The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 04, 1946, Image 1

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ASUU
Vol. 47 No. 49
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
Wednesday, December 4, 1946
m 0 Eligible Men
Every woman student is eli
gible to vote tomorrow for 22 Eli
gible Bachelor candidates. The
eight winners will be presented
at the Mortar Board Ball, Dec. 13.
according to Virginia Demel. Ball
chairman.
Included in the group are
Dwight Johnson, Alpha Gamma
Rho; Kenny Younger, Alpha Tau
Omega; George Miller, Beta Theta
Pi; Norbert Tieman, Beta Sigma
Psi; Robert Keller. Delta Tau
Delta: Bill Vecek. Delta Upsilon;
Robert Rauner, Farm House; Bill
Palmer, Kappa Sigma; Bruce Al
len, Phi Delta Theta: Fritz Wolf,
Phi Gamma Delta; Richard Coyne,
Phi Kappa Psi; Jerry Gardner,
Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Gerald
Moore, Sigma Chi; Jack Young.
Sigma Nu: John Adams, Sigma
Phi Epsilon; Byrne -Swiggert.
Theta Xi; Duke Shumow. Zeta
Beta Tau: Charles Scheinhost,
Cornhusker Co-op: Neils Wodder.
Pioneer Co-op: Dwight Bauer, Ag
Men's Club: Jack Hill, Independ
ent, and Elmer Sprague. Brown
Palace.
Polls will be open in Ellen
Smith Hall Thursday from 9 to 12
a. m. and 1 to 5 p. m.. with
Mortar Boards officiating. Ag Col
lege polling will be carried out
in the Home Ec building from 11
to 2. Printed ballots will make
possible selection of eight candi
dates by each voter.
Pictures of each candidate will
be posted near the voting booths
in Ellen Smith, for the benefit of
women who do not know all the
candidates.
Winning candidates will not be
revealed until the presentation
during the intermission at the
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CHANCELLOR R. G. GUSTAVSON makes the first purchase of
tuberculosis Christmas seals as the first University drive for funds
to fight the disease is opened. Showing the seals to Dr. Gustavson
is Pat Heynen, co-chairman of the campus drive.
To help raise funds to purchase
a mobile X-ray unit for Lancaster
county, the university this week
began its initial drive to sell
$4,000 worth of tuberculosis
Christmas seals.
Pat Heynen and Bill Wiseman
are serving as co-chairmen for
the drive, which is scheduled to
extend until Dec. 21. Wiseman has
expressed a desire to make the
campaign an annual event if this
year's drive proves successful.
50c Contribution.
With the goal set at $4,000, a
Mortar Board Ball, Friday. Dec.
13, in the coliseum.
Spivak Plays.
Mortar Boards revealed yester
day that Charlie Spivak. the man
who plays the sweetest trumpet
in the world, has been signed as
the Ball band.
The New Haven boy protege
whose grade school experimenta
tions with a toy trumpet led him
to give up the medical career his
parents had planned and study
with a local symphony player,
rose last year to top rank among
the sweet bands of the land.
Spivak's meteoric rise to star
billing after an initial engagement
at New Rochelle's famous Casino
Gardens, proving ground for many
a fledgling aggregation, brought
him the cover position on Bill
board magazine recently.
Said Billard. in explaining
Spivak as their choice. "Since he
broke away in 1939 from a long
spell in commercial radio and
formed his own outfit, he's been
setting b o x -office precedents
wherever he's been. When his
outfit was barely a year old he
was booked into the Cafe Rouge
of the Hotel Pennsylvania in New
York and smashed the late Glenn
Miller's record there. His all-time
high hasn't been hit by any other
band since."
What started as a routine four
week stand at the Paramount
theater, showplace of name bands
for the Knickerbocker metropolis,
turned into a record-setting 10
week engagement. This third
showing at the Paramount made
the management decide on making
it five in a row. and they've
booked Spivak for 1947 and 1948.
contribution of 50 cents per stu
dent would fill the university
quota.
Representatives have been ap
pointed by each organized house
to collect contributions. To stimu
late donations, a plaque will be
presented to the house which buys
the greatest amount of seals.
4
If Lancaster county succeeds in
financing a $25,000 mobile X-ray
unit, it will be available for stu
dent X-rays each year. Last fall
the university borrowed the X
ray unit of the Nebraska state
health department. ,
BenKuroki
ToAnalyze
Race Issue
Ben Kuroki, Japanese-American
World war II hero, will dis
cuss the problem of existing racial
intolerance when he speaks on
speaks on "The Unfinished Fight
for Democracy" at the all-university
convocation in the Union
ballroom Thursday at 2 p. m.
Kuroki, one of the most dec
orated heroes of the recent war
and a former Army Air Forces
sergeant, is from Hershey, Neb.
In Ralph Martin's biography of
Kuroki, "Boy From Nebraska,"
he has written of the battle
against racial intolerance en
countered by the former sergeant
upon his return home.
Awarded Citations.
After Kuroki was discharged in
October, 1945, he began his drive
to fight for democracy in Amer
ica. n address he gave at the
Herald-Tribune Forum last No
vember was reprinted in the Jan
uary, 1946, issue of "Readers Di
gest," and was named by the
University of Pittsburgh as one
of five required declamations for
all Pennsylvania high schools.
. Three Distinguish Flying
Crosses, six Oak Leaf Clusters, a
Presidential U.nit Citation and ten
bronze battle stars were awarded
Kuroki during his four years of
service.
Ag Freshman
Wins 4H Club
National Prize
Maurine Steyer, ag college
freshman, has been named win
ner of the national achievement
award by the national 4-H club
committee. As a result of her nom
ination, she will receive an ex
pense paid trip to the National
4-H Club Congress in Chicago this
week; a $200 scholarship, and the
President's Trophy, a chest of sil
ver service.
In her club work, Miss Steyer
has completed 42 different proj
ects including work in clothing,
girls room, canning, yard beautifi-
cation, cooking, gardening, home
making, pure seed, and baby beef
The award is the fourth major
scholarship Miss Steyer has won
In 1945 at the National Club Con
gress, she won a $200 scholarship
for becoming national girls rec
ord champion. She also von a
$100 Farm Underwriters Associa
tion scholarship for her fire pre
vention and safety activities. She
was a winner of the KFAB $150
public speaking scholarship at the
1946 Nebraska 4-H Club Week.
Upon completion of her studies
at the university, she plans to
teach home economics in high
schocL or work as an extension
specialist in home economics. She
is now a member of the Univer
sity 4-H Club.
ASCE Schedules
Construction Film
In Union Today
Including a 16 mm film entitled
"Bridging a Century" the regular
monthly meeting of the student
chapter of the American Society
of Civil Engineers has been sched
uled lor this afternoon at 4 p. m.
in room 315 of the Union.
The motion picture, prepared by
the American Institute of Steel
Constructicn shows the procedure
used in building the Golden Gate
Bridge at San Francisco. Consid
ered to be one of the greatest en
gineering feats in the history of
man, the bridge involved the use
of two cables, thirty-six and one
half inches in diameter and 7,700
feet long.
W. C. Milek, publicity chairman
for the society, has announced the
inclusion of plans for engineer in
spection trips during the regular
business meeting and pointed out
the value of attendance at the
meeting for both the movie and
the discussion period. 1
Vim
Dramatists
Open 'Golden
West' Show
Presented by the Nebraska
Masquers, dramatic honorary so
ciety, the second University Thea
ter production of the year, "Girl
of the Golden West," will open
one week from tonight in Tem
ple theater for a three night run.
The leads in the comedy-drama
of California gold rush days are:
Ann Proper who will play the
part of The Girl who runs a saloon
and dance hall in a California
mining camp. David Andrews a
Johnson, a strarjger who appears
and wins The Girl; and Bill Reese,
playing the part of the sheriff in
the camp.
Cast.
Other cast members include
Nick, the bartender, played by
BUI Renter; Billy Jacqrabbit, an
Indian, Dean Graunke; Wowkle,
an Indian squaw, Barbara Berg
gren; Ashby, sheriff from another
camp, Don Johannes; Sonora
Slim, played by Al Sage; Trinidad
Joe, Joe Moore; deputy sheriff,
Herbert Spence; pony express
rider. Rex Pettijohn; Castro, a
Mexican, Russ Krueger; The Sid
ney Duck, Australian gambler,
John McDonald; Bucking Billy, a
miner, Rodney Franklin; Hand
some Charlie and Happy Haliday,
James Johnston, and Bob Kel
liger. "Girl of the Golden West" is
under the direction of Henry Lee. 1
senior in the speech department. J
Rosenlof Announces Dates
For December Registration
Dr. G. W. Rosenlof, Registrar, announced the procedure and dates
for registration for the second semester, which begins February 3.
The general procedure for early registration has been designed to al
leviate the congestion of the fall registration and is as follows:
1. DATES
a. December 9 to 12 for Sophomores, Juniors, Seniors.
b. January 6 to 18 for students in Junior Division.
2. Each student must make an appointment for registration with
his adviser. Schedules for appointments are posted at the entrance
to the office of each adviser. The student should write his name
on the schedule in the free space
his adviser at that time.
3. Registrations are to be made out in quadruplicate.
4. Registrations must be carefully checked for time conflicts. It
is requested that the daily program
5. When the registration forms
viser will retain one copy. The
taken by the student to the dean
is registered, where they will be
6. The registration forms are to be left in the dean's office.
7. The student's copy of registration will be returned to the stu
dent at the 'appointed time for payment of fees.
8. Payment of fees will be cared
trance). Students must present
ment of fees.
Schedule of dates for payment of fees is as follows:
Students whose surnames begin with letters
A to C inclusive Thursday, January 23.
D to G inclusive Friday, January 24.
H to K inclusive Monday, January 27.
L to N inclusive Tuesday, January 28.
O to Sk inclusive Wednesday, January 29.
SI to Z inclusive Thursday, January 30.
9. Any student failing to pay fees on day assigned will not be
permitted to do so until Friday, January 31 and will then be assessed
a late fee.
10. VETERANS must observe
paying fees. Failure to do so will result in charge against the individual.
11. Changes in registration can
Tuesday, February 3 or 4.
Seeking the best playwrights on
the campus, Kosmet Klub is of
fering a $50 prise for an original
musical comedy.
The competition, to ehrose a
script for the traditional Kosmet
Klub spring show, is open to all
members of the student body. The
play, which may be a collabora
tion of several students, must con
tain songs with original lyrics and
music, a pony chorus scene and
be suitable for production by an
all-male cast.
Deadline.
Deadline on contest entries is
Feb. 1. The winning show will be
produced by Kosmet Klub with a
student cast and will be presented
in April.
Due to the war this traditional
spring show of the Klub has not
been presented since 1942. The
last show given was titled. "Torso
Del Torro," written by Romuto
Solde villa and Clarence Flick,
both of whom are now university
instructors in the speech department.
NOTICE TO VETERANS.
Veterans with limited en
titlement under Public Law 345
(The G. I. Bill) may conserve
their entitlement time by re
questing a termination for the
Christmas recess. Such termi
nation would save two weeks
of entitlement time. It should
be pointed out, however, that
any veteran who requests such
termination will receive no
subsistence during that period.
Forms for requesting termi
nation may be obtained in the
office of the Veterans Consul
tation Board, 101 Mechanic
Arts Hall and must be filled
out before Saturday noon, De
cember 21, 1946.
J. B. Colbert, Director
Veterans Consultation Board.
convenient for him and report to
blank be used for this purpose.
have been completed, the ad
remaining three copies are to be
of the college in which the student
countersigned.
for in Memorial Hall (east en
identification card at time of pay
the same rules as to the time of
not be made before Monday or
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