The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 17, 1947, Image 1

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MISSOl RI MIGRATION committee members Frank Loeffcl, Joan
Farrar and Stan Malashock give Tassel Genie Sampson a sales talk
about why she should buy a migration ticket. The sales booth is
set up in Union this week. (Daily Nebraskan Photx) by Bob Diers.)
Vol. 48 No. 22
Jo, favivsL 'KiLbJksih SpihiL . . .
'Meet the Team1 Rally Plans
Made for Monday Morning
Win, lose or darw, the Corn
husker football team will step off
the train from South Bend Mon
day morning to be greeted by
what promises to be the most spir
ited station rally in recent years.
The cheering squad, led by
Norm Leger, ail Corn Cobs and
Tassels and pep band will hustle
hundreds of students to the C. B.
& Q. station Monday morning at
9:15 to welcome their football
team back from the land of the
Leahymen. "
Chancellor Gustavson himself
will be on hand to welcome home
Coach Bernie Masterson, and
Coach Masterson and game cap
tain Tom Novak will speak for
the team.
Tentative plans to drive the
'Huskers players in open convert
ibles in a triumphal parade from
the depot to the campus via the
"O" street route are being drawn
up by the Daily Nebraskan in
conjunction with the junior and
senior Chambers of Commerce.
The "Meet the Team" rally is
being sponsored by the Daily Ne
braskan as an attempt to mvive
the Comhusker fighting spirit on
the part of the students, an es
pirit de corps that waned consid
erably after reaching a high mark
in the 1941 Rose Bowl season.
"Meet the Team" can be a very
effective demonstration that stu
dent indifference and pessimism
is dead, and that the traditional
Comhusker spirit is returned.
Altho Dean T. J. Thompson re
fused to grant a school-wide dis
missal of Monday morning 9
o'clocks, he indicated that dismis
sal of individual classes would be
left to departmental discretion. In
an attempt to get 9 o'clocks dis
missed, or at least to forjego roll
taking, The Daily Nebraska in-
AWS Activities
Mart Scheduled
3L Saturday Morning
Officially opening the activity
season for freshmen women, the
J AWS board is sponsoring an ac
tivities mart in the Union ball
room Saturday for all university
women.
This will end the six week pe
riod of inactivity and orientation
to university life on the part of
freshmen women.
The mart will last from 10 to
12 a.m., Saturday, and all uni
versity organizations will set up
booths. Attendance is required for
freshmen women and men are
asked to come too, according to
Chairman Mims Weeth.
All organizations participating
must have their representatives
in the Union ballroom by 9:00
Saturday.
LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA
terviewed department chairmen
and college Deans Thursday aft
ernoon. No dean or department
head would agree to dismiss class.
All agreed to the extent that roll
taking woul be a matter of choice
for the individual instructor. Sev
eral instructors did indicate that
they would overlook Monday
morning absences at 9 and 10
o'clock.
Civil Service
Offers Grads
$2,644 Jobs
Positions with the United States
government are open to qualified
seniors and graduate students, the
civil service commission an
nounced Tuesday.
Filings for junior professional
assistant and junior agricultural
assistant are due Nov. 4, at the
civil service commission offices in
Washington, D. C.
The assistantships will be filled
by competitive examinations and
will carry salaries of $2,644. The
positions will be in Washington,
D. C, and vicinity and, in some
instances, at scattered points
throughout the country.
To qualify, competitors must
pass a written test of general abil
ities, and in addition they must
have had education or experience
in fields appropriate to the posi
tion for which they are applying.
Applications will be accepted
from students who expect to com
plete their courses by June 30,
1948. The age limits, eighteen to
thirty-five years, are waived for
persons entitled to veteran prefer
ence. Thirty-nine Jobs.
Positions to be filled from each
of the examinations are:
1. Junior Professional Assistant:
administrative technician, arche
ologist, astronomer, bacteriologist
(medical), chemist, economist, en
gineer, geographer, legal assistant,
librarian, mathematician, metal
lurgist, patent examiner, physicist,
psychologist, social science an
alyst, and statistician.
2. Junior Agricultural Assistant:
agricultural bacteriologist, agri
cultural economist, agricultural
engineer (general), agronomist,
animal husbandman, aquatic spe
cialist, biologist (wildlife), botan
ist, dairy husbandman, dairy
manufacturing specialist, engineer
(soil conservation), entomologist,
farm management, supervisor,
forester, geneticist, home econom
ist, horticulturist, plant patholo
gist, plant physiologist, poultry
Muslkeirs
BY RALPII STEWART
(SparU IdKr
Nebraskas tried but unproved
"T" performeis, set for Saturday's
clash with Notre Dame's famous
"T" experts, entrained Thursday
night amid the cheers of Corn
husker student rooters for South
Bend, home of the vaunted Fight
ing Irish.
Coach Bcrnie Masterson's Scar
let gridders, exhibiting a high de
gree of team spirit and will to
win, wound up practice sessions
at Memorial Stadium Thursday
afternon by running through pass
plays and concentrating on an aer
ial defense against the pass-minded
Irish.
The Huskers went through the
final drills Thursday without pads.
Huskers Arrive Friday
Scheduled to arrive in South
Bend Friday morning at 11:00, Ne
braska will get a warm-up work
out at the Notre Dame Stadium
Friday afternoon.
The Husker caching staff has
been drilling the 38-player Scarlet
Friday, October 17, 1947
Union's Fall
Open House
Set Tonight
Admit Students
With Ident Cards
To acquaint students with all
of its facilities, the Union will
hold its annual fall open house
tonight at 8:30-
Duane Lake, director of the
Union, emphasized that only stu
dents carrying their identification
cards will be admitted to the
affair. Innocents and Mortar
Boards will co-operate with the
Union Activities committee in
acting as hosts and hostesses.
Dancing to Gene Moyer will be
the attraction in the ballroom. At
10:00 Latin American music will
be featured and Miss Donna Mc
Candless will be there to give in
struction in "South of the Border"
dancing techniques. Following
the Latin music will be a floor
show highlighted by an imitator
with a Russian dialect.
Puppet Shows.
Marionettes "Dutchy," the "Bal
lerina" and "Springerly" which is
composed of door springs, will be
shown by Miss Marjorie Shana
felt in her Nightclubbers puppet
show. Miss Shanafelt, who has
been with the University museum
since 1916, will show eight stunts
with elaborately costumed puppets
from 30 to 48 inches tall which
she made herself. There will be
three showings of the stunts at
8:30, 9:15 and 10 in Parlers X,
Y and Z.
A bridge tournament will be
conducted by Dale Ball, Culbert
son official instructor in room
315; and a ping pong tournament
in the basement will begin at 9.
Music programs will be held in
the music room on second floor
at 9, 9:45 and 10:30.
Refreshments-
Refreshments of punch and
brownies will be served in the
main Jounge and in Parlors. A,
B and C from 9 to 10:30. Jay Nor
ris will be at the organ to play
requests during the evening.
Donna Alfrey is in charge of
the open house with a committee
composed of Jeanne Kerrigan,
Walt Simon, Mary Ellen Sc-h roe
dor, Bog Gillan, Bob Easter, and
Ed Trumbul, master of ceremonies
and dance co-ordinator.
husbandman, range conservation
ist, soil conservationist, soil scien
tist, textile technologist, and zo
ologist (parasitology). The major
ity of these positions are in the
department of agriculture or In
the department of the interior.
Students seeking further infor
mation should write to the civil
service commission in Washington.
CBteere'd
traveling squad primarily on de
fensive manuevcrs all week to
M.SltK.M)N-iis boys are
after an upset
wimis:
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Mere October 31
Normon Gronz' 'Jazz ot the Philharmonic'
Features Everything From B!ues to Be-bop
"Jazz at the Philharmonic" will
make its only Lincoln concert ap
pearance of the season, Friday,
Oct. 31, 8:30 p.m., at the Univer
sity Coliseum, sponsored by the
Student Union Activities commit
tee. Norman Granz' show features
some of the world's leading jazz
artists in a program ranging from
blues to swing and be-bop.
Instrumental and vocal virtu
osos will star in the production
which brings jazz to the concert
6Ask Marshall
To Speak Here'
Says Careker
Laying down a challenge to the
entire university, KOLN radio
commentator George Careker, a
univertity graduate student, asked
in blunt terms over his nightly
broadcast why the university is
nat making plans to invite Secre
tary of State George C. Mar
shall to speak at a convocation
here.
Careker, former member of the
Office of War Information, stated,
"there is no doubt about the fact
that Secretary of State Marshall
would accept speaking engage
ments all over the country and if
I were a member of the faculty
or administration of the Universi
ty of Nebraska or a public offi
cial of the city of Lincoln I should
invite the secretary to come here
to the bread basket of the state
department's foreign policy and
state the department's case."
Leave Bos tin.
Basmg his entire broadcast on
Marshall's recent speech in Boston
and on the Marshall plan in Eu
rope and the United States, Care
ker asked, "why not invite Mar
shall to desert his Boston rostrum
and speak before a university of
Nebraska convocation?"
The soft-spoken, British accen
ted commentator made it clear
that he felt it to be a necessity
that Marshall be invited to speak
to university students here.
Total En roll men t
Reaches 10,100
University enrollment reached
10,100, according to final regis
tration figures released Friday by
Dr. G. W. Rosenlof, registrar and
director of admissions.
This includes students on all
campuses of the university.
Union Shows Color Movie
Technicolor picture, "Drums
Along the Mohawk," with Henry
Fonda and Claudette Colbert, will
be shown at the free weekly va
riety show Sunday at 7:30 in the
Union ballroom. At the 5 o'clock
coffee hour in the lounge Bonnie
Compton will play organ requests.
dhu Way
check the flipping of All-Anicri-can
Johnny Lujack.
But the Huskers haven't devot
ed all week to defensive tactics.
Purdue's 22-7 losing struck to
the Mifhty Iribh indicated tuat Die
powerful Notre Dame forward
wall could be penetrated. And
Nebraska ball carriers arc set to
liven the heretofore inept Husker
running attack.
The Nebraska forwards will hold
a slight two pound weight ad
vantage over Frank Leahy's line
men. Although the South Tend crew
has racked up most of its yard. ice
via the air route, several of the
nation's most d. macrons ball toters
in the persons of Coy McC.ec,
F.niil Sitko. Terry F.rennan Ac Co,
dot its backfiehi roster.
Irish Favored 42 Points
Playing at home for the first
time this season, the Irish have
been rated an overwhelming 42
point prc-gamc favorite, laicit
See III SKERS. Taee 2
oimeert
stage. The individualistic style of
the performers make them ex
perts in their particular fields. In
cluded in the show will be Cole
man Hawkins, tenor saxophonist;
Bill Harris, former Woody Her
man star on trombone; Flip Phil
lips, also a prominent Herman
alumnus, and Howard McGhee, a
leading exponent of the be-bop,
or modern, school of jazz.
Helen Humes, blues vocalist,
who was featured with the Count
Basie band for several years; Ray
Brown, bassist, fresh from tha
Dizzy Gillespie band; Hank Jones,
pianist, and J. C. Heard, formerly
with Cab Calloway, on the drums,
are other artists who will offer
the best in jazz on the Student
Union presentation of Jazz at th
Philharmonic.
Granz, who has been tabbed
the Bamum of Jazz," by Down
Beat's editors, originated "Jazz at
the Philharmonic" in 1944. Sinct
then, the show has grown into th
nation's most popular jazz con
cert group. For the last two years
it has been the only jazz group
invited to appear on the Carnegi
Pop Concert series. Prior to their
Lincoln appearance, the show has
been a sell-out in New York, Phil
adelphia, Detroit, Toronto, and
Boston.
In 1944. Granz, together with
Gjon Mili, made a snort, "Jam
min the Blues," for Warner
Brothers, which was an academy
award nominee for the best mo
tion picture short of the year. At
present he is working on a second
jazz film short and a jazz ballet
which he hopes to debut in New
York before Christmas.
Tickets for the Lincoln concert
are on sale at the Student Union
and Walt's Music Store.
Filings Open
For Honorary
Colonel of '47
Filings for the Honorary Colo
nel of the 35th annual Reserve
Officers Training Corps Military
ball will open Monday, Oct. 20,
according to Lt. Col. John Plan
tikow. Cadet director in charga
of the ball.
All senior girls who maintained
a scolastic average of 80 or above
last semester are eligible to fil
for Honorary Colonel, by tradi
tion a coveted coed honor., Filings
will be taken in the Union office
from 9 a. M. to 4:30 p. m. and will
close Friday, Oct 24. A school
wide election will select six nomi
nees from the field of applicants
Tuesday, Oct 28.
Plans are underway to make th
'47 Military ball the biggest in
school history, Plantikow said
Name of the top-ranking band
which the officers have engaged
for the Dec. affair will be announ
ced in the Daily Nebraskan next
week.
"
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