Page 4 The Daily Nebraskan Tuesday, December 12, 1961 Religious Groups Greet Yule Through Fun, Service, Activity By Jim Stelnman Service and fun highlight Christmas activities at the Universities Religious Cen ters. Caroling at rest homes and hospitals, entertaining foreign students and Christmas choral services are among the many Christmas activities at t h e campus religious houses. The United Campus Chris tian Fellowship will feature Christmas music at their tegular service on Sunday... Sunday evening, a fel lowship dinner will be held to which foreign students have been inited. After the dinner, the students choir will pro ceed to the Orthepedic Hos pital, the Veteran's Hospital and the Rock of Ages and Marsh Rest Homes to carol. Christmas Party After the caroling, the group will proceed to the Rev. Dr. Alan J. Pickering's home for a Christmas party. United Campus Christian Fel lowship is located at 333 No. 14 and is staffed by Rev. Dr. Pickering and Rev. Ralph W. Hays. More than thirty Interna tional students will be enter tained at Christmas dinners at the First and Second Baptist Churches on Sunday. The choir, composed mainly of University students, will present a Christmas Cantata at that service. Baptist Churches The First Baptist Church is located at 14th and "K" where H. Meryl Burner is the stu dent worker. The Second Baptist Church is located at 28th and "S" streets where Rev. Royce Jones is the stu dent worker. On Sunday students will dec orate the chapel and sing Advent Carols, according to Rev. G. M. Armstrong, chap lain of St. Nicholas House, lo cated at 13th and R streets. The Newman Student Cen ter at 320 No. 16th will enter tain its members and foreign students at a turkey dinner at 5:30 Sunday after which they will carol at orphanages and hospitals throughout the city followed by a Christmas party at the Center. On Saturday evening, mar ried students will hold a ternational customs and ideas. The Newman Center is staffed by the Rt. Rev. Charles J. Hall Art Collection Adds Tivo Works by Du Bois A new painting has been added to the University's Frank M. Hall Collection and was put on display for the first time Sunday afternoon at Morrill Hall. The new work of art is "The Beach" done by the Ameri can painter Guy Pene Du Bois. It consists of three panel paintings. Norman Geske, director of the University Art Galleries, commented, 'There is a great deal of period flavor and the acquisition is a fine example of Dn Bois' ability to evaluate the characteristic look of the late 20's and early 30's in terms of costume, posture and movement." Geske continued that Du Bois can now be seen as a notable exponent of the well designed picture, creating a precise balance of forms and space and color which is in dependent of the topical sub ject matter. Du Bois was a student of Robert Henri and for a time worked under the French sat irist Steinlen. Besides being a painter he also worked as an art critic for several New York dailies and served as the editor of "Arts and Dec oration" for a period of seven years. His period of greatest suc cess was in the late 20's and 30's and his work may well be cited among the definitive embodiments of that period. It is perhaps a by-product of the current revival ot in terest in the mores of those years that a reconsideration of Du Bois' art is already un der way and he is being seen for the first time as some thing more than a documen- tarian of his own day, uesKe laid. In accordance with the terms of the Hall bequest, the pictures have received the en dorsement oi iwo an auuiou ties, Dorothy Adlow, art critic of the Christian Science Moni tor and Douglas MacAgy, di rector of the Dallas Museum for Contemporary Art. DAILY NEBRASKAN CLASSIFIEDS POLICY Classified d for t?i Daily Nebrs&kiB must be entered two Jtimm trt iflvinn and must be paid for in advance. Correction will be made if errors are brought to our attention within 43 hour. RIDCS WANTED lib t Tiv-mnn at vicinity. Call PMi Baoer, MB . PERSONAL nrimlMo attendant room tarnwbed gMB aaor. fcafcvnatr Durw. Halm Canter Kara- mrw, wtm 1 - nwni I mm. w 9 v p-m. Breekfeot and lonck, eaO 422-ZW2. LOST wrtat-walcHh. BUM of Freahman Vanity came b OAnram or Uc aoajL Ktwara attend. Call 4714611. tt'stJdJsn wsskness khruthchev it strong. tayt Stewart sop. But he hat oni great weak IMtt.Andhtknowtit.ln thitweek'a Saturday Evening Pott, you'll read why the tatellite nations an giving Kremlin big thott the jittert. iHCIAli 1961 CALINDAI fAOlt Dec. 16 itsue JTtl'T'i now en tale. lO&rl. Right . . . (Continued from p. 2) pect Chancellor Hardin to stay here when he is con stantly held back by an unreasonable and unnec sary lack of iunds? If you are not going to listen to a man as competent as he is, WHO ARE YOU GOING TO LISTEN TO? It is and has been, lately, the consensus that the state would profit by more tourism. Fine. It sure would help if the tourists would do more than pay their motel bills and leave tire tread. So, after another study, a sum of $97,000 dollars is asked for, for the specific purpose of promoting tour ism. And . . . you guessed it, $25,000 was generously appropriated for that pur pose. I'll tell yon one thing, Nebraskans, we're not giving Florida or Cali fornia any gray hairs. Again, gentelmen, you are going to get what you pay for. Do you really think that you are going to get the job done with a little more than 25 per cent of the needed funds? If the state is that hard up for money, why don't you do something about it? It is your job. If it is necessary, broaden the tax bace in order to raise the ceiling that is on the state's progress. If you choose not to, however, don't be sur prised by things such as the youth exodus or the lack of tourism, just to name two. More to come on this subject. Keenan, Rev. R. F. Sheehy and Rev. J. R. Myers. International students will be entertained at a Christmas dinner followed by carolling at the Veteran's Hospital and Tabetha Home Sunday at the National Lutheran Council Lutheran Student House at 535 No. 16th. Music, Art "The Missouri Synod Univer sity Lutheran Chapel's club, Gamma Delta, will discuss the Christmas season in music and art at their meeting Sun day at 5:30 followed by a candlelight vesper service at 7:15. Pastor A. J. Norden an nounced that they had held their dinner for international students and had caroled last Sunday. The Methodist, Wesley Foundation Choir, under the direction of Dick Morris, will, for the third consecutive year, perform a Christmas service on television. The Choir is made up en tirely of University students and numbers around one hun dred. The show will be broad cast on KUON-TV and will be recorded for viewing on other stations. After the choir's presenta tion Friday, the members will proceed to the Cotner School of Religion for a cnristmas party. The program beings at 7:30 on KUON-TV. This bun day the group and interna tional students will go carolling. Meetings The Junior Inter-fraternity Council's pledge book, "New Faces on Sorority Kow," wiu go on sale Tuesday in all fra ternity houses and in the main lobby of the Student Union. It contains the names, home towns and pictures of all 1961 sorority pledges at the Uni versity. a Ag Y and Ag YW will meet at 7:15 at Cotner College on Ag Campus. U will be pre ceded by a cabinet meeting at 5 p.m. The Union decorating party for all workers and their friends is at 6:30 p.m. Food, carol singing and a surprise for those under 21 will be al 8 p.m. The annual agricultural ex tension conference continues today at the Nebraska Center through Thursday. There w ill be a lecture by Dr. II. C. Cutler, executive di rector of the Missouri Botani cal Garden, at 4 p.m. in the Biochemistry Auditorium, Ag Campus. He will speak on "The Cultivation of Corn and Squash in the Americas." Cutler will also speak at 10 a.m. today in B 16 Burnett on "Ethnobotany" and at 1 p.m. in the Bessey Hall Auditorium on "New World Food Plants." a UXSEA meeting will be at 7 p.m. in the Union Party Rooms. It will be a joint meeting with Wesleyan and the program will be a panel on Future Teachers of Amer ica (FTA). The Women's Athletic As sociation board members and workers will meet at Grant Memorial Hall at 5 p.m. for a Christmas party. Travel and he paid for it too! Be a STEWARDESS FOR UNITED AIR LINES If you are between 20 fir 26, between 5'2" & 5'8" and tingle, you may qualify for this challenging and rewarding career. As a United Stewardess, you will be living in ome of the country's moot exciting cities San Francisco, Miami, New York, Seattle, Den ver, Los Angeles and other. Train in the new two million dollar Slearde Training Center in suburban Chicago. Rec reational facilities for trainee housed in the dormitory include a year round pool. Salary $325.00 per month. Vacation and trip passes for you and your parents. Other extensive benefits. UNITED AIR LINES 0 llllllllllll MM 0 al at Please send additional information to: J University I Miss J Address J !city Stale Clip end mail to United Air Linn J I Employment Office, Deer 7, Colo. a LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS &tm&'.CMZ,CA&. THEAnZE FKtvJME TUTO& ' KUON-TV Shows Feature Mime, Space, Journalism The art of mime, one of the oldest, least practiced, and most difficult of the perform ing arts, is explained when KUON-TV presents Marcel Marceau and other pantom imes, answer questions by Edwin Burr Pettet, chairman of the theater arts department at Brandeis University, and Elliott Norton, drama critic for the Boston Journal-American. The interview will acquaint the viewer with the way in which comedy and pathos of life are interpreted through the art of mime." Marceau will describe how he became in terested in the "art of si lence" and why he believes that pantomme is a language of the heart. An appraisal of the truth in American newspapers today is given by historian Arnold Toynbee, journalists James Retson and A. J. LieSling, and television newsman Charles Collingwood on Strat egy of Truth on Monday at 9 p.m. They will discuss the pres ent information service and give views on its effective ness. They will note the trend of the American press toward local monopoly, "the one ownership town", and give viewers an inside look at the problems of maintaining a free and objective press in the Umted States. A five program series on Our Neighbor, the Moon will begin Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. wun ueorge uamow, protes sor of physics at the Univer sity of Colorado. He will ex plain the environment of the moon. The National Aeronautic and Space Administration team, Dr. Robert Kreebs and James Thompson, will explain crafts that will take men to the moon in a special Living Science program to be seen Wednesday. The two men will use lectures and demonstra tions to trace the history and development of rockets and then use models of U.S. ac tual and proposed space craft to show applications of prin ciples to the attempts to ex plore outer space. Sinfonia Pledges Elect Difiore Vincent Difiore has been elected president of the Sin fonia pledge class. Other officers chosen in clude vice president Jim Mis- ner and secretary-treasurer Keith McCreight. Sinfonia is a professional men's music fraternity. In one minute we seal in your pharos, ID'S, Cceasas, eta. Headquarter! for Religiout Suppliet Nebraska Church Goods Co. 144 No. 14th St. Mrs. Barnard Matthews Lincoln S, Nebr. Ht 1-S9M Breckenridge Addresses Union College's Seniors Tcto f wnmintf HesDer-should worry you; it is the alio tea VI vi u,v.ui'5 i a XI, ae nnH frantic about survival, growth and development in the world today, Dean of Fa culties Adam Breckenridge sueeested that "we take the less glamorous approach." Dr. Breckenridge, in ad- drpssin? the annual senior recognition day at Union Col lege, urged that in our role as surgeons performing a oeu- catf. and difficult operation in solving the problems of the world we must lay asiae me "meat axe." Ha asked Americans to rec ognize the importance of the individual and the dignity of man. Dr. Breckenridge said he believed that individual man could survive without be coming a coordinated speck in an ant hill or beehive. "The massive scale of our society, the current abundance of material goods and services permit us to develop traits of individualism more so now than ever before." He ex- plained that to be an individ ual does not mean that one must be a complete noncon formist or eccentric. "Our so ciety would soon fly apart if we did not accept conformity to law and order or even good manners. "But," he continued, "you can be a conformist only up to a point the complete subordination of tne individ ual to the system. It is not so much the daneer of society forcing you to conform that ever-present danger that you will want to coniorm, mat you will not try to De tne master of your own fate." Dr. Breckenridge urged the students to maintain an in formed interest in social, eco nomic, political and scientific problems. He said, "Let us have the intellectual honesty, a high de- gree of stamina and the cour age to accept tne cnaiienging problems of the world in which ' we live. Let us not lay waste our powers. AFROTC Receives Program Inspection The 465th AFROTC Detach ment at the University was inspected by Air University Command last week. The in spection is held twice each year to evaluate the AFROTC program. The inspecting team includ ed two officers. Peace Corps Film The first documentary television presentation on the Peace Corps in the field will be shown on Dec. 15 over all NBC stations at 9:30 p.m. EST. NOW TOSHIRO MIFUNE Aawra-Yanwdai COMING DEC. 19 i FAST DEPENDABLE I ONE DAY j Laundry and Cleaning I LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS I 10 Cash & Carry I 239 No. 14th HE 2-5262 I - r. f ' V W A i Si, 4 ' T . 1 w Hi it if' 'tf' Wv''k '(! . 4S 1 - V rv jS x ? ' - ft K I . .... iiiiihi-. ii imawi mmmtutl ftftrf"- mi W,a lla.awili..iM..iMl mmim umm mM UlriilwWiiiiiilr ii m . it.- I S V I f CI tint sy'': ( vmi If'' """"" 'Ji""!w1f W'''., I ill refreshes your taste JtsfS every puff 7t CLfturfC..lts 42Vith every Salem cigarette, a soft, refreshing taste is yours. Salem's special cigarette paper breathes in fresh air ...to smoke fresh and flavorful every time. 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