PAGE 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Thursday, April I, 1948 Membet Intercollegiate Press rORTt -SIXTH If LAB I Maaarrta4laa rat art SI.M aat wmrmlrt, (in par amwatar analtod. K MJI Ha lb raHrx ya. ma Ilea. Start op 8e. lMtim U tart tan (ritual real airrnt Monday! and Saturdays, vacation and examination panada, Jf the lnlvrrll f Nrhrmka oadrt Uw uprrvlaM at Ui PuUllralloa Board. Knlmd aa tjrconrt liaa Watrrt al taw M Olftrr at llacala. Nrkraaka. aaidar aat ml Chitmi, alarcb S. 7. and at apMai rat. a? aaatas provided lot aeettoa 1 10. Act at Octnbei t. aarfcarlara Staoanuat . 1PM. I UaN NaOraaaaa aaaman taw ataaaata at Um (MvarsMy at Naaraaka aa aa t.rr-ioo at ataoenta arwa aad apinloaa only artydUiK to arttrta U at tha Bf Law. covoraina atadrat paMtrataaaa and aaawialatrraa1 taw Hoard ml naalltatlaaa: thr d-"laira pollrjTot tha Board that pobllrana aader a lurtodlrtton abaU tJ ! trr ro, l.torliT een,r.ha, a. ta part a) I B-ar. m -. m,P,b,, S the trraltj o the anOenHri aat inembrra al the atall al The Dallj Koaakaa a-r paranaallf naaaailala rar araM taaj aa or U or eaaaa aa arlnted.' BblTUBlAL BTATT . Orore Mllli f. i. ri,. " . . Jranoe Krrrltan, Norm !- NKlM . .. t ub 'Orm. Tot". Str.rt. Boh Coonlr,. I. HrK I'.t NordJ- Kporr a4M..r iSlmmtSSmm A Nrvi Alitor m fnrrlal rratare Eettar ""IT rhol..raplw-r ri IW'li M MI.IIT NEWS K.niTOR tl" "r-M Riiilara Maaaiet JTri Helw? rirralallnn Munr.cer aiiii mila" "atViie'staWw. Irwin On" Axrioianl Rnmnraa Manaiera WllWaa. CALENDAR NOTE . . . If the date on the calendar means anything, than today is April 1. April 1 is April Fool's Day. April Fool's Day is always filled with jokes as is this April 1 issue of The Daily Nebraskan. The paragraphs immediately below this sentence, how ever, are not jokes and except for a story or two on the sports page are the only completely truthful words to be found in today's Daily Nebraskan. DEADLINE NEAR . . . April 2 is the deadline for registration for the Ne hWv nrimarv election which will occur on April 13. Permanent registration must be made in person or by mail with the city celrk on or before April 2. In Lincoln the registration office is in the Trust Building, street floor, at 10th and O streets. Voters who wish to use an absentee ballot from their home district must make application to the city or county clerk at least two days before the election. An absentee ballot must be voted in secret The af fidavit on the envelop must be attested by a notary public and the ballot returned to the county clerk by the day be fore the election or April 12 in this instance. Residence requirements in Nebraska are six months for voting in the state election, 40 days for voting in a county election and 10 days for voting in a district election. Students of voting age should note these regulations and be sure that they have fulfilled the proper registration requirements, either in Lincoln-B ia-Aheir home town. For those who have forgotten about the registration procedure, there is time today and tomorrow to take care of the details which must be observed. Time Out FromApril Fooling, Cosmos Announce Carnival This harem slave dancer is do ing her best to lure the interests of her Persian shiek from the musical inspirations of his santur The shiek. Iradi Fard, a fresh man in Ab College, finds- this role of characterizing this folk tale of his homeland, Teheran, Iran, intriguing when Florence Nurenberg so enticingly portrays his slave. The haunting melodies of the santur. an oriental stringed instru ment which has been in use in the Caliph Court since the days of the Arabian Nights and which is still very popular in the Middle and Near East, suggests the at mosphere of mystery and intrigue of the countries from which it originates. Iradj will not be the only one charmed by such feminine wiles at the Cosmo-Carnival Dance which is scheduled for Saturday, April 3, in the Union Ballroom from 8 to midnight. This party will combine into one riotous night the gaiety of such masked festi vals all over the world. The music of Bobby Mills and his orchestra and of Juan Illueca and his South American Combo will pro vide an evening of continental dancing. Highlight of the affair will be when the roving spotlight comes to rest on four winners of im ported oriental jewelry in the "spot dance" prizes. Students and faculty alike are welcomed to this fun treat, with or without dates, in or out of costume. a ? i I s ( . vtyw a t , Tn i v mi VDi . ill I ff, . JF Coed Counselors On the level 4he Coed Connectors mill have installa tion for all new officers anil board members, in Ellen Smith Hall at 5 p. m. today. Those installed will be Jackie Wirhtman. Marian McElhaney, Shirley Sabin, Nancy Gtsh. Dorothy Borgens, Mary Helen Malory, Pat Nordin, Marjorie Clark, Janice Cochran, Jean Malone,- Marilyn Campfield, Mary Gaines, Kathleen Bart, and Marilyn Tawson. All past officers and board members are to attend and all interested students arc invited. ;;;:::::i:r::::::::::;:::r links-tested free-for-all-action dress our SI IUIFV to for every porl front badminton ( bo everr f-xto from warm dr t a desk 2-wa.a- kli-play. Nole ita alrrp armbolea, elouble-pieoteal cion kmc., Jiirt-eofte collar, ide-titaice akirt and aMMi-ltinding eUiMi-ised brlu SudaWe rhumbray id sonny palel, 10 lo 20. budget dresses on third tr- Oil i: :-. . f : . I'll r 1 " ! ' .. L : : 1 .linp, Undergraduate Marriages Are Banned by Dean According to an unofficial bul letin issued today from the office of the Dean of Women, the Uni versity of Nebraska has placed a ban on all marriages of under graduate women attending school hear. The Dean has stated that this is being done in order to facilitate the learning of class roles by those professors who must con tend with an enrollment of over ten students. During the past two years members of the faculty have had great difficulty learn ing the new names that UN coeds have attached during Thanksgiv ing, ennstmas and taster vaca tions. Last week by a popular vote, staff members of all colleges de manded that the practfee of be- tween-term marriages be discontinued. Further complaint was made that an addition of "Mrs." be fore the names in the grade book was a definite disfigurement on the neat marking systems UN in structors keep. Due to the fact that the number of women grad uate students is fairly small, and only two or three recordings of grades are made for them per year, professors have agreed to practice leniency in allowing name changes for this group only. Cat Corner Ed. note: If you are unfamiliar with this column, this is to say it is the first (and last) of a series concerning -Cat, the great Amer ican pastime. The series is writ ten jointly by Lee Harris and Cub Clem, two of the rreaiest ex ponents of the game this side of the Atlantic. If we are to intelligently dis cuss the game, we must first real ize the basic objective and rules of "Cat." Nine squares, marked off by four lines, constitute the playing surface. The object of the game is to get either three X's or O's in a line, depending upon whether you use X's or O's. Our first problem takes up the counter-finesse coupled with a quick lozenge in the bottom mid dle square. X is the offensive team, and leads with a quick mark in the upper right. O coun ters with a shot in the middle, and X completes the diagonal with an automatic cross in the lower left. Here is the cruciai point! If O makes a move to either vacant corner square, he is lost The only way to stall X's offen- ssive is to counter-attack to any side box off the center. This will make X stop his plans to thwart O's offense. Unless a miracle oc curs, the game will go lo the cat. To conclude: "The best defense is a good offense." m't iwiwi aim nf i jr