Friday, April 22, 1949 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 5 I 1 mmmrn HI . mim... ,, , M ,v X'' s : - i V ""A I I Ag, Barb Tassel Filings to Open Filings for Ag-at-large and barb-at-large vacancies in Tassels will open Monday. Applications may be made at the Union offices on both the Ag and city campuses. Filing will remain open until noon on Saturday, Ap ril 8. Applicants must have sopho more standing next fall and must have weighted 5.5 averages. The annual Tassel rush tea will be held Sunday, May 8. exceeds the beauty of a span bridge across a deep canyon. To give the public better apprecia tion of these things, engineering students at Nebraska join ranks each year. In sharing their pro fession with all people, engineers have made E. Week a tradition on almost every campus where there is an engineering college or department. At Nebraska it is, "Today's Dream Tomorrow's Reality." 1.1 'A - j(- - - "PILOT TO CO-riLOT" will be the words in Bancroft hall when the operating switch is thrown on the model airplane built by the engineering mechanics department. feilli3! t&uMt. jtto. OMkjf K. tv'-WoteJ. PKIDE OF THE CHEMICAL engineering department is this re cently completed fractionation column, which will be in operation the night of Engineer's Week Open House. The unit is about 24 feet high and built of copper and brass. It is used in the fractional distillation of petroleum products. The crude oil is placed in the reflux chamber and as it distills, the gasoline, kero senes, fuel oils, organic solvents and oils are separated. It is very similar to the kind that large oil companies use, but it is built on a smaller scale. Ed Galloway, a Chem E, is on the platform. Engineer's Week Operations Begin With Sale of E-Ribbons By Kent Tiller. This is it! Announcement of the ribbon sale for Enginer's Week yesterday officially opened the race against time. Since far back in January, engine men have been laying the foundations of E. Week '49. Ad ministrative work, paper work, and day dreaming have all lead to one point today! From now until Open House on Thursday, April 28, the heat will be on. Each year the famous last words, "We're going to start early," ring through the meet ings. True to form, however, the lights of the engineering build ings will burn late this week as men vow again to present the 'best Engineer's Week ever'. Engineer's Week is not a sym bol; it is not a game. From its begining in 1894, engineers have felt they had a product to sell. They have been marketing that product each year since. There is music in the whir of a motor, rhythm in the chug chug of an engine. Art seldom -- . . -SAAft .J . t fMmm AJW WfcW jPTThanks Nebraska NHelpUs CelebraU Ourl "The Home of America t Fine$t BanJt" PROUDLY PRESENTS FOR 3 DAYS FRI., SAT., SUN., APRIL 22-23-24 A With AND HIS OtCHIJTIA Featuring 18 STARS of RADIO STAGE and SCREEN Admlnlon $t.!S Karh Flu T lllirlni S to 1 A. M. i '-J 3 STAR STUDDED DAYS NIGHTLY Fret tardenlat to the l.uilict uhile 300 lost! Your College Clothing Store Here's Corduroy 'N Color jPaitt2et Sportswear Wf! up ml Stitched to fit and easy to wear, corduroy peddle pushers with fly front zippers. Red blue, maize and tan in sizes 10 to 16. 895 Jantzen corduroy shorts are slenderizing and comfort able in turquoise, red, maize, blue, tan, shrimp, moss green and egg-shell. Sizes 10 to 16. 5'5 6'5 Corduroy halters to match, sizes 10 to 16. 395 Soft cotfon tee shirts, gayly striped or solid in many shades. Short and cap sleeves, boat or round neck styles in small, medium and large sizes. 295 395 Sportswear Magee's First Floor