The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 30, 1946, Image 1

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Vol. 47 No. 27
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Wednesday, October 30, 1946
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Homecoming activities this
weekend all point toward a home
coming unparalleled in the 77
year history of the university.
Every organized house on the
campus has entered the Innocent
sponsored house decoration com
petition. Co-chairmen Joy Hill and
Don Kline report general cam
pus enthusiasm to be at a peak,
and Coach Bernie Masterson and
his Cornhuskers are said to be
facing Saturday's game with con
fidence. Placing events in their chrono
logical order, the first official
act will be voting for Pep Queen
on Friday morning in the Union
form 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday
night at 7:00 the' Homecoming
rally will start, under the direc
tion of Yell King Art Beindorff
and the cheerleading squad. Bein
dorff says a featured attraction
, will be the burning of the Mis
souri Tiger after a torchlight pa
rade and bon-fire.
Parade at 10:30
At 10:30 a.m., Saturday, the
many entries in the Homcoming
parade will meet at the Quad
rangle behind the Tassle float
which is slated to lead the proces
sion. The Tassel-Corn Cob com
Dr. Lindstrom
Will Address
4g Convocation
Dr. David E. Lindstrom, profes
sor of rural sociology at the Uni
versity of Illinois, will be guest
speaker at a convocation Novem
ber 12 in the College Activities
Building, highlighting Religion in
Life Week on the ag campus.
Beginning at 4 p. m. and last
ing until 8 p. m., the convocation
will include, besides the address
by Dr. Lindstrom, recreation, sup
per, and an evening program
sponsored by YM-YW. Accord
ing to Francis Wagner, chairman
of the Ag Religious Council pub
licity committee, everyone is in
vited to attend the convocation,
and a special invitation is ex
tended to veterans and . their
wives..
Ag Graduate
Dr. Lindstrom will speak on
"Opportunities for Christian Serv
ice in Rural Areas," and "The
Rural Church in a Christian Na
tion." A native Nebraskan, Dr. Lind
strom received his Bachelors de
gree from the university college of
agriculture. He received his
Masters degree from the Univer
sity of Wisconsin, and his Doctors
from the University of Illinois.
He has written several books and
has served as president of the
Illinois Church Council; chairman
of the conference between theo
of agriculture; chairman of Il
linois Community Relations com
linois Community Relations com
mittee, and secretary of Illinois
Rural Life Conference.
University
Theater
Presents
MI
EVENINGS
8 P. M.
NOV. 1
MATINEE
10 A. M,
mittee in charge of the parade,
has announced, the official start
ing time as 11:00 a.m., a change
from the previously announced
time of 10:30. Marching down R
street, the university band will
take the procession to 10th street,
turning east on O street to 16th
and then back to the Union, along
16th.
Following the parade, the tra
ditional tug of war to decide
whether freshmen must wear
their beanies, will be held be
tween freshmen and upperclass
men at the Quadrangle. Miss
Hill and Klein again emphasized
the change in time, moving the
tug of war back one half hour to
10:00 a.m.
Colorful Game.
Then, in all the colorful
pageantry of a Big Six Home
coming, the university will meet
the University of Missouri at
2:00 p.m. in what has been billed
as the outstanding football game
scheduled in the conference this
week.
Between halves of the game,
and highlighted by Nebraska's
nationally famous marching band,
Jackie Tobin, 1945-46 pep queen
See HOMECOMING, pace 2.
Prospective
UN Queens
Announced
Names of candidates entering
the Cornhusker beauty queen con
test for preliminary judging trials
in the Union lounge at 12:45 to
day have been announced by Joan
Frankhauser, managing editor of
the yearbook.
Girls selected to enter the con
test and the organization each
represents are: Alpha Chi Omega,
Joyce Stuve, Marilyn Denison,
Betty Chipman, Eleanor Stahl;
Alpha Omicron Pi, Tottie Fiddock,
Roberta Faes; Alpha Phi, Pat
Thompson, Shirley Eskilsen, Pat
Warren; Alpha Xi Delta, Mary
Armour, Marjorie Wade; Chi
Omega, Donna Wagner, Pat Fel-
ger; Delta Gamma, Mimi Loomis,
Joanne Patton, Gloria Stephens;
Delta Delta Delta, Louise Rowley,
Ruth Byers; Kappa Alpha Theta.
Ann Phillips, Meredith Bowhay,
Virginia Kellison; Kappa Kappa
uamma, bmrley Lierk, Barbara
Busch, Sheila Curran; Pi Beta Phi,
Betty Lou Mauch, Sue Cochran:
Sigma Delta Tau, Mildred Zuber;
Sigma Kappa, Elva Cobb, Rose
mary Deffenbaugh; Residence
Halls for Women, Louise Meis
bach, Shirley Mason, Beth Wilson;
Carl Hall, Elaine Hensel; Interna
tional House, Eloise Jones; Conk
ling Hall, Shirley Pohl. Dorean
Guettler; Gamma Phi Beta, Kay
nam, jean Metzger, Barbara Row-
See QUEENS, pare 2.
YW Council
The Y. W. C. A. Member
ship Council will meet in the
southwest room of Ellen Smith
today at 5 p. m., accor." :j to
Mimi Ann Johnson, chairman.
SEOTIEm
OCT. 30, 31
and 2 .
NOV. 2
Deadline Set
For Colonel
Candidates
Five o'clock this afternoon has
been set as the deadline for senior
women to file in the Student Ac
tivities office as candidates for
Honorary Colonel of the Military
Ball.
To be eligible, the candidate
must be a qualified senior with
scholastic average of at least 80.
One girl will be permitted to file
from each organized house, and
the number of filings of independ
ent women has riot been restricted.
Preliminary.
A committee of Mortar Boards
and Innocents will judge the can
didates at a preliminary contest
to be held in the Union ballroom
at 4 p. m. Thursday. Five finalists
will be selected, and an all stu
dent election will be held Nov.
5 to elect the Honorary Colonel.
All students will be eligible to
vote, but they must present their
identification cards io election of
ficials when they report for vot
ing in the Union basement next
Tuesday between 9 a. m. and 6
p. m.
SsmiimsmiaL $&rfI&mcwL, (Band.
(pjwvid&, Wjul&juwL Spectacle.
BY MARTHELLA IIOLCOMB
There we were, baclistage at the
Fabulous Dorsey concert, flat on
an instrument case. Tommy was
out in the middle of the floor, a
gentleman's gentleman perfectly
dressed in double-breasted grey,
replete with printed silk tie and
tan shoes. And when that trom
bone came into play, TD was a
musician's musician, everything
perfectly done.
The smooth flow of that famous
theme song, gliding from behind
the velvet curtain into the dark
ened coliseum sent the audience
into a trance which held them
through 'Opus Number One' and
Dorsey's best known 'Song of
India.'
After more than eleven years
of recording, Dorsey can't recall
how many pieces his outfit has
recorded. As he put it, "Kids are
always bringing up platters I don't
remember recording. I don't even
have a complete set myself."
SUII Records.
With two more years to run in
his current recording contract
with Victor, Dorsey is already
dreaming of years filled with fish
ing tackle. Following a decade
on the road, he's longing for the
time when he can say "This looks
Opening Tonight
General Admission 60c
Reserve Seats 7Se
The University Theatre is opening its 1946-47 season
this evening at 8 p. m. with "My Sister Eileen," a three act
comedy by Joseph Fields and Jerome Chodorov. Subsequent
performances are scheduled for Thursday, Friday, and Sat
urday evenings and Saturday morning at 10 a. m.
Bragg Slated
For Second
Convocation
Dr. Raymond Bragg, editor
world-traveller and lecturer, will
make the second convocation ad
dress of the year in the Union
ballroom Wednesday, November
6, at 3 p.m.
Subject of Dr. Bragg's address
will be "Europe's Rehabilitation
How Far to Go?," announced
Prof. Carl Arndt, chairman of the
convocation committee.
European Traveler.
Dr. Bragg is the associate editor
of the 'Humanist' magazine and
has traveled widely in Europe and
Asia. He attended Brown univer
sity and the University of Chicago
as well as the universities of
Frankfurt and Hamburg in Ger
many. Drawing on his experiences
and education, he has become a
prominent lecturer on foreign re
lations and social and religious
topics.
In addition to his editorial
duties and lectures, Dr. Bragg has
been the minister of the First
Unitarian Church in Minneapolis
since 1935.
like a nice place, let's stay here
for a couple of days.
Asked if he ever got sick of
looking at people in night clubs,
Dorsey made the retort perfecto,
"We never get tired of them. It's
when they're not there you have
to worry."
The soon to be released movie
of Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey's
lives, "The Fabulous Dorceys,"
sticks pretty close to reality, TD
said Monday. Scrms they changed
the scenario a bit here and there
to make it a bit more interesting,
but that's no real detriment ac
cording to Dorsey.
"People aren't interested in
what you have done," he says,
"They're interested in what you're
doing now."
Ziggy Elman, man Friday for
the crew, kept popping up with
appropriate comments through
out the show, a privilege open
only to people whose songs rank
with his "Two O'clock Jump" and
"Six Flats Unfurnished," or who
have played with Dorsey ten
years.
Elman Gathers Ban"
Elman will terminate the long
standing partnership, interrupted
IEHLIEIEM
"My Sister Eileen," is a hilari
ous comedy which has been
adapted from Ruth McKenny's
best-selling no-, zl. It concerns two
career-minded girls who brave
New York City in search of jobs
and adventure. In the latter they
are certainly not disappointed, for
they rent a tiny apartment in
Greenwich Village, through which
flows a never-ending stream of
gamblers, drunks, 'Brazilian future
admirals, and sand hogs.
Double Duty.
The rolls of the two sisters,
Ruth and Eileen, have been double
cast. Dorothea Duxbury and
Helen Plasters will take these
parts on the Wednesday and Fri
day night and Saturday morning
performances, while June Gast
and Arlis Swanson will play these
two leads on Thursday and Sat
urday nights.
A revision of the ushering sys
tem for the first time will be
put in effect tonight, according
to Dallas S. Williams, Director of
the University theatre.
In past years the ushering sys
tem used by the University Thea
tre to take patrons to their re
served seats has been unsatisfac
tory and has been one of the
causes of the delay in taking
See 'EILEEN,' pare 2.
during the war, at the end of this
tour when he starts his own band.
For the first few months he hopes
to book into small night clubs
with no radio time, then after
the polishing up is finished,
they'll make a public debut. As
yet Biggy will release no per
sonnel names.
Stuart Foster, latest successor
to the Sinatra-Haymes tradition,
turned in a performance which
fairly melted the beams. After
Elman's appreciative "Oh,
Frankie," the feminine auditors
settled down to a stillness wuich
would make the Gobi desert seem
noisy. His advance billing as the
'hottest' thing since Sinatra may
be deemed appropriate, at least
that was the opinion of the two
little high schoolers who fought
over his one handkerchief.
Band Adds Girls.
Dorsey's twenty-girl symphonic
section, which he co-ordinated
with the band in Los Angeles be
fore their month-long stand at
the Texas State Fair in Dallas,
added body and depth to his swing
classics. 'Sleepy Lagoon' and
'Rhapsody in Blue', the closing
number, plus 'Hawaiian War
See DORSEY, page 2.
Four
Days
Only
BOX OFFICE HOURS
12:30 to 6.-00 P. M DAILY
OCT. 28 THRU NOV. 2
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