The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 31, 1941, Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, October 31, 1941
DAILY NEBRASKA
An Inside Job ...
Sign at Carrie Belle Dorm
Advertises Rooms for Boys
By Pat Chambrlin.
There are "Rooms for Boys" in
the Women's residence Halls. Or
at least so say the signs hung out
side Verona Toman's and Ruth
Westover's room. An inside job,
this story reveals just how the in
genious Carrie Bells individualize
their doors.
Also asking for company are the
unknown occupants of 218 whose
sign reads "Tourists Accomo
dated." The lure of the unknown.
On the other hand, Helen Good
win and Gertrude Fenton are most
exclusive and when they really
wish to withdraw from the rabble
gabble tack up the forbidding "Ab
solutely No Visitors, Please." Doris
Stalling and Merle Newman are
more discriminating, only barring
peddlers and beggars. What kind
of company do they keep anyway?
Refuge for wolves is offered in the
room occupied by Lois Hansen and
Grace Stockly who are quite strict
about "No Hunting or Trespass
ing." For a few days only outside a
certain room on the second floor
appeared the discvet announce
ment: "Themes corrected grade
above C guaranteed." On a few
undecorated doors down the hall,
Ann Schwartz and Bobbie Green
inquire hopefully "Do you want
your picture taken?" Reading on
excitedly, you come to the part
about a price and walk on....
Traffic on second is regulated
by the "Slow, Girls at Work," of
Pat Mclllece and Virginia Konsel.
The dorm corridor pacers are
warmed by the touching generos
ity evinced by Mary Ericson and
Georgia Snell who invite candy
bar lovers to help themselves if no
one is at home. Then, however,
the visitant runs and gets his mic-
Seniors Must
Know English
To Graduate
Friley
AMES. Ia. (ACPI. Dr. Charles
E. Friley, prsident of Iowa State
college, has announced a plan un
der which seniors must show ac
ceptable ability in English before
they can be graduated.
The plan requires that the stu
dent must do more than merely
submit grades obtained in English
courses as evidence that his writ
ten and spoken use of the lan
guage measures up to a fair stand
ard of clearness and accuracy. He
must take an examination in Eng
lish during the first quarter of
his senior year.
Students who fail the examina
tion will be given opportunity for
remedial work in a writing clinic
or in courses in English, and may
take a later examination.
Dr. Guy S. Green, head of Eng
lish and speech here, assert that
employers more and more are em
phasizing the importance of good
English.
ATTEND LINCOLN'S
LEADING THEATRES!
Voe Showing
"Lady Be Good"
Starring Sleanor Powell
Ann Sothern Robert Younc
Lincoln Tr. ;
Me 'til
HCl.
.Voir Showing
Tron Itetlf
POWER GRABLE
ia
II
A YANK in R. A. F."
with
JOHN MTTON
RLUINAI.D OtKIHNr.B
lao!
lartooa aaa lAtaat VTarU New
STUART
'III fc
Inrl.
!S'ow Shotting
"The Smiling Ghost"
with
Wayne Morris
"PriroiTNurse"
Brenda Joyce
NEBRASKA
. . . Individualizes Door
roscope to read the PS : "Don't for
get to pay!"
Advertising the fact that twins
live in one Northeast room are twin
scottiea. Ruthanne and Rose Mary
Biglin are the promoters of this
scheme.
Amber Hasty and Virginia Lynn
modestly announce "Genius at
Work." Who is bragging about
whom? Universally popular to
warn off visitors during study
hours are "Do not Disturb" signs
borrowed from a wide variety of
hotels, while registration howdy
badges and all sorts and sizes of
dolls are used in place of the fa
miliar but prosaic welcome mat.
Unique is the pointer and dial
system used by Marrienne Graber
and Martha Pasternak. All possi
bles are taken care of on the lis
and a turn of the dial will tell
what they are doing or what they
want you to think they are doing.
"Doin' my chores," "I'm readin,"
and "None of your Bizn.ess" are
the most frequently used reasons
for a closed door, according to
Manna.
Egan Speaks
With Educator
On Broadcast
Dr. Fred J. Kelly, chief of the
Division of High Education in the
United States, will be interviewd
by Frank Egan, regular commen
tator, today from 4:15 to 4:30 p. in.
on the Book Nook news broad
cast from the Union Book Nook.
Dr. Kelly, who is also state super
visor of public institutions, will
speak on the subject of the pro
posed "School and College Civilian
Moral Service."
Instead of Coeds
LSU Student Puts Campus
Stags in Classified Places
There have been many attempts
at classifying college coeds into
distinct groups or types, but few
have tried thus to segregate the
campus male element until a Daily
Reveille writer took a poll on the
"Pet Peeves against Campus
Stags" last Tuesday.
The survey divided stags into
the following groups:
"The Jitter Joe:" This type of
male is the one who uses his danc
ing partner as a stooge for his
exhibitionism.
"The Dance Floor Hiker:" Next
on the LSU coed black-list is the
outdoor-man-dancer, whose strides
steps are strongly reminiscent of
their long-ago Girl Scout hikes.
'The Clicking Drip:' LSU wom
en, says the report, bite their
Chinese-red fingernails when they
discuss the tongue clicker. Worst
nerve-wrecker of all, his "tst, t st,
tst" in time to music, is as bad as
a fingernail scraping a blackboard
two inches from your ear, they
wail.
"The Chewing Chump:" And
Proli
ant
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31.
9:30 a. m. Second general 11
session. Room Y, Student Union.
Higher Educational and Naval
Requirements. Admiral Chester
W. Nimitz, chief, bureau of
navigation.
12:30 p. m. Luncheon.
2:30 p. m. Third general ses
sion. Room Y, Student Union.
Higher Education Serves Total
Defense, Dr. Francis J. Brown,
consultant, American council
on education.
7:00 p. m. Dinner (formal).
Ballroom, Student Union.
SATURDAY.
9:00 w. m. Second business
session. Regency room, Corn
husker Hotel.
Reports of committees :
Committee on membership
Committee on Education
beyond the doctor's degree.
Committee on Latin-American
educational relations.
Committee on graduate work
and teacher ed-jcation.
Comittee en endowment in
come. Committee o n committees
and nomination ef officers.
Unfinished and new business.
Col. Charles Thins
ROTC Commandant Names Semester
Non-Commissioned' Officers' Promotions
Will Bradley
Plays at Pike
Friday Night
Boogie-woogie and more boogie
woogie ia in store for dancers at
the Turnpike when Will Bradley
and his band come to the Pike to
night. . Featuring Ray McKinley drum-
Lincoln Journal and Star,
WILL BRADLEY.
.... Boogie-woogie artist
mer and vocalist, Bradley's organ
ization of 19 artists comes here
from the Sherman hotel in Chicago
Bradley has won a lot of favor in
the east having popularized such
boogie-woogie as "Celery Stalks
at Midnight," "Bounce Me Brother
With a Solid Four" and many
more.
Afler Student Poll
hair-dresscrs are the only women
who like the gum-chewing stag.
His poor girl partner becomes at
tached to him, of course, whether
she likes it or not (she never
docs).
"The Pretzel Pusher:" Men's
dancing posture, as well as wom
en's is far from blameless, judg
ing from Louisiana coeds charges.
"The Repulsive Romeo:" Other
complaints included the affection
ate stag who forgets he's not with
his best girl, and proccdes to turn
a dance step into an embrace.
"Party Professors:" No stag
line, the repoit assures us, was
ever as furious over dance floor
teachers as coeds are. Especially
they say, those who have been in
a rut box-stepping for awhile then
suddenly throw you out and start
kicking or give you a shove and
expect you to whirl gracefully
back into his arms.
"Conversational Cutters:" Espe
cially disliked is the man who
startles his partner with some gem
of wit, requiring an answer, and
imemdiately throws her into an
exhibition step while her mind is
on his conversation.
'Miscellaneous Mis-fits:" This
includes many other stags who
have faults that are less hated
than others, such as not giving
their name.
Texas Builds
Bomb Shelters
For Treasures
AUSTIN, Texas. (ACP). A
$3,114,143 WPA project approved
for Texas, with the University of
Texas as sponsoring organization,
includes a statewide listing of
housing and storage facilities for
care of important records and mu
seum treasures in event of inva
sion or air bombing.
TYPEWRITERS
For Sale For Rental
Tk Baya! aartakle tfce Maal auea1a
far taMta
Hebruka Typssrriter Co.
IM Na, UM M. Itasala, Kefcr.
fkaaa t-tl!7
I
...j,,x-
1 1 I
It, ' , A
V J s
Appointment and assignments I
of cadet non-commissioned officers I
in the university ROTC unit were
announced last week by Col.
Charles Thuis, commandant of the
ROTC.
The promotions are effective
Immediately and will continue un
til the end of the semester. Pro
motions were made in the infan
try, artillery and engineers units.
Engineer I. Hit.
Mister Sergeant, Richard Malek, Rich
aril V., Osceola.
Sergeant, Blood, Rodman M., Lincoln,
Battalion lotors.
Technical Sergeant, Kuhlman, Elza R.,
Falls City.
Corpoil. Andeison, Merlin W., Lin
coln. Corporal, Martinson, Lloyd O., Grand
Inland.
Company A.
First Sergeant, Kline. Robert. Omaha,
bt.if 4rL',uni H&9H flurence t. Dor-
cheater. Johnson. Jam?s F... Lincoln.
Sergeants, Kellogg, ie:in u, no. r-iane,
McVey. James C. Bridgeport. Ostermeyer,
Karl A., Dakota City, Stutheit, Arthur L.,
No. Platte. Hammond, Blaln C. Waiin.
Melick. Lloyd M., Omaha, Senften, Jack
W., Genoa; Barbui, James V.. (leneva;
Shellbcrg, Simon G., Jr., Bloomfleld.
Company B.
First Sergeant, Roland M . Kearney;
Stall Serg-rants, Pehler. Carl E., Crete;
Wheeler. William R.. Lincoln.
Sergeant, Kosenbaum, Robert W., Ar
lington; Neiman, lildon A., Cook; Green,
Richard M., Sidney; Whedon, Burt D.,
Lincoln; Dodson, Norm in G., Verango;
Watson, John VV., Lincoln; Hollabaush,
Richard A., Nebraska City; Judd. Robert
M., North Platte; Jensen, Omar B., Alma.
Company C.
First Sergeant, Beagren, Richard D.,
Omaha.
Staff Sergannta, Johnle. Paul 8., Grand
Island; Hunter, John C, North Platte.
Sergeant, Canned, Roger S.. Alliance;
Docsey. Edwin D., Lincoln; Hssby, La
von P., Lincoln; Hargrsv. Mark C.
Klngsport. Tenn.; Bettenhausen. Donald
Lincoln: Bennett. Jesse K., Lincoln; Ker
sey, Kit on V... Grand Island: Gralib, Wll
ham H., Wllber; Neal, Gordon W., Dal-
ton.
CmPH l.
First Sarffaaat, Doyle, Jess M., Oma
ha.
Staff Sergeants, Richardson, Donald O.
Omaha; Sorensen, Robert L., Lincoln.
Sergeants. Sedlak, R. Jacol). Bee; Daly,
John M . Omaha: Craudall. Don B . Lin
coln; Keller, Leo M., Seward; Conle,
Charlea W.. Lincoln; Gorham. W. Smiley
Franklin; Wolford. James C. Fairmont
Rosecarns, James M., Dlnton; Damkroger.
Vern J., .DeWitt; Murray, Lester E.
Omaha.
llvrANTRf I'XIT.
Brigade Colors.
Master Sergeant, Zfnn, William D.
Sioux City.
Sergeant, Morrison, Walter F., Belvl
dere.
New Machine
Now Records
Choral Music
DETROIT. Mich. (ACP). To fill
a need pft?n expressed by music
educators, the Wayne university
A cappeiia choir will provide re
corded choral music on a nation
wide basis, thru a recording tech
nique just announced by its direc
tor. Prof. Harold Tallman. His two
years' investigation has solved
perplexing technical problems that
long have retarded the recording
of choral music.
"Vocal-group music has proved
far more difficult to record than
instrumental groups of music,'
Professor Tallman explains, "be
cause a voice is directional while
an instrument is not. Thus a mic
rophone close to the group pro
duces a recording distorted in fa
vor of the nearest singers; while a
microphone far enough away to
give an over-all impression pro
duces a recording without warmth
one that is 'tinny ' and median
ical."
The solution was an arrange
ment of studio microphones which
preserved proper balance. Profes
sor Tallman solved the problem
last summer while teaching at the
University of Southern California
He sought the approval of Holly
wood sound technicians before re
leasing the recordings for sale to
Gamble Hinged-Music company
Chicago, recorders of educational
music. Royalties are to be re
turned to the university to further
the choir's musical activities.
WE USE SOFT WATER
r
o
J'A
p
I
f c
Merla StinbraoK, Mgr.
Franks Barber Shop g U
Ft i 1
I
130G-O St.
Regimental Colors.
Technical Sergeant, Durland, Peter R.,
Norfolk.
Sergeant. Kelso, John R.. Lincoln: Fer
guson, James L., West Point.
Tampan y A.
First Sergeant, Loonili, George W.,
Omaha.
Staff Sereeanta, Toy, Tony. O'Netll:
Shepherd. Merlyn, Elwood.
Serpeants, Leininger, William H., De
troit, Mich.; Gaunt, Audrey C. KllsworUi;
Schwartz. John L. , Memphis, Tenn.; Ben-
ett, Bernard H., Omana; Puppas, Hir-
Llncoln; HigRina. Jonn R. . Grand
Island; Wegint, Robert J.. Lincoln; Haw-
Ins, William C, Omaha; Glasler, Bertyl
., Osceola.
Corporal!. Brown, Clarence K.. Lincoln;
Martin. Burl H., Lincoln; Wood. Wendell
, Lincoln; Story. William J.. Mx-ell;
Hhanyfelt. Donald L.. Long Pine; Han
sen, Howard D., Lincoln.
Company B.
First Sergeant, Mattoon, Frank J., Be-
trice.
Staff Sergeants, Kohotit. Benjamin K.,
Lincoln: Buckley. Lester M., Lincoln.
Sergeanta, Mover. Frank N., Yoik;Mo-
Lafferty, Fred W., Omaha; Dean, Jo'in
Lincoln; Wvkert, Paul v., Lincoln;
Mitchell, Meredith W.. Grand island: Mc-
Hhland, Benjamin W. , Geneva; Seeoi'l,
James A., Omaha; Holcler. Edward J.,
Ogallala; Fisher, Laird B., Red Cloud.
Coiporals, McDowell, Wallace k .
Handy; Neal. John R.. Wahoo; O'Neill,
Thomas. Omaha; Reiehcl. Henry J., I.ti
coln; Schlecel, Eugene B , Beatrice; Gil-
mour, Robert H., Lincoln.
Cnany C.
First Sergeant. Johnson, Dean R., Cht-
tis.
Staff Sergeants, Robinson. Willi J.,
Lincoln: Lowe. Robert 8., Lincoln.
Sergeants, Ruhrhaugh. Robert .1. R ,
Lincoln: F.lson, Kenneth H., Sidney;
Smcerin. Korman N., Fort Worth, Te- ;
fonl.mith. Rldrick. York; K nicely. Jnck
R.. Omaha; DePutran, Adrian, Lincoln;
Bloom, Clifton E., McCook.
Corporals, Cassidy, Fred J. Jr.. Iln-
eoln; Greenlee, Charles E.. OsliUosh;
Scott. Merrill. Omaha; Henderson, Rt-
rt E. , Lincoln.
Cwnpany I.
First Sergeant, Taylor, Lawrenta t..
Lincoln.
Staff Sergeants, Franklin. Rodney L..
Omaha; Silverman, Robert A., Omahi.
Sergeants, Lincoln, Arthur F., Norih
Platte; Hahn. Norman L., Omaha; IMg
land. Harold A., Winner, 8. D. ; Eaton.
Clifford W., Cozad: Ranz, Jack V., Lin-
coin; Meyer. Carroll M., Colntnbus; Don
ley. Jack R., Lincoln; Diris, Josemi J ,
Lincoln; Chun. Esmond C Honolulu.
Corporals, Hontcbena, Rodger I., Creelr,
Colo.; Gibson, Charles H., Jr.. Bost'-ich;
Porlwood. Robert E.. Nelson; Nelsoi, B-rt
J., Lincoln: Busoman. Robert B. Omaha)
Meroney. Franklin, North Platte.
Cnmftanjr K.
First Sergeant, Walstrom, Robert J.t
Omaha.
Staff Sergeant. Lampshire. Earl L..
Lincoln; Recce, Eugene A., Ashland.
Sergeants. Rasmussen, James A.. Gmna
Island; Helnzclman, Robert J.. Falls City;
Grossman, Harold 8., Lincoln: Murray,
Robert C, Sioux City; Marvin. Henry,
Lincoln: Borghnff, John A., Omaha: Mutt
son. Robert D., Cieston. la.: Barritt,
William C, Union; Peterson, Dea.i, Avoct.,
Iowa.
Corporals, Irwin, Clyde C. Oenv
Bierbo'er, James J.. Glltner: Gotzdiner,
Yale, W., Council Bluffs, la.; Baker. Bar-
(See Non-Coms, Page 4.)
Faatarlar
KAY McKINLEY
America's Creatett
Brimmer
9W
17
Kal Stan Direct fraai
SHkRMAN Hatel. Chlnf
The Band that v( yea
"Beat Me. Daadv. Elkt ta
the Bar." "Sarah Ma,
Mama, With a Baagl Baal."
VBC WITWOKK
COI.l MBIA BEC'OaoS
I
M Al I nWR'PM nnc ft3
FRIDAY, Oct. 31 :
TlekMi Only T7 Eaeh, flat
Tax, at tha Tarnpika Baa
Offlea.
r i tit- ;t'wc.a aw i,i .. i i l
Saturdoy and Sunday
Ray Paul
and His 17 Piece
Orchestra
3 u L
X AND NIS OICRfSTI A
9 H