C J .S- . . , . ..... . IHI III mi n Lruruui VOL 51 N0.2 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Tuesday, September 18, 1951 Enrollment Expected To Exceed 6500 It Happened at NU ... With slightly more than 5,500 students registered last week, the estimated enrollment of 6,500 ap peared within easy reach Monday afternoon. Dr. Floyd W. Hoover, acting director of registration and rec ords, and Dr. G. W. Rosenlof, di rector of admissions, were opti mistic about exceeding the 6,300 figure. Dr. Hoover estimated that five hundred graduate students would register before the Sept. 22 deadline and that College of Medicine registration would total approximately the same. In addition, the assignment committee registered quite a large number of late students Monday. Although last year's pre-class registration totaled only a hun dred more than this year's, the final University population figure was more than eight thousand students. Dr. Hoover explained that an entirely different count ing system was used last year and that therefore a comparison of pre-class registration in the two years is no accurate indica tion of total registration. While undergraduate registra tion was scheduled to end last week, registration in the graduate college will continue until Sept. 29. Students who wish to drop or add courses may do so today in the Military Science building. Those who wish to change schedules after today need the written permission of the in structor. Three steps are necessary for changing registration: 1. See your adviser for permis sion for change. With his help fill out the drop and add sheet. 2. See your dean, or if you are a freshman, see the Junior Divi sion. 3. See the assignment commit tee. A drop and add fee of $2.50 is assessed. Students who wish to change sections of a course may do so by seeing the chairman of the de partment. Oct. 6 is the deadline for drops and adds. Towne Club Holds Dinner For Pledges Towne Club pledges were hon ored at a dinner Monday evening in the Union. They are: Dorothy Ahlgrim, Georgia Baker, May Boyd, Doro thy Brakhage, Donna Brakhage, Carolee Brehm, Phyllis Brown, Elaine Eddy, Lois Eddy, Illeen Frailey, Ruth Greer., Barbara Daniel, Elinor Heiser, Jackson, Joan Joyner, Kreuch, Phyllis Keim, Katt. Frances Leacock, Pat Marlene Meinke, Lila Anna Marie Obermeyer, Marlene Ogden, Nadine Osborn, Pat Por ter. Norma Setzkorn, Mary Ann Schlegel, Winnie Stolz, Bonnie T i a n g c o, Mary Waltz, Kathy Welch and Dorothy Yates. Pat Herzog was in charge of the style show. Towne Club offi cers are Shirley Borcherding, president; Shirley Watson, vice president; Jane Hetherington, treasurer; and Mrs. Donna Mur phy, historian. Sponsors are Gertrude Knie, Sue Arbuthnot and Dorothy Thompson, University faculty members. Towne Club is a social organ ization for Lincoln women at tending the University. Beverly Sharon Natalie Leikam, Newbill, Show Tickets Now On Sale Norden Leads Denomination Student House The Rev. Alvin J. Norden, of Fair Oaks. Calif., will assume the Season tickets for the Univer-; position of Lutheran-Mo. Synod Monday the fateful drawing for football ticket sections began at the Coliseum. Student represent atives from organized campus houses appeared to reach into a batch of numbers from one to 6,000 to receive their game sec tions. At approximately 10:43 a.m., ail-American Bob Reynolds put in an appearance to draw for seats for members of Phi Kappa Psi fra ternity. With his good arm, Reynolds reached into the large box, paused to take ahold of a ticket, and pulled out the Phf Psi fate. In his good left hand Reyn olds held number 14. Which meant that, even injured, the Nebraska all-American had defeated chance and practically put his fraternity brothers on the stadium ou-yara line for this coming season. NU Galleries To Schedule Ten Exhibits Ten art exhibits are scheduled at the University galleries in Mor rill Hall for the first semester. Work done in water colors and oils during the classes of the University summer session are being exhibited this week. Walter Meigs, assistant profes sor of art, instructed these classes. Students' work will also be on exhibition from Sept. 21 through Oct. 14. The exhibition will con sist of page proofs and a selec tion of the drawings and paint ings used to illustrate a new text in art education. The All Nebraska Art show and the Nebraska Art associa tion's fall show are included in the semester's schedule. The dates for these are Sept. 28 through Oct. 12 and from Oct. 18 through Nov. 9 respectively. Highlighting the All Nebras ka Show will be a reception on Sept. 30 for Alice Edmiston, honored artist of the year. Juror of the show will be John Wesle, director of the Sioux City Art Center. Jig Rush Begins For '51 Football Ticlcets; Cornhuskers To Hustle For Game Seats Stadium System m mj ft f n,Mtr 1Q51.R9 nrnrtnrtinns ;,.f tua i designers xoaay wm pe iea- !I rh- in two of the exhibitions, tototo.r' to Rev. Henry 1! In addition, these tickets may be Erck, who was forced to resign purchased from Theatre members, several weeks ago because of ill Kosmet Klub members or house ness. Erck had served as coun representatives. selor for Lutheran men and Three stage plays are scheduled! women at the University for 27 for the' coming school year. On years. Oct. 30 and 31 the Theatre will; Norden received his training at perform Shakespeare's "Othello." Concordia seminary in St. Louis, December 18 and 19 it will pre- graduating in 1942. He comes to sent Robert Sherwood's "Idiot's the University after serving a pas Delight." Elmer Rice's "Street ; torate in Fair Oaks. Scene" is set for March 25 and j His office will be in the YMCA 26. office in the Temple. Tickets for each individual clay I Since Erck's resignation, the will cost $1.50 apiece. These tickets! Rev. A. G. Ahlman, pastor of j will go on sale at the box office; Christ Lutheran church in Lin-j a week before each scheduled; coin, has been counselor for thej oroductinn and mav be Durchased ! 300 Lutheran students on the1 up to curtain-time. icampus. EAST STADIUM en- ENTRANCES PLAINLY MARKED . . . This illustsation shows the student, public and faculty trances which will be used at all football games this fall. The system which was initiated last year proved very successful. Sales Remain Untouched By Reynold's Fate Cornhusker fans had better hustle if they expect to get tickets to Nebraska football games. All reserved seat tickets have long been gone, and by Monday only a few bleacher seats re mained for the Penn State and Oklahoma games. Bleacher space for the other three home games was selling fast The University ticket office re ported Monday morning that the recent injury of Bobby Reynolds seemed to have had no immediate effect upon ticket sales. The ticket office also an nounced that student and faculty gates into the stadium will be the same as last year. The Daily Ne braskan is publishing a diagram in today's issue showing these, en trances. The ticket office requested that students sit in their regular foot ball game seats during the freshman-varsity game Saturday. The office also suggested that all stu dents should enter the stadium by 1:30 every Saturday so as to avoid the 2:00 p. m. rush. Scarcity of football tickets was reflected in the full registration in Lincoln hotels for football weekends. The largest local hotels reported to The Daily Nebraskan Monday afternoon that all avail able space has been filled for most of the home games. Only in a few hotels were reservations still open for every home game. Another Year At NU Brings Few Changes, Usual Gripes After one full day of cutting classes, it's safe to say school has definitely started. Classes are much smaller this year. It's getting so you can't even be sure of getting a seat on the back row any more there aren't Students Greet Returning Cornhuskers At Pep Rally Over 500 University new stu-i Tackle Bob "Moon" Mullen and dents, including Tassels, Corn; Fullback Nick Adduci, after re Cobs, cheerleaders, and pep bandjeeiving cheering ovations from greeted the University Cornhusk- the students, added their thanks ers on their arrival from Curtis,! to the rally backers for the wel f all training camp, at the Univer-'come and their hopes for the ty Coliseum Sunday afternoon. Icoming season. As the Husker coaches and; Dllring the noisy ovation given players stepped from their busses, the returning Huskers, the pep Nebraska student fans massed in band drowned out any thoughts of front of the Coliseum to welcome goom by keeping the rally going team. . :wftn Ny song8 and cheerleaders Cheerleaders, pausing first forg DeVri es Dick ciaussen. Jerry individual hellos to the Huskers, Tubbs Ira Epsticn, George Han led the first rally attenders of this k 'Jack Chedcster, Jane Cal aeason in several Nebraska cheers. L Jo Borry and Judy weibe First on the list of speakers to; dd d the final gpark oi Husker greet the student pepsters wa nlri( Conrh Rill Glassford. spirn. The Husker gnaaers, returning !for two weeks of drill before the iSept. 29 contest with Texas unns- tian university, wm mosi nnviy Glassford, who spent two weeks at Curtis hampered by bad weather and Injuries with his gridders, welcomed the freshmen to the University and wished them success in their four years at Nebraska. of outstanding artists in the fields of commercial and industrial de sign. The first designers exhibition will be by David Stone ' Martin, who has achieved nation-wide fame through his designs for rec-, ord album covers. Besides many! of the covers and other commer cial work, Martin will display a series of illustrations for '"Scien tific America." This will be shown from Oct. 5 through Nov. 11. The second designers exhibi tion will be by Lillian Garrett, a native of Beatrice, Nebr., and and a graduate of the Univer sity of Nebraska's art depart ment. This exhibition will be shown from Jan. 4 through Feb 17. A faculty member of the Min neapolis School of Art, she has been active as an independent textile designer and has won sev eral awards for her work in this field. From Nov. 16 through Dec. 30 "Art For Use" will be exhibited. The exhibition will consist of ma terials of contemporary design including furniture, textiles, ce ramics and glass, metalware, elec trical equipment and professional equipment. "Architecture and the City Plan," sponsored by the Lin coln chapter of the American Institute or Architects, will be exhibited. This is devoted to a review of the specifically archi tectural aspects of the problems of city planning. The quarterly meeting of the Nebraska chapter of the A.I.A. on Dec. 1 will be a special event of this exhibition. NU Police To Give Out Car Stickers Students applying for parking permits have been negligent in bringing automobile registration certificates with them which is a definite requirement, according to Student Council representatives selling the permits. Car owners living more than six blocks from the campus must have parking permits affixed to their windshields by Friday. Stu dent Council is handling the sales at a booth in front of the Corn Crib in the Union. In addition to the registration certificate, students must also present their identification cards and fill out an application. A twenty-five cent fee is paid upon validation of the application. University police will issue the stickers north of the Social Sci ence building on the 12th street mall. oPlicemen will be on duty there from 8 a m. until noon and from 1 until 5 p.m. The booth in the Union will be open Monday ana weanesaay from 9:30 until 11 a.m. and each afternoon this week from 1 until 5 p.m. All faculty members should have secured a parking sticker by this time. Students are requested not to park in areas designated as a faculty parking area. enough to fill up a row. Just can't depend on nothin. There are the usual gripes about the high price of books. And there's one science book that none of the stores will buy because "they aren't going to use it any more." This has been said of the same book for the past two years. Freshmen beanies are begin ning - to - be seen more often around the campus. Under them, of course, are freshmen. Everybody is glad to see every body right now. It'll be a few weeks longer before the juniors start knifing each other in the back and the seniors start com peting among themselves for jobs and husbands. (Or wives, as the case might be.) Of course the big topic of con versation right now is football. All the girls imagine themselves madly in love with some first stringer while their boy friends take bets on the outcome of any game. Picnics, a subversive activity, are still being held throughout the countryside by nature lov ers .. . and the other kind too. Convertibles are speeding around the roads with the tops down. Girls in them wish they weren't because it makes a mess of their hair. Girls not in them ! wish they were. j The party boys are back though some of their members are gone (but not forgotten) to the Armed Services. The Intelligentsia (com monly known as "brains")a re becoming more numerous, due to the deferment tests. Yes, after a long .summer, life at the U. is almost Tback to nor monly known as "brains") are not for long) new classes, and a new school year. It's going to be terrific, no doubt. As they say of Paris, "It's good to be back." Rah, rah for Nebraska U. "P.M. Headlines- 'Russia Has at Least 70 Divisions Read OTTAWA British Defense Chief Emmanuel Shinwell Monday cited some striking figures in describing the So viet threat to world peace. He declared that Russia has "at least 70 divisions" ready for immediate use in Europe. The Kremlin, he added, also is "maintaining a fleet of 300 modern submarines as well as surface vessels, 215 divisions, including many armored divi sions, and an air force of over 19,000 aircraft." Adenauer Calls For Fast German Rearmament BONN, GERMANY Chan cellor Konrad Adenauer, in an interview with UP, called for a speed-up in the rearmament of western Germany. "Much time" has already been wasted,' he said. Adenauer predicted that west Germans would ap prove the incorporation of German units in a western European army. Truman Socks At Dictators, Politicians WASHINGTON President Truman got in two hard licks Monday one at the Soviet dictators and the other at po litical vote-getters. He called Russian society a "jungle" and said through it "the naked power of the government prowls like a beast of prey, making all men afraid." In his second speech, delivered to the National Association of Post masters, the President remark ed that a lot of persons are "trying to make political capi tal" by attacking the loyalty of government workers. It is a "contemptible way to get votes," he said. U.N. Army Beats Off Communist Attack KOREA The United Nations army in Korea beat off scream ing waves of communist at tackers along a broken 60-mile front as the expected enemy offensive got under way. Re ports indicated that UN artil lery "mowed down" hundreds of North Koreans as they rushed American and South Ivorean lines. LA uen sanies A. Van Flea-., commander of the Eighth army, said the North Koreans had received such severe losses on the east ern front that they are no longer capable of launching an extended offensive. The Eighth army, however, was still pre paring for a possible, all-out communist thrust. Waggoner Named Head of Music Group Mary Jane Waggoner, piano in-. Miss Waggoner was graduated structor at the University, was m the University of Kansas and , i j m. . :,. .j received a master's degree from elected Theta province president the University of TxaJ She of Sigma Alpha Iota, national mu- studied piano at the Juillard sic fraternity for women. j school of music under Frank There are ten provinces of j Sheridan last summer. Sigma Alpha Iota in the United Miss Waggoner is vice president States. Theta province includes' of the Lincoln chapter of Pi chapters in Nebraska and Kansas. I concentrate on skeleton drills, passing and signals in this eek's ! activities. , . , - m 1,11 1 j . ' ' ' ' " i .' ., .... i ' h ) 4 tj i V' ' v v ' Husker Rally Spirit r ..w ... k 4 . ,1 V P t 4 N t ' ft X . r"-Vr" - U ' "V I jj -1 - ' t J J-4 - I ' ' ' ' ' 4. - f- .; 'J .. -i r 1 4 X m:rr.VT.IL'SKER REUNION , tive of the CornhuFker ; football itfiiaa, vxpraxtm successful '51 veason to over 600 Husker Jans Courier Lincoln ftt.r home rally in front of the University Coliseum Sunday afternoon. "Moon" Mullen, representa- University cheerleaders Jump high off the ground in leading a M a a 4 II M - . A l . ul a jM ami M AhAi fill 1 4 1 f ! n tf A his hffC-f,,'F ch,,r-ALinerauyior inenriuoei nu nmi..n - at a welcome rugged two weeks at the Curtis training camp. The old tradition Counter Lincoln ftlar victory bell, plus nine cheerleaders, a pep band, Tassels, Cobs and a cheering barrage of students met the Hunkers as they re . iurneu io ihc Cvpitu! Cit Kappa Lambda, national honorary fraternity and a member of Delta Gamma. 7L71 almanac It you have no classes Wednes day afternoon and are planning a picnic, the weather man says, "Go ahead." The mercury may rise to the 80's Wednesday, according to the Lincoln weather station, and fair weather Is predicted for all day. Today's high is to be 76. Temperatures Monday climbed to 77 and at one time dropped to 51. Can you guess what the follow ing Associated Press sports ar ticle is about? An actual uuotc, with ficticious names, follow: "At Blueville, the Rabbits ued the fourth to rout Fred Jones, and teed off on Albert Smith, his suc cessor, but were Iinauy aousen Dy Frank Brown. Before Brown put out the fire, Bob Alberts fashioned a blow off one of his serves to send Harry Green to a tally." Did you guess football, oir. swimming or tennis? Only a sports writer would guess baseball. My kitty is gone galavanting. I don't know wbcre's she's at. Curse this city, That lur my kitty; By dawn she'll be a cat. Fascinating facts: If all Amer ican 'college graduates of the last 60 years were still alive, they would comprise only about 1 per cent of the total population. Four out of five women haters are women. The woes of a feature writer "If it's funny enough to tell, it's been told; if it hasn't been told, it's too clean; and if it's dirty enough to interest a frosh, the edi- ft