The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 27, 1944, Image 1

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Nebraskan Calls All-Campus
Political Forum Wednesday
Dewey or Roosevelt? Four stu
dents will wrestle with the po
litical question Wednesday eve
ning at an all-student political
forum sponsored by the Nebras
kan staff at 7:30 in Sosh audi
torium. Amidst campaign banners and
buttons, cheering and hissing, the
question "Resolved: That there
should be a change in the na
tional administration," will be de
bated. Bill Miller will present the
domestic policies of the demo
cratic party and Al Reddish, the
foreign, while Mary Ann Mottoon
and Dexter Sharpe will uphold
the republican domestic and for
eign platforms respectively. Leroy
T. Laase, chairman of the speech
and dramatic art department, will
be moderator.
As the students enter the audi
torium they will vote on their
choice of the presidential candi
dates. After hearing the debate,
the students will be polled again,
Vol. 44, No. 18
Student Council Discusses
For Recognition of New Political Parties
Campus politics are surging
toward clarification. Requirements
for recognition of political parties,
presented and formulated by
Jeanne Rotton on the basis of re
cent Student Council discussions,
were considered at Wednesday's
meeting of the Council.
Declaring that no political
parties now exist on the campus,
the resolution calls for the imme
diate submittance to the Council
of an official plan of pa.ty organ
ization by all parties desiring
recognition. Organization plans
must be turned into the Council
by Wednesday, Nov. 8. The mo
tion to accept Miss Rotton's reso
lution was passed unanimously
by the Council but on point of
order was laid on the table for
one week in compliance with
Robert's Rule of Orders.
The resolution, which will prob
ably be added to the Student
Council by-laws next Wednesday,
is as follows:
"The Student Council hereby
holds that no political parties
exist on the campus at the pres-;
ent time, and it hereby requires
that any group of students desir
ing to be recognized as a political ;
party submit to the Council for;
its approval an official plan of!
Mrs. F. Williams
Establishes Loan
Fund Memorial
Establishment of a $500 student
loan fund by Mrs. Frank L. Wil
liams of Lincoln as a memorial to
her husband, the late Frank L.
Williams, for many years manag
ing editor of The Lincoln Journal,
was announced today by Secre
tary Perry W. Branch of the Ne
braska Foundation.
The fund, to be known as the
Frank L. Williams Student Loan
Fund, will make loans available
to students in any school or col
lege of the university with pref
erence given to students majoring
in journalism.
Tomorrow Night
Coliseum
this second vote to be based solely
on the arguments presented in the
debate and not on previous po
litical convictions.
Each debater will be allowed
eight minutes to explain his topic
as well as a short time to ques
tion his opponents. The "discus
sion will then be opened to par
ticipation from the floor on any
matter pertaining to the question.
Student Pictures
Are Ready Today
Student identification pictures
are now available in room B7,
Administration hall, according to
an announcement from the regis
trar's office.
The pictures were taken during
registration the first week of
school. Students must present
their identification cards when,
they call for the pictures.
Lincoln 8, Nebraska
party organization dealing with
the following points:
I. The name of the party.
2. The platform of the party.
3. The provision for the elec
tion of a party leader.
4. The organization of the
party's faction.
5. The method of determining
the party slate of candidates for
all campus elections.
"This information must be
turned into the -Student Council
by 5 p. m., Wednesday, Nov. 8,
1944. by all groups of students
desiring to present candidates in
the fall election.
"Likewise, this information
must be turned into the Student
Council for its approval by the
New Honor .
Prim The Unroln Journal.
CHANCELLOR BOUCHER
... heads association.
Chancellor C. S. Boucher of the;
university was last night elected
new president of the Association
of Land Grant Colleges and
Universities, succeeding C B.
Hutchison of the University of
California. The meeting of the
association was in Chicago.
is the ...
Grab
UUlilJIJlllilSuDlliJUL
3 - '
1 H
L U ' I
Favored UM
Tigers Meet
Cornhuskers
Highlighting 32nd annual
Homecoming festivities an under
dog University of Nebraska Corn
husker eleven takes the field
against a tough University of
Missouri team in Memorial sta
dium tomorrow at 2 o'clock.
Hopes for a Husker victory
were dimmed as chances for Lyle
Kops and Joe Kessler being able
to play in the game were still
uncertain. Both men have been
disabled by injuries.
The Husker team is not alone
in suffering as the Missouri team
had five players in hospitalization
Thursday.
With the Tigers will be Bill
Dellestatious, pass-flinging and
hip-swinging back now rated as
(See FOOTBALL, page 6)
Friday, October 27, 1944
Requirements
end of the 14th day following the
first day of classes of every fall
term, by all political parties wish
ing to exist thruout the year. AH
political parties so recognized,
land only political parties so recog
nized, shall exist officially for the
period of not more than one
school year.
"Parties desiring to exist the
following year also, must turn in
their platforms and plans of or
ganization again the following fall
for the approval of the Council.
This protects the student body
(See COUNCIL, page 4)
Groups Win
19 Queen
Nominees
Five groups on the campus
have earned the right to put up
three Cornhusker beauty queen
candidates according to a check
of registration and Tassel sales,
Charlotte Hill, business manager
of the yearbook, announced
Thursday.
Alpha Chi Omega had top
numoer of book purchases with
83; second was Delta Gamma
with 76; and in close third place
were Pi Beta Phi, Women's Resi
dence halls and the unaffiliated
city campus group, each with 75
sales.
Nominate Two.
Entitled to two beauty queen
candidates arc Alpha Phi, Kap
pa Kappa Gamma, Delta Delta
Delta, Alpha Xi Delta and Chi
Omega. Earning one candidate
were Sigma Delta Tau, Sigma
Kappa, Alpha Omicron Pi, Love
Memorial dorm, Towne Club,
Kappa Alpha Theta, Rosa Bou
ton hall, Loomis hall, and Inter
national House.
Each 25 Cornhuskers bought
by a group entitles the group to
put up one beauty queen can
didate, Miss Hill said.
a Tassel for a Ticket
- i r
SiiWiii iiWwiu, V - LkAImJ
PEGGY LARSON
...'43 Pep Queen See her
successor at the homecoming
dance.
Students Meet
Tonite for Big
Bonfire Rally
Nebraska fans will again back
the team with the clang of the
victory bell at the homecoming
bonfire rally, scheduled for 7:30
tonight on the mall by the coli
seum. The bonfire rally is the first of
its kind since October, 1941, when
the Indiana Hoosier effigy and
seven truckloads of boxes and
papers were burned at one of the
biggest homecoming rallies the
university has ever known. This
year a large stuffed tiger, repre
senting Missouri, will be mauled
and burned along with cardboard
boxes and wood furnished by the
organized houses.
Torch Parade
The cheerleaders, 30 Tassels
with torches, and a volunteer
band will be on hand to lead the
rally from the Union down sorority-fraternity
row. A snake dance
will be formed at 16th and Vine
and wind on to the bonfire where
yells and songs will be given by
E. W. DuTeau, president of the
alumni association, and there will
be short speeches by Coach Lew
andowski and the squad. After the
rally a dance will be held from
9 to 11 in the Union ballroom. All
students and trainees are invited
to attend.
Activity tickets are still on sale
and students who attend the
games are asked to enter the sta
dium at the students' entrance.
A student seating section will be;
roped off.
This Week. At War
By Albert Reddhh
Routing the imperial Japanese
navy, the American Third and
Seventh fleets this week relieved
the danger presented in a massive
challenge to American liberation
of the Philippines by the Nip fleet
as it raced out of hiding.
Tho outnumbered and at first
placed in a perilous situation, the
U. S. units succeeded in repulsing
the Japs and inflicting the "most
crushing defeat of the war." Mhc
Arthur believes future el torts by
the Jap navy "can only be on a
dwindling scale."
Tjilf-st rpivirl nl.-ic Jan losses
at one battleship, two carriers,
1 V4 vi Ui f at an- cat ivuai vw r
destroyers. Probably sunk are two
with seven battleshfps, six cruis
Dance Ends
Homecoming
Celebration
Climax of LN's annual home
coming celebrations will be the
homecoming dance tomorrow
night from 9 to 12 in the Coliseum.
This dance is one of the few tra
ditional affairs still held since
the advent of the war.
Here from Omaha will be Basie
Givens and his orchestra to pro
vide the music. Held in the Union
ballroom last year, the dance was
moved to the Coliseum this year
to better accommodate the crowd
expected.
Present New Queen.
Feature attraction of the annual
affair will be the presentation of
the university's 1944 Pep Queen
during intermission. The queen
was chosen from five candidates
in an all-campus vote yesterday,
and her identity will not be re
vealed until the half-way mark in
the dance. Just before the presen
tation of then we queen by Yell
King Bernie Urich and 1943
Queen Peggy Larson will come
the awarding of prizes to the
men's and women's organized
houses judged to have the best
homecoming decorations. Decora
tions will be judged Friday night.
Tickets to the homecoming
dance are $1.25 per couple and
may be purchased from any
Tassel, at the Union office, or the
door Saturday night.
City Churches
Plan Activities
For Weekend
Plans for church activities this
Sunday announced by the pas
tors of the student churches in
clude several special activities.
Lutheran students will attend
chapel service at 10:45 a. m. Sun
day in room 315 in the Union.
The anniversary of the Reforma
tion will be observed. The ser
mon topic will be: "Is the Church
of the Reformation Obsolete?"
Miss Ruth Vortman will sing and
Miss June Gast will accompany
the hymns.
Methodist students will assem
ble Sunday evening in Saint Paul
Methodist church at 6:00. The
Lincoln chapter of the American
Guild of Organists and the Metho
dist church will jointly sponsor
a concert by Sgt. Vernon E. Vick-
ers, an organist with the United
States Army Corps. Sergeant
(See CHURCHES, page 7)
ers, and at least five destroyers
damaged.
The USS Princeton, a 10,000
ton carrier, was sunk by Amer
ican fire after being severely
damaged. It was the first Amer
ican carrier lost in two years. The
U. S. navy also lost an escort
carrier and several P.T. boats
sunk and a number of planes
lost, with several escort carpers
and destroyers damaged.
Meanwhile, MacArthur's ground
forces on Leyte in the Philippines
continued theii advance against
counter-attacking Jap forces. So
far the returning Americans have
captured three airfields and over
30 towns and villages.
The Russians invaded Norway
from the north Wednesday, tak
(See WAR WEEK, page 7)
Tickets $1.25