1 Savon Plays: ThesifeF Offers FHCfH5 Top Jiff lip Dallas Williams, director of the University Theater, isn't really worried. Although the price of the season tickets to the theav has dropped rom $6.50 to $5, Wnliams says he is confident that the theater "will at least break even." A season ticket now entitles the holder to reserve seven seats dur ing the season, any number of which may be used at any one per formance of any play. Williams explained that under this plan a student could bring six .friends to the initial show, "The Desperate Hours" on his one tick et. "This would use up the ticket," he added. "I think this plan is an excellent idea for a couple of reasons," the director noted. "Primarily, it is a saving of over 100 per cent for the student who would otherwise pay $10.50 for individual seats." He said that it means the plays will have to be good. "If the quality of the plays is not up to the par the University can expect, we won't sell tickets. The University of Nebraska like any other great University, can hope for outstanding drama in its theater. We'll attempt that this year." ..-'Williams has scheduled such lays as "King Lear" and "The r'Garden of Asclepius" for the 1956 57 season. "Lear will be out toughest. But it's the kind of challenge sincere drama students deserve," he ad ded. , "The Garden of Asclepius" is pn original drama . written by Os car Mandel, professor of English t the University. "As this has never been produced before U will be a challenge technically as well . as dramatically," Williams stated. The schedule of productions is as follows: October 16-19 "The Desperate Hours" by Joseph Hayes. This play was an outstand ing Broadway success which was also a motion picture. It is the dramatization of a best selling novel which tells the story of a typical American family held hostage by three vicious and frightened escaped convicts. November 16-17 "The Garden of Asclpius" by Professor Mandel. This is an original three-act play which tells the story of a popular Greek legend. December 4-8 "Dark of the Moon" by Howard Richardson and William Barney. Set in the great Smokey Mountains of North Caro lina and based upon one of the many versions of the. legend of Barbara Allen, this play tells of 868 Cadet Wing: Marvin M c N e i e e has been named cadet wing commander of the University Air ROTC unit for the coming year, Col. Carter Dun can, professor of air science, an nounced today. A senior in the College of Busin ess Ad m i n stration, he will have the r a n k of cadet colonel. Second in command of t h e 868-cadet wing will be Cadet Lt. Col. William Bed- Bedwell well, an electrical engineering major. Both McNeice and Bedwell are in the pilot training phase. Other cadet members of the wing staff are: Maj. Francis Ost diek, personnel; Maj. John Mor row, operations; Charles Sum mers, materiel and inspector; Capt. Walter Gerlach, Jr., ad jutant; Capt. James McConnelL information; 1st Lt. James Oehm, cq), assistant personnel. The cadet group commanders re: Maj. Marshall Nelson; Maj. Doyle Hulme, and Maj. Emmet Wier, Jr. Group adjutants: Capt. Marlow Patton; Capt. Ronald Hoel, and Capt. Gary Kelly. Squadron commanders: Capt. AFHIOTC - '-" l Death: Bess Steele, Ex Home Ec Teacher Dies In Oregon Miss Bess Steele, 67, University lome economics department staff member for more than 30 years, died Saturday at her home in Portland, Ore. Miss Steele was associate pro fessor of home economics and head of the design division from 'Multi-Jet' Summer Ends For Bourne Richard Bourne, associate pro fessor of economics, returned to the University this week after spending the summer at Boeing Airplane Company's Wichita, Kan., Division, where he took active part in multi-jet bomber production. During his stay at Boeing, Pro fessor Bourne along with thirty-one other professors from various campuses worked with company personnel, carrying out engineer ing and other technical assign- tMDtS. a witch boy who becomes human for the love of Barbara Allen. . January 15-19 "The Corn is Green" by Emlyn Williams. This play tells of an English spinster who settles in a Welsh mining village and open a boys school. It has been a successful play, motion picture and television production. March 12-16 "King Lear" by William Shakespeare. This tragedy is known as one of Shakespeare's greatest plays. ' April 26 and 27 rtThe Dead Day" by Ernst Barlach. This play is an allegory which concerns a mother's passionate and selfish love which is bent on keeping her son from knowing God and helping human ity. May 14-18 "Harvey" by Mary Chase. This was a successful humorous play and motion picture about a lonely man who created a friend in the form of a six foot rabbit named Harvey. Theater: Whitalcer Releases Play Cas The cast for the first Univer sity Theater play of the season, "The Desperate Hours," has been announced, by Max Whitaker,di rector of the production. The" leading role of Dan will be played .by John Crowell, that of Glenn . by Skip Weatherford and Cindy by Trudy Scriven. The play, which was an outstand ing Broadway success, was Writ ten by Joseph Hayes. Humphrey Bogart and Frederick March star red in it when "The Desperate Hours" was produced in Holly wood. A dramatization of a best-selling novel, the play tells the story of a typical American family held hos tage by three viscious and fright ened escaped convicts. The play will be presented on the stage of Howell Theater Oct. 16-20. Other members of the cast are Bard, Don Montgomery; Winston, Bob Griffin; Eleanor, Bonna Tebo: Hank, Charles Richards; Robish, Joe Hill; Chuck, Clancy Croft; Carson, Steve Schultz; Fredericks, Bob Morrison; and Mr. Patterson, John Thompson. McNEICE Keith Arndt; Capt. Walter Blore; Capt. Stephen Davis; Capt. James Fager; Captv Ronald Schneider; Capt. Neil Miller; Capt. Thomas Olson; Capt. Dennis Brune and Capt. John Sc anion. Squadron adjutants: 1st Lt. John Ball; 1st Lt. Depnis Hruby; 1st Lt. Joy Klaasmeyer; 1st Lt, Rob ert Kelley; 1st Lt. Robert Mar pies; 1st Lt. Richard Swanson; 1st Lt. Lenny Schropfer; 1st Lt. Keith TeSelle, and 1st Lt. Ronald Yost. 1938 until her retirment in 1954. She was a past president of the Lincoln Artists Guild. A native of Meadville, Pa., she joined the University staff in 1921 after teaching art in Washington, Pa., and Long Beach, Calif., schools. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in 1925 and her Master of Arts degree in 1936 from Columbia University. She also had studied at the International School of Art in Vienna, Austria, and the University of Gaudalajara, Mexico. Miss Steele was a member of the American Association of Univer sity Professors, American Home Economics Association, Western Art Association, Nebraska Art Association, Lincoln Weavers Guild, and Omicron Nu, honorary home economics society. She had contributed articles to the Journal of Home Economics fend ether eduoataonal raegaaioeSk mmmmmmlmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Vol. 30, No. 2 x- - 3 $ ?r i t ' i r : r - . v '"'.'-'X -A P'ijvM i " jp S -una Min-iim nmrriornil Shapiro, Students Discuss New English professor, Karl .Shapiro and ' English"- students, Mrs. Ellie Ashida, Bruce Brug- Poet At NU: , By NANCY COOVER Copy Editor Karl Shapiro, Pulitzer prize win ning poet who has joined the Uni versity English Department this year, is impressed with the literary climate in Lincoln and at the Uni versity. After facing his first class in literature Monday he stated that the students always seem to laugh in the right places. Shapiro, who will hold the rank of professor, will tach classes in the creative writing ('. poetry and fiction, an introduction to lit erature, and modern po'try. A Montgomery Lecturer at the University in 1953, Shapiro Said he visited quite extensively in the city and was pleased with the in terest in literature he' found. He credits that interest and the Prair ie Schooner as the factors which drew him to the University. Shapiro will succeed Dr. Lowry Wimberly, a member of the University faculty since 1917 and founder of the "Prairie Schooner," as editor of the "Prairie Schoon er." Wimberly has requested that he be placed in retirement because of ill health. Dr. A. C. Brecken- ridge, dean of faculties, said Wim- berly's request will be presented to the Board of Regents at its next meeting Saturday. Wimberly served as editor of the "Prairie Schooner" for more than a quarter of a century and on the University English faculty as instructor, assistant and asso ciate professor, and as a full pro fessor since 1928. During Wimberly's tenure, the Prairie Schooner" achieved na tional stature as one of the leading literary quarterlies in the coun try. Wimberly is credited with the "discovery" and first printing of such authors as Eudora Welty, Loren Eizley, and Mari Sandoz. i Wimberly stated that he got the idea for the "Prairie Schooner" j from a student in one of his class- Yearly: Dietetics Scholarship Established A yearly scholarship, valued at $300, has been established at the University's department of home economics by the Standard Market of Lincoln to encourage women to enter the field of dietetics. The announcement was made Wednesday afternoon by Stanley Sands of Standard Market at a party honoring University and Ne braska Wesleyan University house mothers and members of the Lin coln Institutional Directors and Dietitians Association. The scholarship will be awarded each spring to a senior woman in home economics to assist her in her fifth-year internship in a hos pital or institution for training as a dietitian. The senior must be in the divi sion of foods and nutrition and must have an outstanding scholas tic record. The scholarship com mittee of the department of home economics will select the recipient, Dr. Florence McKinney, chairman of the department of home eco nomics, said. Miss Evelyn Berger of Chicago, chief of home economics and die titians of Wilson and Company, kpok ai Mm Wednesday parw ingfish To Edit mann and Marv Breslow discuss the University during an in formal session. Shapiro is show Department Adds Shapiro 'Prairie Schooner', Teac es. He said that its chief function is to encourage young people who are interested in writing profes sionally and to encourage creative thinking among amateur writers Wimberly suggested that the "Prairie Schooner" could be im proved to interest more people. He added that such a magazine can always improve its quality. Wimberley plans to try his hand at writing, but he has no definite plans as yet. Wimberly has already contrib uted to many magazines and au thored and edited several books and anthologies. Among his pub lications are books on folklore and ballads of England and Scot land and books on writing. In addition to his writing and research, Wimberly was widely known for his courses at the Uni versity in advanced literary com position. "It is quite a responsibility to follow a man like Dr. Wimber ly," Shapiro said. "He made the 'Prairie Schooner' what it is." Shapiro plans to make several slight changes in the magazine, such as redesigning and revising the cover and modifying the name to "Schooner." He also plans to include more poetry and book re views to make the magazine like some of the other university's quarterlies. Shapiro said that it is impossible to tell right now exactly how much or along what lines the "Prairie Schooner" will change that will depend chiefly on the contribu tions received. He also plans to improve circu lation and publicity, among the improvements Wimberly suggest ed, but he doesn't plan "to make it a best-seller because if a mag azine has a comparatively small circulation, that is usually an in dication of high quality." Shapiro said that the intellec tual climate among the professors at the University is a wonderful thing. He has bought a picture painted by LeRoy Burket, asso ciate professor of art at the Uni versity, to hang in his office. Asked if there appeared to be an increasing interest in poetry, he replied that the "audience for modern poetry has gotten very big." He credits this interest to ed ucation in poetry, which is becom ing widespread, and, to a lesser degree, the interest generated by mass forms of communication. The noted poet remarked, "You will never have everyone reading poetry and it would probably be an awful thing if you did. Nothing else would get done." Shapiro lists Eliot, Auden, Thomas, and Whit man among his favorite poets. Shapiro says he became inter ested in teaching because "Uni versity teaching is the only place for people like me it is close to the sources of writing." The author of nine books, he is currently working on two more. One is a collection of poems, sev eral of which already have been published. The other is a textbook on creative writing. Born in Baltimore, Shapiro pub lished his first volume, "Poems," in 1935 before enrolling at John Hopkins University where he la ter served as an associate pro fessor. During his Army service from 1941-45," he wrote four additional volumes, including "V-Letter and Other Poems," which netted him the Pulitizer Prize. He has received a number of other awards and honors for his LINCOLN, NEBRASKA ing Mrs. Ashida an autographed copy of a first edition by James Joyce. Courtesy Lincoln Star WIMBERLY Davis prize, 1S42; the Levinson prize and the Contemporary Po etry prize, 1943; The American Academy of Arts and Letters grant, 1944; the Shelley Memorial prize in 1945, and a Guggenheim fellow ship, 1945-46. In 1954 Shapiro studied in Rome as a Guggenheim fellow and lec tured on American poetry in In dia and Ireland during the next summer. He served as an associate pro fessor of English at the Univer sity of California last year and gave a series of lectures at a grad uate seminar at the University of Indiana this summer. Flying: AFROTC To Offer Pilot School Colonel Carter Duncan an nounced Tuesday that pilot training will be offered to senior Air Force ROTC students at the University this fall. The University will be one of 38 colleges and universities in the nation to provide the flight pro gram. Cadets who take the light-plan pilot training will receive 35 hours of flight instruction and the same amount of ground school. The ac tual flying training will be given in light aircraft from 65 to 200 horsepower. Colonel Duncan sajd the new program has received full ap proval of the Civil Aeronautics Ad ministration which will actually operate, administer and supervise the program. Flight instructors. will be certi fied by CAA who also will ad minister flight checks of cadets and recommend elimination action for students deficient in flying. The flying operation and training will be conducted by private civilian flying schools and Air Force ROTC instructor personnel will teach the ground-school courses as part of the . regular AFROTC curriculum, Colonel Dun can said. The majority of the ground school training includes navigation and weather subjects, courses which are already offered in the Air Force ROTC curriculum. Successful completion of the flight course will qualify the AFROTC cadet to apply for pvet pKoVs fetensc " : - k - Freshmen: a Dims 2)ifi) vitq 8 on Biir The University's Junior Division announced Thursday that 2,003 new students have taken placement tests for enrollment compared with 1,870 last year at this time. Dr. Charles F. Warnath, chair man of New Student Week, said between 30 and 50 new students will probably be added to this figure during the coming week. This will bring the total fresh man figure for this fall to about 2,040, compared with a final total of 1,896 last year, he said. The new student figure does not include upperclassman transfer students, Dr. W.arnath explained, since they do not take placement tests upon entering the University. In spite of the overall increase in enrollment, the College of Agri culture showed a slight decline in enrollment up to Friday. However, final figures are expected to show enrollment at about the 1955-56 level. Biggest gains were made by the College of Engineering, with Arts and Sciences, a perennial favorite, second. Dr. Warnath attributed the engineering increase to the much publicized shortage and the high starting salaries in that field. Dr. Warnath also attributed the enrollment increase, which came in spite of Nebraska's worst drouth in the last decade, to a general realization that a college educa tion is more necessary for success in all fields than it was twenty years ago. Corn Cobs, Co-ed Councilers, In nocents and Mortar Boards were praised by Dr. Warnath for their part in making New Student Week the success that it was. "Without Comedy: YWCA To Ho! "This Is Your Life," a comedy sketch, will be presented by the YWCA Thursday, 7:15 p.m. in Love Library Auditorium. The program is especially for freshmen students and the sketch will feature the life of a prominent Nebraska Univer sity student whose name will be disclosed Thursday evening. Barb Sharp, as master of cere monies, will present guests out of the subject's life. Gifts will be presented to the subject at the end of the sketch. Also included in the program of the evening will be a debate on the subject, resolved: That college is a waste of time. Debaters will be, negative, Helen Snyder, Dean of Women and Dr. Robert Knoll, professor of English; affirmative, Bruce Brugmann, president of Student Council and Dr. Rex Knowles, Presbyterian Congregational student pastor. YWCA commission leaders will be introduced during the evening. Thota Sigma Phi Meet Changed The Theta Sigma Phi women's journalism fraternity meeting orig inally scheduled for Tuesday will be held Friday at 3 p.m. in Union Room 313, according to Bev Deepe, president. Dr. William Hall, new director of the School of Journalism will dis cuss plans with the group. Luci gace Switzer, vice president, will report on the national convention, and plans for the coming year will be made, Miss Deepe said. Students Meet Dr. William E. Hall, new chairman of the Department of Journalism, discusses his plans for the department with Susan Sauvan, sophomore in Arts and Sciences, and Russell Rasmus sen, freshman in Arts and Sci ences, at the Nebraska Open liousa ' held Friday. ht O-ea i Mi , .'If r s f Tuesday, September 18, 195 llfifi)n)1!' the help of upperclassmen New Student Week would have been im possible," he stated. Actual preparation for New Stu dent Week began last April 16 and continued in rising frenzy until September 9. The work included locating 130 advising rooms and 6 convocation rooms, and required .the help of over 200 upperclassmerl. Brugmann: Council To Try Changes The philosophy that the student body should have the privilege, if not the right, to be concerned with all that affects or influences the general welfare of the student body will be e x p e rim ent ed with this year, accord ing to Bruce B r u g mann, Student Coun cil president. The idea, which is an off spring of the student tribu nal, discussed during the Brugmann spring semester, is not really t new one, Brugmann said. "The structures of the Student Council, the IFC, and the Panhel lenic Council, are all places where students take an active and im portant part in government," he stated. He claimed that the philosophy of student participation has not been extended to its logical conclusion of insuring student participation in activities which affect their well being and that of their education such as student discipline, the ath letic program and many faculties which dispose of student problems. "This does not mean we are pushing for more control. We wish to assume the position that we are willing and able to have a voice in," Brugmann said. "The important thing is not that this authority be arbitrarily vest ed with the students but that he students themselves are willing to accept these important responsibili ties." This means, the Council presi dent added, that students must be willing and able to dispose of their own discipline problems, serve on key faculty committees, enter into discussion of institutional pol icy and, if necessary, to fight for the support of honest convictions. Student organizations must be reflections of student opinion and guide it into constructive channels of high scholarship, qualified per formance and a well-balanced col legiate program, Brugmann stated. The Council must reflect the "splendid principles of academic freedom," he said. He concluded, "Only by pledging the ideals of our campus organiza tions to these objectives can we demonstrate our potentiality to have an effective voice in all that affects our general welfare and the future and integrity of the Uni versity of Nebraska." Cob Meeting Sophomore men interested la be coming Corn Cob workers and have not yet signed up may attend the Corn Cob meeting Tuesday, 5 p.m. in Union Room 315. Tick ets for the pep section will b re served at that time. Chairman House was planned to acquaint new students with The Nebras kan staff members and the Pub lications Board and to encourage new students to work on The Nebraskan. The Open House also enabled journalism students ta become acquainted with the aew depart mit chxJmaa. A h i k - k i