The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 13, 1942, Image 1

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    UNIVERSITY OF NEB
Vol. 42, No. 17
Lincoln Nebraska
Tuesday, October 13, 1942
War Council Plans
Jork Pistribuiom
. . . Thru Manpower Group
Newest plan of the Student War
Council is the organizing of its
own Manpower Commission to
handle volunteer work for campus
war activities of all types. This
commission will be composed of a
representative leader from all or
ganized houses, dormitories, co
ops, and any other interested
groups whose duty wil be to sup
ply the workers needed from his
house for the volunteer work of
the moment.
Student chairmen of the various
war activities will gather the num
ber of workers she will require
from various houses, apportioning
the workers so that no one organ
ization is called upon for more
than its share of work.
The principal duty of the rep
resentatives in the Manpower
Commission will be to organize
his house for the program and to
find workers when his house is
called upon for aid.
Names of Manpower Leaders
must be at the Union office by
noon today. All leaders from worn
en's organizations are asked to at
tend a meeting at 5:30 Thursday
in Ellen Smith to discuss Surgical
Dressings. The requirements of
workers for that work, the sched
ule, and the quota of each house
will be outlined by Catherine
Wells.
Alice Becker
Names Staff
Of Yearbook
Spilling ink on the copy pages
of the 1943 yearbook for the first
time this year, Cornhusker Editor
Alice Louise Becker announced the
appointment of 23 section editors
and assistants yesterday.
Paul Toren will edit the opening
section, with Virginia McCulla and
Maty Russel in charge of the ad
ministration and women s sections
respectively. Co-editing the sec
tion on classes will be Fin Howard
and Myron Rubnitz, while Pat
Catlin and Pat Herminghaus hold
similar positions on the beauty
queens staff.
Jeanie Browne and Kay Det
weiler were named as campus life
editors while Norris Anderson, as
sisted by Myra Colberg and Mar
jorie Mengshol will head the
literary staff, Tom Drummond
and Dick Foe the military section.
Greek sections staffs will be
headed by Johnson Anderson and
Polly Ann Petty; Wayne South-
(See YEARBOOK, Page 3.)
Ex-Governor
Landon Sees Kansas Scrap
Win, Ponders Grid Outcome
In the breathing spell between
halves of Saturday's game the
Daily's roving reporter caught a
few words with Former-Governor
Alfred M. Landon, of Kansas.
"I think Kansas will win that
scrap bet over Nebraska, but I'm
not so sure about the annual Nebraska-Kansas
scrap!" replied the
'genial Kansan when queried as to
the outcome of the present compe
tiiton between the two states.
When questioned as to whether
he could give the same reply after
... At Indiana Game
seeing the numerous scrap piles on
the campus, Landon stuck to his
former statement, but also ex
pressed his amazement at the uni
versity s success in the scrap
drive.
'It displays fine energy, patriot
ism and hard work on the part of
the students," he stated heartily.
Governor Landon visited the Phi
Gamma Delta fraternity, of which
he is a member, yesterday morn
ing, and viewed the Homecoming
decorations.
Students. File Up 50
St
tell
r-4 A
J
'
IF
f
v
i
Courtesy Sunday Journal anil S;ar.
Representing the army, civilian scrap judges and students, Col. Early E. W. Duncan (in uniform).
Dan Hill fat right front), Ray Osborn, and J. Welsh Rose with Delta Delta Delta soroity members
during Nebraska's 150 ton homecoming scrap drive.
IP
apnimtt
Sunless
T1 J
llLLKLs SIX UUL
After the first evening of University The
ater season ticket sales by Tassels the pros
pects are excellent for the largest sale In a
number ot years, according to Virginia ruru,
Tassel chairman for the sale.
Reasons for the brisk sales and prospects
are the best schedule of plays in many a
season, the "new reservation plan and the
thoro campaign which is being made, Miss
Ford said.
Canvass Campus.
Tassels, selling tickets for the five feature
Ok
productions of the theater for two dollars plus
a 20 cent federal tax, have or will have visited
before the campaign ends on. Friday every
sorority, fraternity and organized house on
the campus to describe the entertainment to
be offered this year by the theater.
Ticket booths will be set up today in the
Union, social science hall, and in the physical
laboratory for the benefit of engineers, while
representatives will tour ag campus.
In addition Tassels will speak and sell
(See THEATRE, Page 4.)
Femme Reporter Nearly
Nabs Capt. Glenn Miller
BY PAT CHAMBERLIN.
Crime don't pay. I ain't never
been so wore down. Ya see, it
was like dis.
Some sorority big-timer, gets a
advance view on the fact that
Barb Leaders Start Question
Mark Year with New Program
BY MARJORIE MAY.
(TAHor't ante: Mariortr May ku fc M tiv member
I bar nnuiluUltia fur In. ymr Baa report km kr
vtra at Uwlr firal RWrttni.)
The barbs are a bunch of rookies this year.
In almost all phases of the NIA'S program
new leaders are taking over, but, like the St.
l)uis Cardinals, they may come through with
a successful year if
As always there's a lot of ifs connected with
barb activities. To enumerate this year's ques
tion marks:
1. How will the present well-planned district
system continue to work?
Awake or Not?
2. Will the at times indifferent, but not
dead, interest of unaffiliated students in ac
tivities rise to an enthusiastic height, as it did
two years agot Or will lack of interest pre
vent barb leaders from carrying out their
ideas, no matter how well organized the pro
gram! Last year was an example of this
inertia.
3. Are the initial efforts of the new leaders I
only a start as to what will come, or will their
hard work dwindle into nothing?
4. And, perhaps most important, will politics
outshine social activities again, making the
entire interest in MA work depend on the two
yearly elections, which at best can concern
only a few of the 3.000 or 4,000 barb students?
All of these questions hinge on three things:
the NIA organization itself, the leaders, and
the general mass of barbs.
Organized last spring to do away with sev
eral independent barb institutions, the Barb
Council, Barb Union, and BAIiW, the Ne
braska Independent Association was the brain
child of William V. R. "Bill" Dafoe, barb
boss last year who is, at least temporarily, con
centrating on law school and letting the NIA
go its own way.
: Use District System.
The NIA organization is based on the dis
trict system. The university campus and Lin
coin residential system are divided into four
districts, from each of which students elect one
, (See PROGRAM, rage z.)
He Gets Around
Glenn Miller (yeah, De G. M.)
minus his band, of course, is in
Lincoln at the Cornhusker. It
seems she even knows someone
who had grub with him. I didn't.
So she ups and tells me just in
time to rattle me for my big date
Friday night. So I jitters all evn'-ing.
No Cut Comin'.
Saturday morn bright and early
at 10:30 a. m. I reports to de rag,
expectin' my cut for de hot tip,
like when I was a bookie, see?
Well, so dey says I gotta interprete
him to de pupas or something, any
way so I calls up de secretary at
the hotel who I used lo know ai
Freddie's before she hit the meal
ticket, and asks where he is.
She musta had a big night Fri
day, too, because she sorta yelled
hopelesslike, "God, I don't know!"
That don't do me no good so
hops down to the snooty man at
the Cornhusker desk who after
some physical persuasion says the
captain (only he said cawptawn)
was at the air base.
Muttering all the way about the
government's selection of cawp-
tawns when dey would only put
me back in the state pen if dey
found out me real monnicker,
hurries down to Ace's favorite pool
hall to borry his car, which ain't
so hot as the one he borried in
Grand Island, but he's been in on
a lot of deals, and I knowed he
would be willin' for a cut.
Vehicle Vanishes.
Sure, I finds him, but his car
is just lifted itself, so dat is dat
So I drags me back to de rag, and
picks up a convertible on de way.
Pretty neat. I ain't lost de old
(See MILLER, Page 3.)
Regents Make
New Changes
In UN Set-Up
Approve A Year Around
Plan of School Work As
Summer Quarter Added
Changes in university faculty
and administrative personnel were
announced today as approved Sat
urday at the meeting of the board
of regents. Besides the action
taken on faculty appointments,
the regents voted .to continue the
two-semester schedule as in the
past and add a full summer
quarter. The semesters will be
equal to three quarters when a
student wishes to carry a year-
round course of study.
Among the appointments were
G. M. Severson as research chem
ist on the chemurgy project, Por
tia Boynton as instructor in dra
matics and English at ag campus,
and Margery Kuplic as instructor
in physical education for women.
Mrs. Helen Travis Avery becomes
instructor in voice.
Gorbach Takes Music.
Samuel Gorbach was appointed
in place of Emanuel Wishnow,
associate professor in the school
of music, who was granted a leave
of absence for military service.
Robert J. Sreitwieser will lecture
in psychiatric social work in place
of Robert J. Stein who is on leave.
Two new heads of the women's
residence halls are Lura Aspin
wall, Northeast Hall, and Marjorie
Johnston, Raymond.
Resignations included those of
R. T. Prescott, agricultural editor;
Marcella Mason, instructor in ele
mentary education; Faye Thomp
son, instructor in physical educa
tion for women; Oliver Egleston,
Instructor in English; and Frank
(See REGENTS, Page 2.)