1 Thursday, February 20, 1964 The Daily Nebraskan -a- a tile Directs Winiies, U Of s Prove Baldwin Directs Comedy; 1 'Rivals' Tryouts Scheduled Tryouts for the University Theater production of "The Rivals, one of the world's most famous comedies were announced by Dr. Joseph Baldwin, professor of speech and dramatic art. The tryouts will be held Monday through Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in 201 Temple Building, as well as 3:30 p.m. every day except Monday, when only evening tryouts will be held. Dr. Baldwin emphasized the fact that all students reg ularly enrolled in the University and not on scholastic or other probation are eligible to compete for parts in the prodcction. "The Rivals," by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, is one of the great comedies of the eighteenth century. Sheridan wrote the play, in part, to spoof the current fad for senti mentality in the theater and in literature. His heroine, Lyd ia Languish, who has filled her mind with syrupy stories from the lending library, wants her young man to elope with her and lose her fortune "love me for myself alone." Naturally, the young man, Captain Jack Absolute, tries to win both her and the fortune, being more of a realist Among the comic portraits in the play, Mrs. Malaprop stands out An aggressive and ignorant woman who tries to sound educated, Mrs. Malaprop misues the language delightfully. Her pretentious mistakes gave the language a word now found in dictionaries: malapropism. Rehearsals, to begin after the production of "Ham let," will be held during the evening. Directing the show will be Baldwin; Mr. Charles Howard is the technical di rector and designer. Performances will be May 20 through 23. When asked why it was important to people of the twentieth century to be interested in anything written in the eighteenth, Baldwin emphasized that the play is "a delightful comedy, one of the great ones. Its humor is not topical, but lasting." He went on to say that the play would be staged in an eighteenth century style. "This will help us get at the spirit of that period," he stressed. In this regard there will be a large forestage, in front of the curtain, as was prevalent when the play was written. In addition, staged boxes are planned, with actors to sit in them, dressed as audiences of that day. "The scenery will be of a flat-wing and drop style," noted Baldwin. "Beautiful and artificial-looking, it will be shifted in full view of the audience, by way of indicat ing that 200 years ago the idea of raising and lowering a curtain was nonexistent" Baldwin further revealed that as in the eighteenth century, the action will take place largely on the forestage, with the scenery forming a sort of picture behind the actors. AT THE STARTS TOMORROW For 'Baby Jane' i BETTEDliS IHJS 1 L10EE! HER IffFO! "i f" pjt 0m- T? y i y Id w Jr mu l tWf CAROf JWH HAGEN mum NEBRASKA lN SILVER ANNIVERSARY February Special CAMPUS PAC $1.50 Volut COMING FEBRUARY 24-28 Ak-Sar-Ben Ups Scholarships Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben scho larships, available to students in agriculture and home eco nomics at the University, will be increased in value from $150 to $200 each. Earnlnf Money In Europe JOBS in eorope Every registered student can get a job in Europe and receive a travel grant. Among thousands of jobs available are resort sales, lifeguard and office work. No experience is necessary and wages range to $400 monthly. For a complete prospectus, travel grant and job application returned air mail, send $1 to Dept. F, American Student Informa tion Service, 22 Ave. de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxem bourg. for 25c .,.....llll L,!!!!..! .1.1 II HP ' j 4 ; -JESUS IN WILDERNESS Lent Is Time Oi Preparation for Christian World's Easter By Al Brandt Junior Staff Writer Editor's Note: This is the first of a series to be run during the Lenten season telling of the meanings of Lent. It is -done in coopera tion with some of the cam pus ministers. "Then Jesus was led up by the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted by the devil.?' Matthew 4:1. In this way be gan the story of Jesus' forty days in the wilderness on which Lent is based. We enter now into another season of Lent. Lent, which begins on Ash Wednesday and includes the forty days before Easter, excluding Sundays, is the Christian preparation for Easter. , Sermons during Lent deal with gifts and means of grace, the events of Christ's lift and his teachings. The mood is introspection in t h e light of the Gospel of the crucified and risen Lord. TODAY HOME EC CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 203 Food and Nutrition building. COLIN JACKSON, British Broadcasting Company news analyst, will speak at 8 p.m. in Love Library. AWS REPRESENTATIVES will meet at 5 p.m. in Union 334. TOMORROW TOT BEAUTY SHOW, spon sored by Ag Union hospital ity committee will be held at 7 p.m. A child of a Uni versity student will be chos en the cutest child. Garence Landen, chairman of the Ak-Sar-Ben scholar ship committee, and Dean E. F. Frolik of the College of Agriculture and Home Ec onomics, announced that the change would be instigated at the beginning of the 1964-65 school year. The adjustment was made by the Ak-Sar-Ben Board of Governors in reviewing the entire scholarship program, taking into account the in creased cost of education. The complete Ak-Sar-B e n scholarship program includes over 500 scholarships given at all state universities and nearly every four-year col lege in Nebraska. Since 1955, a total of 100 such scholarships, valued at $150 each, have been made available annually at me un Ford Employees To Be On Panel Three recent college grad uates employed by the Ford Motor Company will partici pate in a panel discussion tonight at 7 p.m. in Union small auditorium. All students are invited. The program is sponsored by the College of Business Ad ministration and the Busi ness Administration Execu tive Council. L. J. Graziano, manager of the engineering cost analysis department at Ford will be the main speaker and panel chairman. The panel will consist of Rolf Roth, Earl Bunkers and James Duff. Bunkers earned his masters degree at the Uni versity of Nebraska in 1961. The Ford employees will discuss their experiences and responsibilities with the com pany, concentrating on the areas of managment account ing, financial analysis and budgetary control. Ford Motor Company will interview prospective gradu ates at the University March 3 and 4. ! YD's To Hear Report Loren Weatherwax will ad dress a meeting of the Young Democrats (YD's) tonight at 7:30 p.m. to report on his trip to the Young Democrats National Convention in Las Vegas which he attended as official representative. The state president of YD's, Joe Badami, will also speak &. the meeting to explain about the state convention to be held in April. Ash Wednesday inaugurates Lent with a prayerful mood. The first three Sundays of Ag Junior Honored At Dinner ' A junior with an 8.6 aver age in the College of Agricul ture has been named top sophomore by Gamma Sigma Delta, honor society of agri culture, at the society's an nual Scholarship Recognition Dinner. Gary Fick, a junior major ing in range management, added the honor to a long list of accomplishments through high school and his first years at Nebraska. Fick was among eleven other juniors cited for t h e i r sophomore scholarship at the dinner. Main speaker at the ban quet was Dr. Donald O. Clif ton, professor of educational psychology and measure ments. Top students honored Tues day night by Gamma Sigma Delta are: Sophomores Jay B e 1 d e n, Stanley Cassel, Burle Gengen bach, Rodney Johnson, Ken neth Krausnick, Ronald Lind vall, Marshall Logan, Law rence McGill, Dwain Meyer, Milan Moore, Wayne Pfeiffer, Robert Schaffert, Bruce Sny der and John Wendt. Juniors Donald Alan, Dono von Benson, Leroy C e c h, Gary Fick, Galen Frenzen, Dale Hanson, Frances Jor gensen, Daniel Knievel, Wil liam Luebbe, Robert Rey nolds, Rolen Sell and Marvin Wesley. versity 82 for upperclass men and 18 for freshmen. Upperclass scholarships are based on college grade re cords and financial need. In the case of incoming fresh men, the awards are based upon the high school record, need, and amount of farm experience. University records show that Ak-Sar-Ben has made available a total of $178,800 in scholarship funds since the present program was initiat ed in 1946. During the first six years, 24 scholarships, awarded to upperclassmen only, were valued at $100 each. In 1952 the number offered was In creased to 36, with twelve made available to freshmen. In 1954 a total of 72 schol arships were offered, and in each year since 1955, 100 scho larships have been offered 65 for men and 35 for wom en students at the University. Including those scholar ships awarded this year, a to tal of 1,118 scholarships have been available 729 for men and 459 for women. During this time 459 men and 248 women have participated in the program, receiving schol arships for one semester or longer. Ak-Sar-Ben scholarship re cipients for 1963-64 in atten dance at the University rep resent 79 different communi ties in the state. I "Qllfltlltng fnr (Unmplrat (grotfanan" SPECIAL SALE ENDS FEBRUARY 22 ( Today, tomorrow and Saturday only, special reduction of 25 to 50 mean additional savings in our clearance tale. Save on outerwear, sport coats, slicks, ties, sport and dress shirts. 432-2042 OPEN THURSDAY EVENING TILL NINE t dpa Lent carry forward the mood of penitence, looking- toward the Passion and Resurrection beyond. The Fourth Sunday breaks in as a day of grati tude and rejoicing for forgive ness. The last two weeks in Lent, known as Passiontide, lead to Holy Week. The fifth Sun day being Passion Sunday centers on the redemptive suf fering of Christ and interest centers on the final events of his life on earth. Holy Week, the last Sunday in Lent, and Lent proper close on Saturday at noon, when Christ lay in the grave. The last week in Lent par allels Jesus' final preparation for His death. The whole drama from Palm Sunday to Good Friday is a pageant of preparation for the victory of the cross and the Resurrec tion. Thus, with the ending of Lent the preparation for Eas ter, for the Christian world, is complete and the world waits for His resurrection. Tri Defs Offer Grants Delta Delta Delta is offer ing two $132 scholarships to University undergraduate co eds. Candidates will be judged ton community leadership, scholarship, activities and need. Applicants need not be affiliated. Application blanks may be obtained from Miss Arbuth not's office in 213 Teacher's college or from Sally Eckel at the Tri Delt house. Filing deadline is March 1, 1964. Queen Will Win Car, European Trip A French sports car and a trip to Paris and other Eu ropean cities will be among the top prizes in the "1964 National College Queen" con test sponsored by Renault Inc. The 10th annual "College Queen" contest is open to any unmarried girl between 17 and 22 who is a fuli-time stu dent at either a women's col lege or co-educational school or university. A total of 50 winners, one from each state, will be selected this spring. Each will be given a week's free-ex pense trip to New York and the 1964 World's Fair, where final judging will determine the 1964 college queen. Contestants will never ap pear in the swim-suits, unlike many beauty contests. The judges will pick the state queens and the national queen for attractiveness, charm, personality and appearance, plus scholastic accomplish ment, campus activities, hob bies and interest in com munity service. Nebraskan Want Ads WANTEDt Need male roommate lor nice apart ment. One block from campu. Must b 21. 4774610! 1:15-7:16. FOt SALE: Volkswaceii, 18X2, Turquoise. Sunroof, 12,DUII milra. EwseUent condition. Beit offer. 434416. WANTED: Btu boy wanted. Call 432-1317. UMIVIMITY O lliA tlNCOt.l 1127 "R" Street LaGrange College Gives Experimental 'Thompson' A play written by Dr. Joseph Baldwin, professor of speech and dramatic art at the University, will be per formed at a fine arts festival at LaGrange College, Geor gia in April. Baldwin's play, "Thompson," is a story .of a sensitive young man's revolt against the horror of impersonal kil ing in warfare. First performed at the University of Alabama, "Thompson" was chosen for production at LaGrange by Sylvia Strickland. Miss Strickland played the leading female role when a graduate student at tlae University of Alabama. As as sistant professor of speech at LaGrange, she remembered Baldwin's play, and urged, that it be performed there. The play is written in an "experimental" style and is noted for its use of a number of soliloquys, direct speeches, to the audience and chorus characters speaking in con cert. The stage setting represents, hi skeleton form, an en tire town with several separate stages which are used for short scenes in quick succession. Baldwin, who came to the University in 1958, says, "I'm anxious to have the play done again. It will give me a chance to work on the play, having seen it performed at Alabama." Commenting on his "magical second chance to im prove the play," Baldwin indicated delight at being able to rewrite the ending. "It was a bit vague and negative before," said the professor. "Thompson gives you no flat moral," he went on; "but Is instead suggestive to the audience, leaving one with many possibilities of interpretation." He stressed, however, that these "possiblilities are clear ones," and expressed the conviction that this tech nique is a facet of "great drama." Baldwin has had a number of his plays published and performed and has won a number of writing awards, in cluding the Texas Playwright's Award in 1951, the Mar burg Award at Johns Hopkins University in 1952 and the Birmingham Festival of Arts Award in 1958. He indicated the possibility that "Thompson" might be performed at the University sometime, but noted that he would "rather reserve spots for students' plays in the lab oratory and experimental theaters." Baldwin, who recently traveled to Georgia to discuss revisions of the play, termed the trip "quite an experi ence, livened by various revisions and intriguing dis cussions of the play itself." Preliminary entry blanks can be obtained from an Re nault dealer or directly from The National College Queen Contest Committee, Para 1. I've been giving a lot of thought to the future career-wise and goal-wise. I've been pretty busy working on my hook shot S. Material reward is important, too ki mug at uic jop in one or profound significance. I'm a terror off the boards. 5. How about you? What are your goals? I'd like to score 30 against Tech. Mok on appointment through your Placement Offici to set Equitablt'c employment representative on March S or write t William E. Blevinj, Employment Manager for further information. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United States Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.l 10019 1 904 mount Building, 1501 Broad way, New York City. Applications must reach New York City by April 20, 1964. 2. As recipients of a college education. I fee! it is incumbent upon us to work in areas which allow us to make a contribution to society. Watch me dribble right around you. 4. What! more, the company I work for must be forward-looking and encourage initiative. Notice the feather touch on the baH 6. 1 mean after graduation. Oh, Tve got a swell Jols with Equitable. They've got everything you're looking for. And they're a good team to work with.