Poc le 4 Thp Daily Nebraskan Tuesday, October 21, 1953 KFMQ Readies Movies Radio Plans Film Festival "So different you can't com pare them with anv movies seen" commented Mrs. An drew Schultz, publicity man ager of KMNQ, radio station. She was describing the two films to be shown at the ra dio station's first film festi val Thursday at the Nebraska Theater. "Rasho-Mon" is a type of picture American movie go ers aren't accustomed to at all, Mrs. Schultz . continued. The Japanese film was the grand prize winner at t h e Venice Film Festival. The story is very old the setting being some 1,200 years ago but the motivesthat are dealt with are modern. View points of four different per sons involved in one violent and dramatic incident are shown. The second selection, "The Rtd and the Black," has been termed a movie classic in the same league as "Gone with the Wind" by Dorothy Kilgal- len, Broadway and Hollywood columnist. Time Magazine said "for those who like their love potions exotic it is like a shot of straight perfume." A limited number o'i tick ets are available for seating only. They can be picked up at the Nebraska Book Store or the offices of KFMQ. N cw Diociiein Ho me , ? t I- 5 , - ' ' I ! ? A- WITH A NEW million dollar home, the biochemistry and nutrition department has moved to the eastern section of the Ag campus. The 3-story modernistic building is now fully occupied by teaching and research personnel and . nUir ite,i... 1 ii , - hiiiMfBf:it.Mni ssbsWmsI students. It is the latest building completed under the Uni- versily building program underwritten by the special state mill levy. USSR Farming Links Old, New Hurlbut Saw No Operations Better Than Ours Blue Print Group Sales To Begin S i x engineering societies start their annual Nebraska Blue Print subscription com petition today. The Blue Print sales initi ates E-Week competition in which the individual socieites will be vying for a large plaque. The plaque is award ed to the society selling the most subscriptions. The Blue Print, the official campus Engineering College magazine, features arti cles, stories and other mate rial. It will be of main interest to engineering and architec ture students. Subscriptions f o r the eight monthly issues will be avail able from an E-society repre sentative. Price is $1.50. K3X ANSWER. Russia uses both modern i spent a month in Russia as and ancient tools in cultivat- one of the six U.S. agriculture ing her lan d. commented specialists participating in an Prof. Lloyd Hurlbut after his exchange with Russia. recent tour in the USSR, Hurlbut, chairman of t h e Department of Agricultural Engineering, returned to the Some Modern "Some farm operations seem lairly well mech anized," the professor com- t ; i o a i i . i . . i , , Lincoln saiuraay irom a tour , meniea. we saw some verv of Europe. During his tour he I large combines of the pull Candidatees Boast 859 Ticket Sales Final Tabulations Continue for Winning Honorary Producer Twenty-three Honorary Pro ducer candidates accounted for 859 of the University Theatre season tickets sold so far this vear, according to figures released yesterday. Final tabulations to deter mine the winners of the con test were still going on Mon day afternoon. Ruth Ellen- of Nebraska Masquers, which annually sponsors the compe tition, noted that an added in centive to bales this year was the fact that the candidates were allowed to sell the lic kets at a profit of one dollar for each ticket. type with the appearance of U.S. types of about 10 years ago. A few combines in the f -i orni 1 r rv L H riiiita m rH ern. The more primitive meth ods of farming may be seen around the villages where workers have small plots of their own, Hurlbut said. Oxen are frequently util ized in Russia in much the same manner as they are in Europe. Despite the high rate of progress the Russians have claimed, the professor said he saw no operation superior to those found in the U.S. Branching Out government is to create fear toward the U.S. in the minds of the workers." After leaving Russia, a tour of the rest of Europe plus the I Inter Varsity Author-Professor Publishes Book '. . . Slote Finishes 2 Year Project The publication of Professor Bernice Slote's book, Keats and the Dramatic Principle,; marks the end of a two year project involving the works of five writers. Miss Slote's study of the in- fluence of drama on the writ ings of the English poet was j released last week by trie lm Bridge Lessons Union bridge lessons have been posponed. They will be gin Oct. 28 rather than Oct. 21, as previously planned. The lessons will be hold in Union Parlor A at 4 p.m. for beginners and at 5 p.m. for advanced players each Tues day for four weeks. Union Bulletin Board Tuesday, October 21, 1958 Murine Officer Selevtion Team Gamma Lambda Luncheon Cnrnhusker Editors Luncheon fnler Vnrsily Inter Coop Council MtR. 12 1?:S0 Main Hallway V 31.1 3: V 4 X 31.1 presentation of a paper at the 5th International Congress of Agricultural Engineering in Brussels gave the professor a good opportunity to observe Russia's neighbors. Dr. Crowe Leaves For Turkish U. ahc Dr. L. K. Crowe, of the De- nartmpnt of riairv Hnshnn- i ney recognize tnat we are drv Iofl Wednesday for the iniH if tVinm " Via cr,,A Kut ... . . ' H.V.H.. ... new Alalni k 1 niversirv in public Relations Comm. Un. Act Hn. pitality ( omm Hnu'M Rcnrescntativcs Mis. ! I'n. Act Music Comm. 3 I'n Act Owral Knt. Comm. 3 Phi Chi Thela MtK. ! Nebraska Plueprint Banquet ' Phi Heln Kappa Iinner Dance Lessons Un. Act. iien. F.nt. Aliriilinns I'ni Primes Be- gimiinit Rririire Un. Act Committee 6 3(1 RC fi:45 Ballroom 7:30 31C versity Press. Quarterly Editors The book is the third to be published during the last 14 months by the author-professors editing the University's literary quarterly, Prairia Schooner. Miss Slote's colleagues, Karl Shapiro, Schooner edi tor, and Dr. James Miller, ad visory editor and head of the English department, recently published Poem of a Jew and Critical Guide to Leaves of Grass. Miss Slote's book begin when she received a summer grant from the University Re search Council. During this work, she discovered that nothing had been written on Keats' relationship to the the ater. According to Miss Slote, what people see at the theater and what they read in books influence the subject matter of their writing. Keats' Life "This is why I wanted to examine this aspect of Keats' life," the English professor said. Keats' letters reveal he at tended the theater a great deal, she added. Miss Slote has eontributed more than 100 poems and sev eral critical reviews of liter ary works to various periodi cals. Her latest review of which Dr. Miller is co-author, dis cusses the relationship of Walt Whitman and Dylan Thomas and will be published soon in Western Humanities Review. are not copving as much as u ' it, ..,.,) . j w u H6 nas iiivv ueu tu ctiiu die ui cjuliI' ing out with machines." Women make up a 1 a r g e percentage of the laboring classes, according to Hurlbut. The general quality of labor is lower than in the I'.S.. hp "This profit angle was prob-j said. Nothing the professor wood, university rneatre bus- wuaw indicated to mm any un- iness manager, emphasized tnat tne candidates sold an rest on the part of the Rus- that the winners will be deter- 'average of almost 40 tickets sian people, he said. ! mined by the ratio of tickets apiece," Miss Peters said. I "They seemed to have a' sold to members of the group She noted however t h a t job to do and were doing 11," j selling. many of the houses entered Hurlbut commented. 'Tml Added Incentive naa tnosc,n to give up tne dol-;sure tnat tne Kussian agncul Ataturk University Turkey. been selected to cxpcnmeniai 1? i it , v,,Krncua and assist with the general college during his two year assignment. Crowe was recipient of the $1,000 1958 Outstanding Teach ing Award in the field of science given by the Uni versity of Nebraska. He is chairman of the Scholarship and Awards Committee at tthe College of Agriculture. Ataturk University, financ ed by Turkish funds, is re- uiMjpnci i isicionojFT? E E. JO NTT 0 Nj L A R A N T AlR CjT I. CUT RE It h Tin osil eev e s fc H A Rf" "" M E S H H OT 3S Ml 1 aJlIe r t IrTi pie UjsjfR A Mlcfg squawk sOmu t tti o u RffH a lWaIl O AF N ABl i ALOlU DfP TJI ETrToLffTElEINlSyElLlY SUfftch -from Hots -to Snow Fresh KQDL i f. m,, . i v int; (i. L.iiiiJi. en l uiiirtiii r. T t- . i. ;j a ar nrntit in nvfiur n call iura unrfDrc u-nn rt iL- rnmr c . 171 uiana reiers, ice president " 1 """7""- ''land assistance from the 1IIU1C IliUCU tu Mum Hllill c re UO- ! Presentation in over here, but it is doubt-! Uni- Deans Helen Choose Snyder Presentation of the Honor ary Producers will take place Wednesday night at the open- Helen Snyder, assistant ing of "The .Merchant of Ven-! dean of student affairs, was i ice." Candidates will be fhe chosen as the new president i guests of University Theatre of the Nebraska Assn. of, at a banquet before the plav. i'ul if their groups which on to Women's Deans and Counsel ors. She will succeed Ruth Her man, girls' counselor at Oma ha Technical High School. Miss Snyder was elected president at the association's convention in Hastings recent ly. Next year's meeting will be held in Lincoln. - ESSO A lift J sKiitl, tv I Jn It M ML CAW Oct 19 6. SUve Schultz, president of Masquers, reported that a few seats are still available for the opening night. He said that a change from last year's procedure has been made and that the winners of the Hon orary Producer contest will e presented before the first act, instead of at the intermission. '"We hope to begin the cere mony a bit before 8." he stated, "so that we won't delay the first act curtain. An announcement of this should come here travel much their return to Russia." More Specialized Russian farming seems tie more specialized than the U.S. 'Russia has agricultural! production operations rather ! than farming as we think of j it. ; "1 would refer to the Rus-! sians as agricultural workers! Hither than farmers," Hurl- 'The workers are organized into groups. One group is re sponsible for swine, one for dairy cattle, another for field crops." When the Quemoy crisis arose, Hurlbut w a s in the USSR. News Blackout Because 01 the news we k n e w was i K that something had happened vai ai me T)l- ruir,,.,. .1 n versity of Nebraska through a contract with the Inter national Cooperation Admin istration. Harry Gould, Coordinator of Nebraska's Turkish pro gram, said that the Turkish 111 ! unit is scheduled to open Nov. ia ottering instruction in ag riculture, arts and science and home economics. He also stated Ataturk is patterned after land grant colleges in this country, and expects a first year enroll ment of about five hundred. I help those who are particu , uuxy ju:itcu iu u.c ...... blackout aU we k n e w : tu uicuie p 1 a 11 a i their time oi am i theatre." iAtlentls Conference j Dr. Wesley Meierhenry. i professor of school admin is The Chinese were shellinc Quemoy and the Russian ra dio was blasting t h e U.S. Some of the Russians asked us why we wanted war so badly," he commented. tration and of history and "There is little doubt in my mina tnat tne intention ot the j principles ot education, is I attending a two-day confer ! ence of the National Educa ! tion Assn. : He will represent the Uni versity at meetings of the De partment of Audio-Visual In struction at the American Council of Education in Washington, D.C. NEBRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS ,1 Mop Rervlne Laundry. Khirt fm- linK dry cleaning. Al'a U Hour i:t5 80. 18th. Main Feature Gock Lincoln: "Dunkirk," 1:00, 3:08, 5:08, 7:15, 9:22. Nebraska: "Drango," 100, 4:28, 7:5&. "Men In War," 2:37, 6:03, 9:33. Stuart: "The Decks Ran Red," 1:00, 2:40, 4 5, 6.05, 7:50, 9:35. Varsity: "Onionhead," 1:08, 3:13, 5:18, 7:23, 9:28. State: "New Orleans After Dark," 1:00, 3:39, 6:18, 8:57. "The Pagans," 2:19, 4:58, 7:37, 10:16. Joyo: "A Certain Smile," 7:15. "The Naked And The Dead," 9:00. Starview: "Cartoon," 7:15. "La Parisienne," 7:25, 10:30. "The Young Don't Cry," 9:00. 84th & O: "Cartoons," 7:15. "Girl In The Elack Stock ings," 7:30, 11:00. "The Key," 8:45. THURSDAY! 1 nf?i ii 1. it ajt; m . X -- 4 'I tit j&iM .r '.it KUON 5 :( 5 h: ;(0 7 Hi Sing Hi-Sinc Lo. Thf hriftuilv ;tat. FiveniDK Prelude. TV Classroom. ! (M's isii School fLivei I)iriver Ht the Rntokfield Zoo. Lantiuaj-'e nt d Linguistic. is'-iif 1 L ci From Capitfl Hill. THAT LOVABLE LAUGH -MAKER OF'NO TIME FOR SERGEANTS'! garni ft. W I IE it fhtlflmM 15 J ANDY 4 k Trt t"Z GRIFFITH 1 3 FELICIA FARR KwL KROSSWORD No. 5 ACROSS 4h. Europe in V orld War II 49. l't-ia fiO. Enirlish cat bedrid town DOWN 1. 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