The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 03, 1948, Image 1

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Vol. 49 No. 37 LINCOLN 8. NEBRASKA Wednesday, November 3, 1948
Gustavson to Make First
earance Since
App
ivprsitv students will
have an opportunity to see their
chancellor for the first time and
hear him speak this Friday when
Dr. Reuben G. Gustavson appears
at the second major convocation
of the year.
Gustavson Returns from Sweden
To students on campus last
year, it will be a homecoming con
vocation for Chancellor Gustav
Knn who arrived bv plane from
Sweden yesterday afternoon. The
11 o clock classes win De aisrrusseu
in order that students may as
semble in the Coliseum to hear
his talk on conditions in Sweden
today.
Chancellor and Mrs. Gustavson
have been in Sweden since Sep
tember. The Chancellor was pne
of four prominent Swedish-Americans
invited by the government
of that country to help celebrate
the centennial anniversary of the
coming of the Swedes to the mid
west United States.
Chancellor Given Swedish Honor
Dr. Gustavson wns awartfed the
Student Memo
Memo to all men: Drag that
tux out of the back of your
closet, rtnew your acquaint
ance with Emily Post and in
crease your friendliness toward
that eirl you've been noticing:
in your 10 o'clock. The time
has come to impress her with
an invitation to one of the out
standing social functions of the
year.
And attention women stu
dents: Don't throw that steady
of yours overboard until you
hear the sews. We can promise
you something that will make
another date with him worth
while even if his ears don't
match.
Yes, the opening of the 1948
formal season is approaching
and with the usual air of mys
tery, too. Watch tomorrow's
Daily Nebraskan for an an
nouncement which will have
everyone talking.
Bigger Corn
Campus Fumiybone Today
Thp first issue of Corn Shucks
is on the stands today.
Behind a cover of cheering foot
ball fans, by Jan Haugseth, is a
magazine with more illustrations,
cartoons and literature than ever
before.
With a circulation increase of
more than one-third over last
year, the first of six issues will
go to 1500 students. Subscriptions
for the ensuing five issues will
be sold for 85 cents. Single copies
are 20 cents.
In line with a new policy of
more real literature, this issue
will contain the first of a series
of short stories, Editor Jack Shir
mer announced. The story is writ
ten by Wayne Panter.
Shirmer Heads Staff
The staff responsible for the
1948-'49 Corn Shucks is: editor,
Jack Shirmer; managing editors,
Nadine Anderson, Thorn Blom
gren; art editor, Jan Haugseth;
assistant art editors, Jody Wol
cott, La Verne Anthony; business
manager, John Slothower; as
sistant business managers, Al
Abramson, George Coupe.
"We still need many workers
to put out the next five issues,"
Editor Shirmer said. The Shucks
can use all kinds of talent, but
it especially needs people in
terested in art and writing."
Corn Shucks is in its second
year of. publication. It was
founded in 1947 by Joan Fank
hauser, its first editor. It is spon
sored by the Publications Board.
Shuck Feature Tarties
Previous issues have featured
okes, cartoons, short stories,
house parties, male beauty con
tests and a Mav Ouc'en racing
form. This year's Shucks will
... Chancellor to
Order of the North Star, the xnira
highest honor conferred by the
Swedish government, for his ac
tivities in behalf of education and
science.
While in Sweden he visited uni
vorQitipe nnrl rpRparrh centers, ad
dressed seminars and public gath
erings and presented commissions
ISA to Send Ten
To National Meet
Nebraska ISA is sending ten
delegates to the National inde
pendent Students convention to
h Vipld in Denver on Nov. 12-13.
Carl Froent will represent the ISA
as voting delegate, wnue tseuy
rnrni Tnm Mvers. Paul Reiter.
Sonya Sookdo, Ben Wall and four
others yet to be selected win ai
tonH ns non-votin2 delegates.
Announcing that the member
ship drive will continue, Publicity
Chairman Ben Wall said that the
Hriwo haH notted 550 members.
The membership campaign started
Oct. 1.
Shucks Hits
rim nartv Dictures of the six
oiganifed houses which rated
highest in subscription sales in
proportion to total house mem
bership. Corn Shucks is a humor maga
zine for the students. It wants
to print the type of thing you
want to read. Shucks will ap
preciate any suggestions you
have for its improvement or just
any comment at all, Shimer said.
AIEE to Hear
ElginEngineer
W. M. Lienert, plant engineer
at Elgin National Watch Co., will
speak on production engineering
for the student branch of AIEE
at 7:30 Wednesday evening in
room 324, Avery lab.
All electrical engineering stu
dents are eligible for membership
in AIEE and are invited to at
tend. The meeting will be of
particular interest to those who
plan to associate with industry
after graduation.
The organization has made ar
rangements to sponsor the
"House of Magic," a General
Electric scientific show, which
will be presented to the public
on Dec. 8 in the Union ballroom.
According to advance publicity,
the show is a "pleasant combina
tion of entertainment and infor
mation actually not 'magic' at
all, but proof that sober scientific
fact can be stranger than fiction."
U
Chancellor R. G. Gustavson
Return
Speak at Convo
from Governor Peterson to several
Swedish notables.
The newly appointed Convoca
tions committee of the Union Ac
tivitips committee, headed by Bob
Axtell, is in charge of the convo
cation. A student wm introduce
Chancellor Gustavson.
Union to Open
Art-Lending
Library Nov. 8
Prints of pictures bv contem-
nnrnrv artists and old masters
will be available after Nov. 8 to
every university student for their
rooms through the "Picture-Lending
Library" sponsored by the
Union. In promoting this project
the. University joins with colleges
all over the nation.
The initial funds to purchase
pictures for this picture-lending
service were presented by the
1948 Kosmet Klub, from the re
ceipts of their show and revue.
Thirty-eight prints were obtained
in th first selection. The pic
tures have been framed and now
hang in the Book Nook and along
the main corridor of the Union.
Beginning Nov. 8, the Hobby
Interest Committee, under tne
sponsorship of Bob Metrakos, will
rhpolr these Dictures out for a
period of one semester. A booth
will be set up in tne mam nan
for this nurnose.
A preference list is available
in the Union office so that stu
dents may reserve their choice
nrinr to that date, and also to
indicate what type of prints are
most popular.
fjpnp Dver. committee chair
man. states that his erouD is on
the look-out for a permanent
backer to mane yeariy purcnases
of new works for the library.
Campus Poll Shows Dewey
Winner With 62 of Votes
Dewey will take 62.5 of the vote while Truman' will take
35.5, according to an election day poll of the campus. About 2
of those polled. were undecided, 2 were for Wallace, 1 for Thur
mond, and 1 for Thomas.
Althnueh over 1.000 students were polled, the results have al
most no statistical significance for
the students polled without regard to statistical samplings. Ten re
porters, stationed at different points on the campus, took the poll.
The reporters asked the students, "If you were voting, whom
would you vote for?" Despite the fact that about 47o of the students
answered this question with the name of a minor-party candidate,
such votes would not be counted on an official ballot for write-in
votes for president are not permitted. Only Truman and Dewey
appeared on Nebraska's presidential ticket.
The 1,028 students voted like this:
Dewey: 316 women; 322 men; total 638
Truman: 159 women; 18G men; total 345
Wallace: 3 women; 14 men; total 17
Thomas: 0 women; 5 men; total 5
Thurmond: 3 women; 1 man; total 4
Undecided: 11 women; 8 men; total 19
Full Dress Rehearsal Staged
Wednesday for
TVpks rphearsals for the 12 skits
and curtain acts making up this
year's Coll-Agri-Fun show will be
held at-8 p.m. Wednesday in the
auditorium of the College Activi
ties building.
Entrants are urged to have all
properties on hand at this per
formance. Time limits of five
minutes on curtain acts and ten
minutes on skits will be checked.
This will be the last chance par
ticipating groups will have to give
their entries before the board
preliminary to final productions
Saturday night.
Skit Entries
Skits entered in the show are
Loomis Hall, "Wifo
Takps a Farmer." directed bv Sue
Bjorklund; Home Ec club, "Cot -
ton Club Revue," directed by
Hurts IP IHpes
Democrats Surprise Nation
With Early Election Returns
w IT 3
Coeds Plan
Annual Party
Style Show
Th Annual Coed Counselor
Frinnrlshin dinner will be cele
brated as the Friendship Harvest
Thursday at 6 p. m. in the union
ballroom, according to Fat wor-
din, publicity chairman.
Event to Feature Style Show
Thp pvpnt will feature a style
show of campus fashions modeled
by coeds chosen from each or
ganized house. The best in class
anrl snorts wear, date and formal
attire, casuals and furs will pass
in review.
Open to all Coed Counselors
anH thpir freshman "little sis
ters," the dinner is arranged each
year to promote inenasnip De
tween new students and upper
classmen. Any freshman girl who
has not been notified about the
affair should contact Jackie
Wightman, 2-7938. .
Borgens Holds Chairmanship
This year's chairman" is Doro
thy Borgens. Committee chair
men include: Mary Helen Mal
lory, style show; Fritzie Clark,
decorations; Jan Cochrane, food;
and Marilyn Campfield, ticket
Scilcs.
Style :huv participants will
be:
Jaekie Hi Kappa Alpha Theta
Jarkie Soreiwen. .Kappa Kappa Gamma
Uloria Grobeck Terrace Hall
1'at Plschel Kappa Delta
Jerl Brlrker KUma Delta Tau
Gladys Ixrd International House
Kllzabelh Stoesz Delta Delta Delta
Shirley Pohl Rasmussen Hall
Fat O'Brien Sigma Kappa
Bev Deal Alpha Omlcron Pi
Klaenorn Wlbers; Roea Bouton Hall
Dorothy IJdoiph Howard Hall
Anita Spradley Alpha XI Delta
Suzanne Eastericard . . Delta Gamma
Carmen Chrtstoful Alpha Phi
Barhara Durland Gamma I'hl Beta
Suzanne Marshall PI Beta Phi
'arl Gross Raymond Hall
fcvelyn Barren Northeast Hall
Olive Cettman Alpha Chi Omesja
Jean Nordicren Chi Omeita
I.oulwi Bofiehen fox Hall
Shirley Anderson Wilson Hall
Pat Hanlon I.oomls Hal
Joan Hedlaeek I-ove Memorial Hall
final tabulation represents merely
Loll-Agri-b un
Phyllis Ross; Ag Men's Social
Club, "Petes Pipe Dream," ai
rected by Arnold Nieveen; Love
Hall, "One Night in Love," di
rected by Mavis Musgrave and
Jeanne Weilage; Amikitas, "You
Too Can Be Affiliated," directed
by Eunice Jensen; Alpha Gamma
Rho, "Show Business," directed
by Jim Sturm; and Farm House,
"Free Gas At The Grocery Store,"
under the direction of Stan Lam
bert. Entering curtain acts are
Loomis Hall, "Russian Drama"; Ag
Colleens, "Musical Midgets," di
rected by Lucy Erlewine;
Y.W.C.A., "A Lion Hunt," di
rected by Donna Kumsil; Y.M.L.A.,
' nd Amikitas.
1 Jiul;;ins Pi oredure
I "Productions will be judged on
President Truman pulled a na
tional surprise in the early elec
tion results last night by winning
a much stronger Democratic vote
than all public opinion polls had
anticipated. -
Early reports including about a
15 vote found Truman out
ahead with more than enough
electorial votes to win. Since
these votes indicate little in the
final tabulations this overwhelm
ing Democratic vote can mean
little but a big surprise to the
possibly over-confident Repub
licans. Thurmond Leads South
All probabilities point to the
"Solid South" remaining solidly
behind Strom Thurmond, the
Dixiecrat nominee. Wallace
seemed to' have little chance to
pull any electorial votes.
In the Nebraska election, most
state offices were sure to re
main in Republican hands. Sena
tor Wherry was leading Terry
Carpenter nearly two to three
in the senatorial race. Incum
bent Governor Val Peterson also
had a two to three edge on his
Democratic opponent Frank Sor
rell. These results are based on
earlv reports from 192 out of
2,033 precincts.
Nebraska Leans Demo
For a Republican state, Ne
braska was also appearing to
lean more to the Demo side in
the national election than was
expected. Dewey was ahead of
Truman in the presidential race
by a vote of approximately 36,
000 to 29,000 at 11 p.m.
State proposals appeared to be
losing out in early reports. One
proposal, the Mineral Rights Tax
proposal, was to be a constitu
tional amendment and the other
was the Veterans' Bonus pro
posal. Another early report indicated
that the Kansas voters favored
prohibition repeal. The vote for
an again wet Kansas was def
initely a majority.
Welk Theme
Writer to Play
For Union Hop
The Union will present some
thing special with this week's
Unionizer Bob Calame, famous
composer of Lawrence Welk's
theme song, "Bubbles in Wine,"
and his orches- r-
tra will provide i" "5
tne enieriain
ment for the
Friday night
dance to be
held in the stu
dent Union
ballroom from
9 to 12 n.m. '
Calame, for-
m e r arranger
for Welk's or-
n Y e f r V1"
made Decca re- Bob Calome.
cordings and was obtained for the
Union dance through the National
Orchestra Service.
The candlelit tables around the
ballroom for last week's Union
izer proved so successful that the
dance committee has decided to
repeat them this week.
Scabbard and DIade
Scabbard and Blade initi
ation dauce Friday in drill hall
of new armory. Meeting of
active and pledges Wednesday
at 7:30 in armory. Initiation
will be held before the dance
Friday.
the basis of originality, organiza
tion, and strict adherence to time
limits," states Gale Erlewine, man
ager of Coll-Agri-Fun board. A
faculty committee composed of
Miss Eleanor Reimers, Dr. C. E.
Rosenquist, and Dr. D. D. Dean
will chose the winners.
Tickets for the show are on sale
at fifty cents apiece, and may be
obtained from any board member.
Following the presentation of
prizes Saturday night a juke box
dance will be held in the audi
torium of the College Activities
building.
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