white tex tile paints form interesting pic- AlexanderTells Of Livestock Judging Slate The Junibr Livestock Judging Team has been announced by Coach M. A. Alexander, professor of animal husbandry. The team will leave for Denver Thursday to attend the National Western Livestock Show. The live-, stock team is made up of Jack Aschwege, Larry Connor, Stanley Eberspacher, Gerald Schiermeyer and Allen Trenkle. The carlot team will consist of Eberspacher, Schiermeyer, Tren kle, Charles Tomsen and Duane Trenkle. The wool team will be composed of three of the follow ing: Lonnie Wrasse, George Hart man, Duane Trenkle, Aschwege, Connor and Tomsen. The team will judge carlot classes Friday, all other livestock classes Saturday and wool Sunday. They will return late Tuesday, Jan. 18. ...-. x SAV I If Hmim... fcn wwint.i,., ... 1 L. . ,, , "Always sometiiino new "Different types of work appeal to different men," says Donald O'Brian (A.B., Indiana, '50), in the Traffic Department with Indiana Bell Tele phone Company. "For me, I'll take a job that keeps me hopping. And , that's just the kind of job I have.. , "You'd think that after two years I'd have all the variables pinned down. But it doesn't work that way. When . you supervise telephone service for thousands of different customers whose Don's enthusiasm for his job la pretty typical of how most young college men feel about their telephone careers. Perhaps you'd be interested in a similar oppor tunity with a Bell Telephone operating company, such as Indiana Bell "... or with Bell Telephone Laboratories, Western Electric or Sandia Corporation. See your Place ment Officer for more information. . . . when Miller landed a 36-inch Wa hoo while fishing for sailfish. The Wahoo is rarely caught around Miami, and Miller's fish was the twelfth one caught all year. Capt. Jack Germaine, leader of Miller's party, said the Wahoo is "a very rare fish" around Mi ami. It is also reported to be a very strong swimmer, having been clocked up to 50 miles per hour. The Wahoo is a dark-blue food fish (Acanthocybuim petus), of the Sqombridae family and the Per comorphi order. It spends most of its time around Florida and tures. Sand has even been em bedded in the paint y give the pictures a different texture. One display is made of a weathered board with metal piec es nailed onto it to form figures. There are a . number, of modern paintings in the exhibition having varied color combinations. An informal tea from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday will open the annual facul ty exhibition. The exhibition of old master drawings and prints from the col lection of Hans Calmann of Lon don, England will ;open Sunday. The 35 original drawings and prints will be for sale with prices ranging from $30 to $300. Arranged "primarily by the Iowa University Student Art Guild, the collection was planned to be ex hibited at three universities in this order: University of Iowa, Uni versity of Nebraska and Univer sity of Manitoba. The art works date from the 15th century to the 19th century and include some of Ruben's and Tiepolo's masterpieces. The pur pose of bringing such an exhi bition to the University is to cre ate interest among students and art collectors. Scholarship Fund Competition Open The 1955 Tri Delta General Schol arship Competition is now open. The deadline is February 25. Scholarships are awarded to women students iri the 96 colleges where there are Tri Delta chap ters. They may, or may not, be fraternity members. The amount of awards included in the competi tion will not exceed $200. Application blanks are available at the office of the Associate Dean for women, Ellen Smith Hall. A Campus-to-Career Case needs are always changing, there's always something new coming up. "I started with Indiana Bell in 1952, after two years in the Army. My train ing program exposed me to many dif ferent kinds of telephone work cus tomer contact, personnel, accounting, operations. I saw a lot of jobs which looked as interesting as mine. As much as I like the kind of work I'm doing now, I bet I'll like my next spot even better." Friday, January 7, 1955 Pyllce By Landing Wahoo the West Indies, some peupio it the peto, but not to its face. Still fishing for sailfish, Miller augmented his catch with a small tuna. Earlier he had caught four kingfish, one weighing 30 pounds. Leaping Trophy Dick Pickett, who matched Mil ler's bag of six fish, caught what was acclaimed by Capt. Germaine to be "probably the largest sand perch of the day." The sand perch was 12 inches long and was caught while Pickett was fishing for sail fish. Because of the relative rareness of his Wahoo, Miller has decided to make a trophy of it. "I'm having him mounted in a leaping urve," Miller said. His trophy will cost only $1.33 an inch. Pickett declined tQ have his prize preserved. Tom Healey, third member of the Nebraska team, caught no fish, but immortalized himself earlier by falling through a hole in the floor of an old castle into tha ocean with his clothes on. NU Recital To Feature 4 Seniors Donald Kitchen, Donald Mattox, Yvonne .Moran and HaroldWelch will be featured in a senior recit al at the Howell Memorial Theater Jan. 12 at 4 p.m. Accompanists for the recital will be Beverly Ross, Shirley Mc Peck and Barbara Yokel. Soprano Yvonne Moran will sing "In quelle trine morbide Manon Lescaut" by Puccine, "Mein schon er stern" by Schuman, "The Lone some Grove" by Bacok and "Song' by Sammond. "Elegy, Op 24" by Faure and the Allegro movement of Stamitz'a "Concerto in D Major" will be played on the viola by Har6ld Welch. Donald Mattox, baritone, has chosen to sing "Vittoria, mio core" by Carissimi; Brahms "Wiegen lied" "Life" by Curran, and Dvorak's "Goin' Home." Donald Kitchen's piano selec tions will include the Allemande, Sarabande, Gavotte and Giguer movements of the "French Suite in G Major" by Bach, "Prelude" by Rachmaninoff and "Polka" by Shostakovitch. Harold's Barber Shop 223 North 14th lYt block i South of Student Union v FLATTOPS $1.25 History BELL TILIPHONI SVSTIM I I .J