7teDalA Vol. 85, No. 5 Sunday, September 26, 1943 AllSoldierson Campus nn 1 t 1 tvT 1 1 All soldiers on the campus will! receive the Nebraskan the same as students, it was announced late yesterday by Marjorie Marlette, editor of the paper. Subscriptions have been pur chased from the petty cash fund of the army corps, and officers under Col. J. P. Murphy, com mander of the ASTP unit, have made arrangements for distribu tion. Under the new circulation sys tem, the Daily Nebraskan was first distributed to soldiers last Thursday and will continue the same today and from now on. Without cost to the men it will be delivered to the library, field house, and foods and nutritions building on ag campus. With an army page included in the paper at least once a week and an Army Stew column every day, the Nebraskan will be a source of information to both army and civilian students. It will also help to make the army a part of the university student body and keep them m touch with activities on the campus. The paper is now receiving about equal circulation between soldiers and students, according to business manager Charlotte Hill. Any soldier may write for the paper during his free time and contributions should be turned in to the editor or to Pfc. Harry Olesker at fxve library. t V X3 f M. Marietta. - C. Hill. Food and Nutrition building on ag campus, under the direction of Major Edmison. Fifty copies will be delivered to Regimental Headquarters in the library, in charge of Colonel Murphy. Four hundred copies will be sent to the Charge of Quarters Desk in the library, for the Army Air Corps. Captain W hitting is in charge of these copies. Nebraskans are uted as follows: to be distrib- Six hundred copies will be de livered to the Orderly Room on third floor of the library, to be distributed in the bunk rooms un der the direction of Major Patti-son. Two hundred copies delivered to the Field House by arrangement with Captain Crabill. Three hundred and fifty copies will go to the STAR Unit in the Appear Sim p44 Yearbook For the first time in history a UN Cornhusker will contain indi vidual class pictures of all stu dents enrolled in the university, freshmen and sophomores as well as juniors and seniors. Appointments for the taking of War Council Makes Plans For Semester , . Monday at 5 Student war council will hold its first meeting of the semester tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock in room 315 of the Union. All old and new members are asked to be present, according to coun cil president Pat Ch.amberlin. The meeting will be of unusual importance since plans for the semester will be formulated and discussed. Some of the topics which wil be brought up will in clude stamp sales, soldier enter tainment, another campus regis tration of women for war work and Rag Tags. Organized houses and campus organizations who do not al ready have war council members are requested to appoint or elect them so that they will be repre sented in the council. Uni Theater Plans Work For Season University Theater will start this year's activities with an open meeting Thursday, September 30, in the auditorium of the Temple. Students interested in any phase of theater work, technical or act ing, arc urged to be present to enable Berne Enslin, the new di rector, to get acquainted with them. This first meeting will be especially important because the program of plays for the season will be decided on the basis of the number of people interested in participating. Elect Board Members. The new student theater advi sory board will be elected at this meeting. Members of this board will work very closely with the di rector and will be responsible for keeping the technical and business end of the theater running smoothly. Anyone carrying 12 hours, re gardless of university standing, may work in the theater this year and there is an urgent call for (See Theater, page 4.) Houses Hold Hour Dances With Soldiers . . . Frats Hour dances will continue. Dances may be held with fra ternity men on Friday night3 and with uniformed men on Saturday nights from 7:30 to 8:30, accord ing to Verna H. Boyles, dean of women. Men stationed at Love library will be divided into units including the enginering, pre-flight. foreign languages and dental units. Any group, whether it be so rority or organized co-operative house, desiring to have an hour dance with soldiers must contact Dean Boyles at Ellen Smith Hall, giving the date, the number de sired and the unit preferred. Mrs. Boyles will then contact Col. Murphy, who will in turn arrange vith the men. the pictures at the Miller & Paine Cornhusker photo studio, recently moved just south of the main store, were made during registra tion for each student according to the alphabetical spelling of last names. " Picture Schedule. The first group of pictures will be taken from Monday thru Satur day of those students whose last names begin with A and B. The following list is the weekly alpha betical schedule of appointments. A and B, Sept. 27-Oct. 2. C, D and E, Oct. 4-Oct. 9. F, G and H, Oct. 11 -Oct. 16. I, J, K, and L, Oct. 18-Oct. 23. M, Mc and N, Oct. 25-Oct. 30. O, P, Q and R, Nov. 1-Nov. 6. S, T and U, Nov. 8-Nov. 13. V, W, X, Y and Z, Nov. 15 Nov. 20. Students are to fill out the col ored cards handed to them during registration and hand them in when their pictures are taken. If a card is lost, a duplicate may be obtained at the studio. Fraterni ty and sorority cards will be filled out at the studio also. Same Pictures. The same pictures will be usedx for both the class and affiliated sections of the year book. Class photos alone will be $1.75; frater nity or sorority pictures will be $1.25; pictures in both sections will be $2.75 together. All sororities must have the blouses which are to be used in their pictures down at the studio on Monday and they are to be left until the last day of appointments, Nov. 20. Credit to Tassels. Affiliated people who bought books at registration may give credit to their respective Tassels if the complete list of names from each house is handed in to Bob Henderson, business manager of the Cornhusker, at the year book office in the Student lnion. StudentActivityTicket SalesBeginTomorrow UN Lincolnette Coeds Register Thruout Week Girls wishing to become Lincoln ettes, an organization composed to help entertain soldiers, will regis ter with Dean Boyles Monday through Friday in the afternoon from 1:30 to 5. All those registering will make up the university division of Lin colnettes which includes only uni versity girls. These girls will be under the leadership of Verna H. Boyles, colonel of this division of tthe Lincolnettes. Hostesses on Campus. University Lincolnettes will be used at city Lincolnette 'dances and also as war council hostesses for scheduled dances with army units on campus. The schedule of dances will be announced later. Time given to Lincolnette activi ties may be contributed to the three hours of war work per week which is recommended for every university girl by the war council. Student season activity tickets will be put on sale tomorrow at the student activity office in the coliseum, according to Ad Lewan dowski, head football coach. These tickets, which sell for $5 plus 50 cents tax, will be usable for all football, basketball and track contests played on the home fields. Students who purchase tickets must present their identifi cation cards at the time they buy the tickets. No Reserved Seats. No reserved seats will be sold this year, nor will sections be drawn for organized groups. Mem- Uni Singers Need Mass Male Voices Dr. A. E. Westbrook, an nounced today that there is an urgent need now for male voices in the university sing ers. Many activities have been curtailed by the man shortage, but there are enough freshman boys and other men on the campus to balance the number of men and women in the sing ers. Dr. Westbrook said that ten more basses and at least fifteen more tenors, are. im perative. Classes for singers meet Monday, Wednesday, and Fri day at 11 a. m. on the first floor of temple. If there are men interested who can only attend one practice, Dr. West brook requested that they still report to him. Daily Reporters Meet Wednesday Reporters on the staff of the Daily Nebraskan and those in terested in working in that ca pacity are asked to attend a staff meeting in the Daily of fice Wednesday night Exact time for the meeting will be announced in Wednesday's morning Daily. The meeting is important for all reporters and Marjorie Mar lette, editor, requests that all reporter be present. (KnufflaSaHcaBnaill Velcirsiiia EBsicIk CDnn (CauminDTiis firr IFitIbaIlIl By Larry Went The war had been officially un derway only sixteen days when Jim Chadderdon, in a National Guard unit, was called into active duty. The National Guard was mobilized December 23, 1940, and Jim was sent to Camp Roberts, Arkansas, for training. He was then sent on to Fort Ord, Califor nia, whicji was the debarkation i3 v Jim Chadderdon From bullets to footballs. -X' 7 Courtesy Lincoln Journal. AD LEWANDOWSKI . . . season tickets on sale. bers of sororities, fraternities, or other goups who wish to sit to gethe must purchase their tickets in a body. The first activity for which the activity tickets will be usable will be the five home football games played as follows: Indiana, Oct. 9; Kansas, Oct. 23; Pittsburgh, Nov. 13; Iowa, Nov. 20; and Oklahoma, Nov. 27. point. Thursday at 2:30 p. m., March 19, 1942, Jim sailed under San Francisco's Golden Gate bridge, and away to what turned out to be Ausrtalia. (Jim thought that the girls that he met in Aus tralia were swell but they couldn't compare with our Nebraska fueens. He also thinks that the university coeds are much nicer than any skiits he saw in Cali fornia.) Guadalcanal. In the process of eliimnating Japs, Jim landed on Guadalcanal Oct. 13, 1942. Just as he was com ing ashore, and while he was con gratulating himself on not once being seasick, he heard someone yell, 'To jo Time!" Everyone be gan working feverishly at digging foxholes, so he did likewise. No sooner said than done, and just in time, too, because right over their heads, 26 bombers appeared and they tore h out of that part of the island. Jim was on Guadalcanal for 90 days and in that 00 days a lot of men lived a lifetime. He was in three major battles, one of which was the "Second Battle of Tenaru" in which 2,200 Japs were convert ed into "good Japs." An interest ing point is, that Ji mlanded be fore, and left after, Barney Ross. His regiment, the 3rd Battalion of the National Guard, 164th In fantry, fired the first offensive (See Guadalcanal, page 4.) RombergOpens Concert Series Here Oct. 8 Sigmund Romberg, the noted pianist, his conoert orchestra and soloists, will officially open the Lincoln Symphony concert season on October 8, 1943, presenting a musical crazy-quilt of grand opera, European operetta, Amer ican musical comedy, classics that are popular and popular works that are becoming classics. The last half-Njur of the concert will be devoted to Mr. Romberg's own works. Notables to Appear. Other notables in the music world scheduled to appear this season are: Angel Reyes, Cuba's foremost violinist, Dec. 9; Brag gfotti and Shaw, famed two-piano team, Jan. 13; James Melton, Met ropolitan Opera's leading tenor, February 8; and Helen Traubel, one of the tew American-born prima donnas, on October 13, 1944. The winner of a student au dition held in the spring will ap pear with the Lincoln Symphony Orchestra on April 18. Season tickets are now on sale at the school of music office. No single admission tickets for stu dents will be sold.