The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 15, 1946, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    JJi.
Vol. 47 No. 16
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Tuesday, October 15, 1946
Juniors Choose Class
President Thursday
The second election for junior
class president has been set for
Thursday, Helen Laird, election
chairman, announced. The polls
will be open from 9 until 6 in the
Union basement, and all juniors
who registered at the Union last
week are eligible to vote.
First flection. '
The first election was declared
invalid, not only because of a dis
crepancy between the number of
votes cast and the number of
voters registered, but also because
of a large number of students
whose voting eligibility had not
been determined. During the past
week the elections committee has
spent long hours checking the
number of credit hours earned by
numerous students in law, den
tistry, and engineering to ascer
tain which of these are of junior
standing; these additional juniors
will be eligible to vote at this
week's election.
The election on ag campus was
declared to be valid, and the votes
from ag will be counted with this
week's election on city campus.
The only ag students who will
have to cast their ballots for a
second time are those who voted
in the city campus election.
The student council election
committee will supervise Thurs
day's election, and the judiciary
committee will count the votes.
The candidates for junior class
presidency are Jackie Tobin, Dale
Novotny, and Darrell Devoe.
Dr. J. P. Decker
Named Botany
Staff Member
Jew Assistant Professor of
Plant Physiology is Dr. John P.
Decker, formerly Major Decker
of the Army Air Force. His spe
cialty is photosynthesis and he is
-the author of several articles on
photosynthetic processes in pines
and hardwoods published by Plant
Physiology Magazine in 1944.
Jr. Decker recalls serving with
the Ninth Air Force during the
Normandy invasion. Last year he
was Chief of Physiological Sec
jionett the Air Forces Proving
Grounds in Florida, in which ca
pacity he wrote numerous mili
tary research articles for the Air
Force. Previously Dr. Decker was
Director of Altitude Training at
Westover Field, Mass. and Instruc
tor of Ecology at Troy, Alabama,
State Teacher's College.
Although he names Spokane,
Wash, his home, Decker received
his B.S. at the University of Idaho,
and hi? A.M. and Ph.D. at Duke
University.
KU Game Rules1
All women attending the KU
game this weekend who are
not traveling on the special
train and who plan to stay in
Kansas overnight, must make
previous arrangements for a
place to stay and give their
housemothers the address, ac
cording to Mimi Ann Johnson,
AWS president.
It was also announced that
the weekend in Kansas will not
count as one of the three out-of-town
weekends granted to
university women during a se
mester. Coeds must sign in at
their houses Sunday, as soon as
they return from Kansas.
Friendship
Banquet Set
For Oct. 23
Tickets are now on sale for the
annual Coed Counselor Friend
ship dinner and fashion show
which will be held October 23
at 6:00 p. m. in the Union ball
room. Tickets may be obtained
from a coed counselor and are 60
cents.
One of the largest events to
be sponsored by any university
organization throughout the year,
this dinner is planned to help
new students become acquainted
with the university and other
students, upperclassmen as well
as freshmen. The coed counselors
regret, however, that accommoda
tions for the entire group of new
students is impossible ,and a limit
of 550 tickets has been set for
the dinner. They urge you to get
your tickets soon if you plan to
attend.
Included on the program is the
annual campus style show in
See BANQUET, Page 3
Means Reveals
Addition of Three
Health services
Three additional services have
been added to the University's
student health program, Louis E.
Means, director of student phys
ical welfare, announced Monday.
Special afternoon periods for
treatment and diognosis are now
available to College of Agricul
ture students, supplementing the
morning clinical service. Miss
Mary Fager, has been appointed
as full time registered nurse for
students living in women's resi
dence halls. For emergency duty,
two registered nurses will be
available at all times for students.
Newspaper Concert Series
Presents U.S. Marine Band
BY SAM WARREN.
The United States Marine Band,
under the direction of Capt. Wil
liam Santelman, will present a
concert Saturday night in the
coliseum as the second attraction
of the Lincoln Newspapers series.
Oldest musical organization in
the nation, the U. S. Marine Band
has performed for every president
since George Washington and con
sequently has been dubbed the
"President's Own."
Authorized by congress in 1775,
the band calls Washington, D. C,
its home and is housed in the
marine barracks there. The band
performs on all official occasions
of state, exhibiting extreme versa
tiliy. Festive and funeral events
alike hear the Marine Band' perform.
For example, it has played at
the inauguration of every presi
dent since John Adams, at the
White House weddings of presi
dents' daughters, and the funeral
marches of the several presidents
who have died in office. In addi
tion, a regular public-concert
schedule is maintained.
The band selcfom strays from
the nation's capital, and this year
marks its first nation-wide tour.
The band's management boasts
that it is able this year to fill only
a portion of the engagements re
quested by cities over the country.
Tickets are on sale at ' Walts'
Music Store where students and
service men in uniform may pur
chase seats at 50 cents. Reserved
section seats sell for $2.80, down
to $1.20.
Wqdtf EDamac uqcbcbiiii
Vespers Will
Meet Weekly
On Thursday
Beginning this week, the all
university Vespers which have
been held on Tuesdays during the
last several years will be pre
sented regularly each Thursday.
Meeting weekly at 5 p. m. in room
315 of the Union, Vespers are a
project of the Religious Welfare
Council.
The change of time is scheduled
in order to avoid activity con
flicts, enabling more students, es
pecially music students, to partici
pate, according to Beverly Sievers,
chairman. Miss Sievers declared
that the Religious Welafre Coun
cil which sponsors Vespers is a
representative body composed of
members from various church de
nominations and from the YWCA
and YMCA, and that 'Vespers are
designed to appeal to students of
all faiths.
Members of the planning com
mittee are Elaine Bratt; Priscilla
Flagg, Betty Fuhrman, Lois Gil
lett, Myrle Holler, Willabea Ste
vens, Marjorie Ice, Max Kors, Don
Schmitt and Warren Thomas. Gor
don Lippitt is advisor to the group.
YW PROJECT.
Vespers were formerly a project
of the YWCA and in the early
1900's were held in the Temple
theater. After 1919 services, were
held in Ellen Smith Hall follow
ing the purchase of the building
in that year. In the fall of 1944
Vespers moved to the Union and
See VESPERS, Page 4
Wulf Awarded
Borden'sHome
Ec Scholarship
Helen Wulf, senior, has been
awarded the $300 Borden Home
Economics scholarship for 1946-47,
according to an announcement by
Miss Margaret Fedde, chairman of
the university department of home
economics.
This award is granted annually
to the senior student majoring in
home economics who has the high
est grade average in her class.
Helen Is a member of Mortar
Board, Home Economics club, Stu
dent Faculty Council, Delta
Omicron and Phi Upsilon Omicron
home economics honorary socie
ties. In her freshman year, she
was elected to Alpha Lambda
Delta, honorary scholarship organ
ization for freshman women.
Union Sponsors
Siesta Film Hour
This Afternoon
Activities in the Union today
will be highlighted by the Siesta
film hour in the lounge this after
noon at 4:30.
v
Travel shorts and cartoons will
comprise the hour program which
is open to all students, free of
charge.
The second in a series of social
dance classes sponsored by. the
Union willi be held in the ball
room Tuesday night at 7:30. Don
na McCandlesS, instructor in
charge of the dancing class, has
invited all interested students to
attend. There is no charge for
dance instruction.
Corn Gohs
Corn Cob meeting will be
held in the Union tonight at
5:00, instead of the usual time
of 7:30. All meetings for the
rest of the year will be held at
5 p. m. also, and all Corn Cob
pledges and actives should be
present, according to Art Bein
dorff, vice president of the organization.
New Student
Parking Lots
Announced
L. F. Seaton, operating superin
tendent of the university, an
nounced late Monday establish
ment of four new parking areas
for students which will accommo
date a combined total of 280 cars.
The areas:
' On Tenth street (west side) be
tween T and U streets. This area
will accommodate about 125 cars
and can be entered from the mid
dle of the block.
On T street, between 14 and
15th streets. This area is com
prised of two vacant lots and
will accommodate 35 cars.
On 14th streets, just north and
behind the new armory building
being constructed adjacent to the
Coliseum. This area will hold
about 90 cars.
On Vine street at 15th street,
just cast and north of the Ban
croft school building. These vacant
lots will hold about 30 cars.
These parking lots will be avail
able to students at all times, seven
days a week except the lot on
Tenth street opposite the stadium
which is an official parking area
on days when Nebraska plays
games at home.
All the areas are to be cindered
in the near future, Mr. Seaton
said. He urged students to park
their vehicles as efficiently as pos
sible in order that lots may be
used to their maximum accommo
dation. He added that these addi
tional parking areas should enable
many students to park closer to
the campus and eliminate the
necessity of double parking on the
coliseum mall which is considered
as a traffic hazard.
Required AWS
Quiz Scheduled
For Wednesday
All freshman women and trans
fer students will be required to
take a test on A.W.S. rules on
Wednesday. It is necessary that
everyone in these two classifica
tions be present to take this test,
for attendance will be checked,
according to an announcement by
Mimi Ann Johnson, president of
the A.W.S.
The schedule for the times tests
will be given is: Dorms:
Raymond Hall: 7:30 p. m.-8 p m.
Love Memorial: 8:00 p. m.-8:30
p. m.
North East: 8:30 p. m.-9:00 p. m.
Anyone who can not be present
at these times should appear from
9 p. m.-lO p. m. in North East
Organized Houses:
All freshmen living in Co-op
houses and transfer girls living in
any organized house will take the
exam in room 315 at the Union
between the hours of 5:30 and
7:30 p. m.
Ag Campus:
Girls living cn the Ag campus
will take the exam at 303 Ag
Hall from 8 to 8:30 p. m.
A. W. S. Board members will
be in charge of all of these ex
aminations.
Ag students will vote for their
Farmer Formal Queen and her
attendants for the first time since
1942, when they go to the polls
in Ag hall between 9 a. m. and
6 p. m. today. The Farmer For
mal, an annual event on Ag cam
pus before the war, will return
a
in all its previous trappings.
Each student will vote for three
candidates with the senior girl
receiving the highest total of votes
being elected Queen. The next six
senior women elected, will be her
court of attendants. All students
on Ag campus are eligible to vote
and a list of senior women who
are qualified for Queen or at
tendant will be posted at the
polls.
The election was set in ad
vance of the actual dance in order
to have time for presentation cos
tumes to be made according to
Phil Lyness, Farmer Formal pub
licity chairman.
Students will attend the dance,
a formal in name only, in jeans
or calico dresses to add color to
the general decorative plans.
Smith Warren's orchestra will
provide music for the affair which
will be climaxed by the presenta
tion of the Queen and her court.
Tickets for Farmer's Formal can
be obtained at the Union, at the
door the night of the dance, or
from the Ag Executive Board
which is sponsoring the dance.
The tickets priced at $2.00 the
couple will include both dancing
and refreshments which will be
served in Activities Hall.
Director Raps
Dilator yTactics
Ofl8YearOlds
Reports received from a num
ber of counties in the state indi
cate that many men students who
have reached the age of 18 are
negligent and dilatory in report
ing to the Selective Service Sys
tem for registration, according to
Brig. Gen. Guy N. Henninger,
state director for Nebraska.
Failure to register within five
days after arriving at the age of
18 years is a violation of the act
which provides severe penalties,
both fine and imprisonment. Gen
eral Henninger cautions prospec
tive registrants that carelessness
and ignorance of the law are no
excuse. Delays in registration have
a tendency to disrupt the prepara
tion of records in the local board
offices.
National Bridge
Tourney Includes
Over 300 Colleges
Over 300 colleges and univer
sities will be invited to participate
in a nation-wide inter-college
contract bridge contest for a na
tional championship cup, which
will be held in 1947, Foster M.
Coffin, Cornell University, chair
man of the Inter-college. Bridge
Tournament has announced.
The 1947 event will be a dupli
cate tournament for under-grad-uate
pairs, with the title of Na
tional Inter-college Champions go
ing to the winning team. Pre
liminary rounds will be conducted
by mail. Sixteen teams represent
ing every section of the country
will be selected through the mail
competition for face-to-face finals
in Chicago on April 18 and 19.
In previous years the tourna
ment has been restricted to East
ern schools.
1
I
i
I
1
?
u
1
ft
1
P
s
)
'(
It.
I
fi
I-
a-
I
I.
r
i
K
1 rv&fVti&iWC