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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 6, 1946)
0) 03 0) n uuu fir?niogM iVol. 47 No. 51 T.TNrnnT.iM o "Nro-nT? aotta r-j t 7 lojaJU LfD(ijlQU irsioiidlliarslh S3DU(S ii;iiiiiitiii:;i:iv ; IwmmmMwmmifMm lllllllllllik JB8 &r-:yry- ..." v i-.-l ' if 1 t Scheduled to begin at 8:30 tonight in the coliseum, the long-awaited 1946 Military Ball will herald the opening of the winter formal season on campus. Traditionally a colorful spectacle and outstanding social affair, this year's ball has been named "the best in history" Dy uaaet J-t. Vol. Bill Hammond, ROTC publicity chairman. Opening with the grand march at 8:30 and a short review by the crack Pershing Rifles drill team, the honorary colonel will be pre sented at 8:45 by Bob Gillan, mas ter of ceremonies for the proceed ings. After the presentation, the battalion cadet colonel and the honorary colonel will havethe first dance. Cadet Captain Dal las Cotton, officer in charge of the presentation, has announced that the company sponsors and the company officers will also take part in the first dance. Journalism Honorary Organized Sigma Delta Chi, men's profes sional journalistic fraternity, will be reactivated Friday, December 13, with initiation of approxi mately 20 undergraduates who are journalism majors, by frater nity members on campus or in town. Prof. K. R. Marvin of Iowa State college, national vice pres ident in charge of undergraduate affairs, will assist with initiation of the Nebraska chapter, suspend ed since 1941. Initiation will be followed by a dinner and a busi ness meeting at which officers will be elected and a program for the rest of the school year put into operation. In charge of details of reactivi- tion is Prof. Charles T.- Duncan of the school of journalism fac ulty. Dr. William F. Swindler, di rector of the school, recently at tended the fraternity's national convention in Chicago and com pleted formalities for replacing the Nebraska group on the na tional office's list. Company sponsors are Pat Bus- sey, Jane Frey, LaWanna Gra ham, Ruth Sargent, Elaine Bud ler and Jean Fogel. Each coed was chosen by the various com pany cadet officers and will be presented with a regimental hat .during the evening. Cotton said tnat the Honorary colonel will be presented with a complete uniform. Perfect Detail. Making every effort to plan a military ball that is perfect in de tail, the army department has worked out a system for park ing which should insure a mini mum of effort on the part of couples driving to the dance. A See BALL, Page 2 CHUCK FOSTER. Second Semester Registration Dates Published by Registrar The following, procedure and dates for second semester regis tration have been announced by u. w. Kosenlofi, registrar. 1. DATES: A. December 9 to 21, for sophomores, juniors, seniors. B. January 6 to 18 for stu dents In junior division. 2. Each student must nr.. ' ap pointment for registration with his advisor. Schedules for appoint ments are conveniently posted in the offices or at the entrance to the offices of the advisers. Each student should write his name on the schedule in a free space and report to his adviser at that time. 3. Registrations are to be made out in quadruplicate. 4. Registrations must be care fully checked for time conflicts. It is requested that the daily pro- STUDENT BASKETBALL SEATS Student activity season tickets admit holders to all basketball games during the 1946-47 season, but do not re serve seats in the coliseum. Students may sit any place m the coliseum at the games except in the faculty section, which is in the west balcony, and the reserved seat section, which is in the east balcony. Ramps 3 and 13 to the balcony are therefore closed to students. gram blank be used for this pur pose, 5. When the registration forms have been completed, the advisor will retain one copy. The remain ing three copies are to be taken by the student to the dean of the See REGISTRATION, Pare 4 Psychotherapy Lectures Given By Dr. R. Stein At the monthly Nu-Med meet ing Wednesday night, Dr. Robert J. btein spoke on psychiatric as pects of medicine, stressing as damental concepts of mental ill ness. He reviewed the recent his tory of psychotherapy and par ticularly the insulin shock treatment of schizophrenia. Dr. Stein also treated subjects of chemotherapy in bacterial in fections of the nervous system, and electric shock treatment. He See STEIN, Page 2 FAULTY BASKETBALL SEATS. Reserved seats for faculty members at basketball games are located in the west balcony of the coliseum. Members of the faculty should use Ramp 13 to get to their seats. Ben Kuroki Relates War Experiences Campus Church Groups Plan Weekend Religious Activities Pamnns rhurnh 3rr"re Viovo mt. ular services scheduled for this week end. Lutheran students will meet for regular worship services at 10:45 Sunday morning in Room 315 cf the Union. The Rev. H. Erck, uni versity Lutheran pastor, will con Hurt tho worsViin and hp will base Speaking on the subject. "The Ma cormrm nn tVo tnnifv "The Unfinished Fight for Democracy" First Gosnel" Lamert Burmester at yesterday's convocation, Ben will accompany the hymns, and Kuroki, "The Boy From Ne- Myra Hauge will be soloist, braska" who is carrying on an in dividual fight for democracy, re- Msgr. George Schuster will say lated his experiences in the armed mass at 11 a. m. Sunday in Par forces, and told of the racial dis- lors XYZ of the Union for all criminations he was subiected to Catholic students. The Newman because of his Japanese ancestry, club will sponsor an orchestra ' aance in me union uaiiruum ueu. Born and raised in Hershev. 14. from 9 to 12. Admission will Nebraska, Kuroki enlisted in the be 25 cents per person, army the day after the Pearl , . Harbor attack. In recruit training, Bible Sunday. U 4. j; uc Aii&g eiicuumereu prejudices tt? i t-,ui c?,.j :n u U1J x j A . I wuivciadi U1U1C OUUUCMT Will uc held toward, Americans of Japa- obsPrver1 at Emmami!, Methodist ncac ucstwii. aim iu prove ms i,u 4.u; c,,.,o c,.nt. loyalty he joined the army air Lmwc nf iran ph Tvr.thnHi:t 3 " " ' forces, was sent to Europe, and made B-29 raids over Germany. Schoolhouse. apeaKing oi tne ts-zy as a "schoolhouse in the air," Kuroki described the true democratic comradeship of an "All-American" crew that included men of Jew ish, Polish, German and Indian descent. "Here I learned the real meaning of equality and brother hood," Kuroki said. Upon his return to Nebraska after his European tour of duty, Kuroki was pleased to find that the University of Nebraska was one of the few schools to admit See KUROKI, Page 2 sorority on the campus, will pre sent a public reading of the entire New Testament, beginning at 6 a m., and ending at 9 p. m. Read ing, to be begun ,by Beverly Juhnston, will be from the new Revised Standard Version. A breakfast will be served at the church from 7 to 9 a. m. for those who are on the early reading periods and all others who wish Cornliusker Pictures Student pictures In the Corn husker must be taken only at Rinehardt-Marsden studios in Gold's in order to be printed in the yearbook, according to Merril Grant, editor. to attend the early reading. A light lunch will be served in the evening between 6 and 7 p. m. An exhibit of Bible pictures from the American Bible Society, many old and interesting Bibles, and New Testaments will be on dis play. Special decorations will be used to carry out the ideas and symbols of World-Wide Bible Sunday, and the Christmas sea son. Don Stanton will lead the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship See CHURCHES, Page 4 Engineers Convo Features Speech By John Cramer John Cramer, of Fulton and Cramer, consulting engineers, will speak on "Progress and Develop ment of Present-Day Airplane Structure" at an engineers' con vocation in the Union ballroom at 7:30 Tuesday evening. Cramer, who obtained his de gree in civil engineering- from Ne braska in 1940, was fuselage de sign engineer with Lockheed Air craft on the west coast during the war where he worked with elas tics from 1944 until the spring of iio. In July. 1945. he returned to Lincoln and joined Fulton and Cramer shortly afterward. Sponsored by the Engineers Executive board, the convocation is open to engineers and their wives.