Vol. 50, No. 3 There are fifteen University operated parking lots on, and ad jacent, to the campus this year. These lots, the shaded areas Students May Add and Drop Sept. 19, 20 Late registration and add and drop procedure will begin Mon day, Sept, 19 and will continue until Tuesday, according to Dr. F. W. Hoover, assistant registrar. Three steps will be followed by students who wish to add and drop courses. According to Dr. Hoover, students should first see their advisors and have any changes approved. Step two calls for obtaining the approval of the dean of the college in which the student Is registered. This also applies to students registered in the Arts and Sciences college. FinaJ Step The final step is picking up tick ets in the lobby of Love Library on Monday. The tickets will serve to hold a students place in the registration line. Numbers will be posted on the blackboards near temporary building B, and it should not be necessary for students to spend more than a few minutes in the add and drop procedure. 2600 Tickets Issued Dr. Hoover reported Thursday that approximately 2600 tickets had been issued to new freshmen and upperclassmen. Dr. Hoover said that registration was pro ceeding at a rather Blow pace to insure each student of careful attention. Students are asked to note that the dates for add and drop and late registration are the 19th a'd 20th, rather than the 18th and 19V as reported jo Thursdays Daily Nebraskaa. ... U . . I l t t I . , . t Jip, . del " '"" P, I f . h i ii t 1 11 1 1 jh l (eJ gggg :,,.o r: Sp: lrZJ? f! . ' . L !) ' r-TiLhr jTSi rpi ur r-pr J .F" kCT "F L .'.v:.. I (T 1 Only Daily Publication for 9000 Nebraska shown above, plus the stalls on the campus streets will accom modate 1,560 cars. This does not include R street, 14th or 10th streets, or Avery avenue which Alums to Continue Buffet Luncheons Informal buffet luncheons will be served at the Student Union for all University of Nebraska alumni,' their families and friends on Saturday afternoons when the Cornhuskers play football in Me morial Stadium. The luncheons, started last year, met with an enthusiastic response, William L. Day, Lincoln president of the University Alumni Association said. "The luncheons provide a place to meet and visit old friends. There is no program and the theme is in formality," Mr. Day said. The first luncheon is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 24, when Ne braska opens the season in Me morial Stadium against the Uni versity of South Dakota. The luncheons are in the main dining room on the second floor of the Student Union from 11:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. Reservations should be made in advance with the Alumni Office, Student Union, Lincoln. Activity Tickets on ale Until Student activity tickets for all home athletic games went on sale Thursday at the Coliseum and will be on sale until Saturday noon. Ticket prices will remain at last years price of $7.20. According to ticket manager A. J. Lewandowski, the system of drawing tickets by lottery will remain the same as last year. This system assures fair distribu tion of seating arrangements for both groups and independent stu dents. Married Students Married students may obtain i iii LINCOLN 8, NEBRASKA are available for parking under city regulations. Permits to park on the campus, or in the lots, must be obtained today, Friday or Saturday morning. Money Grant To Improve Med Course The University of Nebraska College of Medicine received a $14,000 teaching grant from the United States Public Health serv ice, it was announced Tuesday. Dr. F. Lowell Dunn, Professor of Medicine and listed as "re sponsible director" in the grant, said the money will be used to improve the teaching and diag nosis of heart disease both in the regular medical course and on the graduate level. It will permit some increase in the faculty, he said. Research work at the Univer sity will not benefit from the grant even though financial help is needed. The school has used an $8,400 two-year grant made by the Life Insurance Research Pro gram for this work. Saturday tickets in the student section for their wives by presenting proof of marriage, such as photostats of marriage certificates, joint ments. A special window will be reserved for married students. All groups wishing to obtain block seating arrangements must have a representative of the group present all identification cards and money to one of the two spe cial windows- being maintained for buying blocks of ten or more seats. The representative will 'SEE PACE 2 University Students Students to Apply f o Blanks by Sept. 24 Seven days remain in which car owners ana operators can get parking permits. The interim Student Council committee which issues permits will be located in Room 315 of the Union until Saturday, Sept. 24. Its hours are 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. week days and from 9 a. m. until noon on Saturdays. Under provisions of the campus parking regulations drawn up a year ago by the Student Council and University officials, students can get a violation ticket from campus police for: failure to ob tain a parking permit, parking by a fire hydrant, not parking be tween stall lines, speeding, double parking, failing to stOD at stop signs, red line parking or care less driving. Parking Tickets Tickets request the violator to report to the office of campus police in the West Stadium dur ing specified hours on specified days. Students who fail to report to the University police office within a week will be summoned to the office of the dean of stu dent affairs. Students who continue to vio late the regulations will be asked to report to the office of the dean of student affairs for appropriate action. The action may include: plac ing the student on probation, re ferral to the city traffic court for payment of fine, suspension and the recommendation of the Board of Regents of explusion of a student from the University. Appeals Appeals from decisions made by the dean of student affairs may be taken to the faculty con duct committee. The campus police have made 1,560 parxing stalls available on the campus streets and in the parking lots an increase of 200 over a year ago. This is exclusive of the parking stalls on B, 10th and 14th streets and Avery avenue. To be eligible for a permit, a student must live more then eight blocks from the campus perimeter (the area bounded by 10th, 14th and R streets and Avery avenue). Bonafide applicants will be is sued blanks by the Council com mittee. Students will take these application blanks to the campus police booth located at the west end of the library hall to get parking stickers. LinIttroni Join ISU Navy ROTC Staff Lt. Kenneth V. Lindstrom, 30, a veteran of six years in the submarine service including two years in the Pacific Theater of Operations, has joined the Uni versity of Nebraska Navy ROTC staff as an assistant professor of Naval Science. He graduated from the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis in 1943 and at tended the submarine school at New London, Conn. ROTC Students' Fee Raised This Year Freshman and sophomore ROTC students will be re quired to pay a $25 fee for de posit when they check, out their uniforms next week. This is a new ruling by the University of Nebraska Board of Regents. The fee will cover any pos-? sible loss or damage to uni forms and will be returned to the student when the uniform is turned in next spring. f Friday, September 16, 1949 " Chancellor G us Will Meet New StudentsFriday Everyone's invited and there's something to suit everyone's taste at the traditional Chancellor's re ception and Union open house tonight between 8 and 11:30 p. m. in the Student Union. The combined reception and open house will give all students an opportunity to meet the fac ulty and get acquainted with this year's union, according to Genene Grimm, Union activities director. Receiving Line The Chancclor's reception, will be between 8 and 10 p. m. Be sides Chancelor R. G. Gustafson, the receiving line will include: Dean and Mrs. Thompson, Dean and Mrs. Oldfather, Dean and Mrs. Lambert, Dean Marjorie Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Glass, Dr. and Mrs. Warren R. Bailer, Dean and Mrs. Fullbrook, Dean and Mrs. Rosenlof, Col. and Mrs. Linstrom, Col. and Mrs. Cly burn, and Lt. Col. and Mrs. Jamieson. Members of Innocents and Mortarboard and the Student Union board will assist at the reception. Mortarboards will also serve refreshments. Background music will be furnished by J. Norris at the organ. Floor Show Jean Moyer's orchestra will provide music for a dance fol lowing the reception. The dance will be in the Union ballroom from 8:30 to 11:30 p. m. with By Hooper as master of cere monies. A feature of the dance will be a floorshow, including the Pi Phi trio, the Farm House quartet, and songs and piano by Marian Crook. Harmonizing for the Pi Phi's will be Marilyn Le?ge, Erni Trefz and Bev Larsen. Neal Baxter, Thomas Chilvers, Alvin Lambert, and Stan Lambert sing in the Farm House quartet. Marjorie Shanafelt and her puppets will present shows at 9 and 10 p. m. in Parlors XYZ in the Union. Movies Featured Movies, featuring Abbott and Costello, Woodie Woodpecker, and the 1943 World Series, will be shown during the evening in Room 315. As a part of the open house, all other department of the Union, including the Craft Shop, the Book Nook, the Music Room and the game room will be open throughout the evening. Members of the Student Union Board this year who will be act ing as hosts for the evening and directing the various activities are: Marge Cherny, By Hooper, Paul Weltchek, Pat Bussey, Marcia Pratt, Bob Mosher, Herb Reese, Olive Gettman Sue Bjorklund, Jack Dewolr, Ann Webster, and Warren Monson.