PAGE 4 Monday, September 24, 1951 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN 1 .'ii Hi ft Red Cross Officials' Coffee Hour Red Cross "Jnlverslty unit chair. MAM M A T A 1 ment met at a coffee hour in the t union aaturday morning. University board members at tending were Joan Hanson, presi dent: Kathy' Swingle, secretary; Pat Wiedman, vice-president; Bill Adams, treasurer; Sharon Neff, orthopedic; Jo Berry, Gladys Novotny and Marlene Mecke, vet erans; Joyce Johnson, handicraft; Suiaan Stoll, mental hospital; Joe Raben, water safety; Ira Epstein, penitentiary; Bob La- Sheila, entertainment; Tom Sny der, special aacttvities; John Gibbs. fraternity bead for blood program; Carl Trumbull, civil defense; Bill Hofeard, motor corps; Virginia Poppe, Gray Laadies; Ruth Raymond, public ity. T-anrnstAr oAiintv chairmen are Mrs. Blanchard Anderson, volun-ifS tecr services; Mrs. Frank arts and skills; Mrs. Merle canteens; Mrs. Richard Smith terlamment and instruction W. W. Putney, Gray Lady; Mrs. C. F. McAdams, pro ductions; Mrs. Clair Sloan, motor service; Mrs. John Unthank, nurses aides Mrs. Harry Simon, staff aide; Mrs. Everett Angle, survey and training; Mrs. John Curtiss, recruitment and referral; Mrs. Helen Welsh, recognition and uniforms; Lloyd C. Jenkins, di rector of safety service; nmMH.iinn mm nun ii.nmi'it.wMmMnmiuww i n iiiiiiiiiy-wiwgM,y.M 7 ;oi4-i ie Hale lXjsW-jT s. ' . . ! . n ; Mrs. W v , JJ STRICTLY SOCIAL . . . The Lancaster county and the campus Red Cross chapters met Saturday to get acquainted. At the serv ing table (I. to r.): Mrs. Blanchard Anderson, chapter volunteer service chairman; Susan Stahl, RCCU blood chairman; Mr. Lloyd Corp, fund campaign chairman and Virginia Toppe, grey lady chairman. John Agee, first aid; Mrs, Vir ginia Roberts, water safety; Joe Fenton, disasters; Lloyd Corp, fund raising; tVinfield Eimcn, blood program; Mrs. Ellery Davis, Junior Red Cross; Del Llenemann, blood recruitment; Dorothy Amand, Harold Hill. Brother Assists Brother S"mw -15 '-" ill-". t ,11 , lit . 1 BROTHERLY PRIDE That is the feeling which Boyd G. Carter (r.), chairman of the department f romance languages, displays as he points out his brother, Ross, author of "Those Devils in Baggy Pants," to Jane Randall (1.), feature editor of The Daily Nebraskan. By JAXE RANDALL Feature Editor "I feel limp being strangely mixed up with a manuscript that has possibilities of becoming best seller He took the title for it from a diary found on a German soldier who told how the Germans feared paratroopers, whom they called a j "Devils in Baggy Pants." He dedicated it, Boyd Carter "It was fascinating," Carter said. "Because my brother and I were of similar temperament and nature, I could more or less see thing through his eyes. "In fact," he went on, "in work ing with the manuscript, I found Hills of Gold ... Film Series On Wildlife Start Friday A series of Audubon screen tours will begin Friday, Sept. 28, with a film story of the Black Hills entitled "In the Hills of Gold." The movie will be shown by Dr. Olin S. Pcttingill Jr., of Carletin colege, Northfield, Minn., at 8 p.m. in Love Memorial library auditorium. Five programs featuring natur alists and wildlife photographers will be presented during the year under the auspices of the Uni versity extension division and state museum and the National Audubon society. Other programs in the illus trated lecture series, which feature natural color motion pictures of wildlife and wilder ness scenery from all parts pf the continent, are as follows: Oct, 2?, "Lakelore" by Howard L. Orians; Febr. 8, "Canada North" by Bert Har well; March 4, "Animals Be ware" by Howard Cleaves, and May 1, "Wildlife Down East" by Carl W. Buchheister. Season tickets for the five pro grams may be purchased for $2.40 at the bureau of audio-visual in struction in Room 11 of Archi tectural hall or at the state mu seum in tocm 101 of Morrill hall. Single admission tickets are 60 ! cents. ! Friday's film tour of the Black Hills presents the area as "a sort !of island 6,000 square miles of green- growing life surrounded by a sea of semi-arid desert I wastes. Wild birds and animals in their native haunts are the lead players in this motion picture set in a unique and historic area." Dr. Pettingrill was graduated from Bowdoin college and re ceived his Ph. D. 'cgree in or nithology from Cornell uni versity. He is now associate professor of zoology at Carleton college, and the University of Michigan biological station at Sheboygan, Mich. A well-known bird specialist, Dr. Pcttingill has published many articles in technical and popular magazines. His "Laboratory and Field Manual of Ornithology" is used in a number of colleges and universities. The final results of his seven-year study of the American woodcock were pub lished as a monograph by the Boston Society of Natural History. Dr. Pettingill was recently commissioned to write the section Frosh Meet Dean ( HMummmi mi i. m. ,un n ..in. n ...m.., i.,iiih.i,i m mm9mmmmmmmmm..mmm wmmm jMmmmmmMmj ) I A A . 'sC 1 fill M ' x y f ; x I i all i rSr t hk In ; I I il II I OFFICIAL WELCOME FROM THE DEAN . . . Marjorie Johnston, dean of women, extends the of ficial greetings of the University to freshmen women at her annual reception. Miss Johnston, right, is talking with Bickey Nedrow. Others in the picture are (1. to r.): Delores Garret, Sharon Fritzler and Nancy Button. Hundreds of University women were guests of Dean of Women Help Ox-Yoke Missing! Miss Marjorie Johnston, at a tea Friday afternoon. Dean Johnston and her staff Has any fraternity house on the; it was taken by fraternity men greeted women students andcampUS acquired an ox-yoke this from some university in the house chaperons from 3:30 to 5:30 summer? region. p.m. in Ellen Smith hall. Speciali ,, . . t ivimci s uiiu onup ixi j. iic ua- uivc, iviio. iviinci owl- Park, Colorado, has lost their ox-ed, is expensive and irreplaceable, yoke. According to a letter re-j If any knows the whereabouts ccived by the Dean of Student of this valuable article, they are Affairs, the owners suspect that j requested to notify the owners. freshmen and new! guests were students. Nancy Button, president of AWS, and Sharon Fritzler, president of Mortar Board, greeted guests at the door. In the receiving line were Mrs. R. G. Gustavson, Dean Johns ton; Helen Snyder, assistant Dean of Women; and Mary Augustine, assistant to the Dean of Women. Kampus Kues Star Coed Series Campus Know-How, newly iKues, will include a discussion on. planned series for freshmen coeds, INLTs do's and don't's by Nancy will be inaugurated Wednesday i Button and Marilyn Moomey, Refreshments were served from jn Love Library auditorium at 5 president and vice president of tables decorated with candles and p m. I AWS respectively. 'Previously Mortar Board and On the agenda will be a film fall flowers. topic Mrs. Arthur Westbrook, Mrs.jCoed Counselors SDOnsored seoar- on camous etiauette. Frank Henzlik. Mrs. Arthuriato nroframs throuchout the vear ScholarshiD -vill be the on hii-d nrpv fnr tho WnriH jHitchcock, Mrs. G. W. Koseniot, for new Coeds. Oct. 3 and activities Oct 9. Book encyclopedia. ISi.V mTsoT TL" MrTi For the flrst tlmc Coed Coun- Mary Hubka, president of Coed fii r, " . .." selors and Associated Women; Counselors, advised freshmen Thompson presided at the .,, . . Oor ,iLt , 'j u v . 'three coed orientation programs. How series to their "new student Members of the professional! The' first pr0gram, Kampus iorientation must list" music sororities furnished back- . ground music, Barbara Gillmore,'. If At A ri a Delta Omicron, and Kathleen Wil- Uncle 5am ASKS ActlVG SerVICG BOOSt son, Mu Phi Epsilon, were at the TT , . i piano during the first hour. I. Uncle Sam has spoken for an-serve from four to five years. Uit, tt . i J wliji ai iii w"- vto it(,uiai xuc jaw aisu luci Cdcu I cCA W avutu nun m-i, iiil miiii ii v im. Mrs. Carl Since 1939 Dr. Pettingill has cnia p2": IHIUICU iU djjpiUAUllGILClJ 11 llclll million people in the United States and Canada. To obtain the pictures which he uses in his lec tures he has traveled a hundred thousand miles and has exposed nearly 25 miles of film. The National Audubon society, originator of the screen tour programs, is one of the largest conservation organizations in the world. It has enrolled more than 8,000,000 boys and girls in Audubon Junior clubs, where learn an appreciation of nature. Ag College Issues These were the words of Boyd ; explained, "as a tribute to the vi. unci, uiaiimaii ui m uc- jj iuufeni. mun6 oiui. i" u"u myseu nenunc. lovinE ana lauen-iM partment of romance languages, a monument to their memory. !jng right along with the boys of rQrkina Permits uaon receiving notice from the! He wanted their deeds to sur- 504." yiwimiu reader's Digest that the bookjvive." I Hp sHmittpH hnr that st vfarPn Pennits will be avail- u,Sir.v, hie ,mthPr "Rnss wrote and After re-enlistine in November'.."6 BQ. ,ovle ,r ln?l llable m the Ag Union on Tues- he edited, is appearing as a con- of the same year, Ross Carter ZZZl wir w Z!d5: Wednesday and Thursday, densation in the October issue of! never able to finish the manu-;f 'n tm.ph 1. fIlt ,ilr" ,1 ;hA l?eP- , 26 and 27 from 8 ajn., ' , . , ,!to o p.m, that magazine. script which he had begun. He That book is entitled "Those volunteered for service with The Devils in Baggy Pants." It is a 'Task Force Frigid, an Airborne portrayal of the life of Company j Experimental Unit testing win C of the 504th parachute infan- ter equipment in Alaska. After try, 82nd airborne division. Ross making one jump he was sent Carter was a member of this ; home because of illness. group one of three out of a di vision of 40 men who survived hand-to-hand combat at the Bat tle of the Bulge in World War II. After the campaigns in North Africa, Sicily, Salerno, Vol turno, Casino, Anzio, Holland, France and finally the Battle of the Bulge, Ross was discharged In June of 1945. It was then that he began working on the manuscript for "Those Devils in Baggy Pants." He died of cancer April 18, 1947. Shortly before his death, how ever, he called on his brother, Boyd, for assistance. It was the job of editing and redrafting that he wanted done. "We spent hours and hours," Carter said, "talking over changes and revisions that he wanted made." So, Carter went to wortt. He spent the entire summer of 1950 editing the manuscript. been there fighting along side of the men in the 82nd division. While the manuscript was still in the editing process, one of its first chapters, "How Tranquil the Desert," was pub lished in the "Prairie Schooner," University literary magazine. That was in the spring of 1948. Then the Reader's Digest de cided to use it as the lead-off chapter for their condensation. The chapter itself tells of the Roberts, Sigma Alpha Iota, played violin duets during the second hour. They were ac companied by Janice Fullerton. NROTC students and an option tenure for contract NROTC stu on an additional year. dents from six to eight years. An Act of Congress, passed in' Of course, as one naval stu June, increases active service of dent remarked, "It doesn't make ecStivTdS oW&adl!1 0f time in the-naval re-!frozen commission," eline Girard, secretary of Panhel lenic council; Katherine Parks, director of counseling and activ ities at Women's Residence halls; Mrs. R, H. Hastain, Mrs. Verne Huff and Mrs. Adele Hurley, head residents of freshmen halls; and members of Mortar Board. 150 Veterans Tour Ag College Campus White To Head Coll-Agri-Fun Ht.nno.n4-;H 4UA Un-4nH;- ' J . ' niauuii ii anu ucsniiime sucicer to park on Ap rammic nf thA S filian ramnaitm fnr thA L n un flj campus, paratroopers of the 82nd division. Since the Reader's Digest pub lished this condensation, the magazine has received letters from General Matthew Ridgway, one time commander of the 504th paratroop division, and General Mark Clark, commander in Italy Students applying for permits must bring their automobile reg istration, their identification card and fill out an application. A twenty-five cent fee is paid upon I Veterans taking on-the-farm validation of the application. j training toured the Ag college University police will issue camPus Thursday. Approximately stickers at Ag Hall during the'150 men rom Howells, Coleridge time the permits are sold at thAd Burr. Neb- and Hamburg, Ag Union. ila attended. These permits are the same as those sold on the city campus. Students do not need a different board within another week to re-jduring World War II. Both men place Dick Young, who did not , praised the book very highly, Car ter reported. Reader's Digest has Wayne White, Ag College jun ior, was elected manager of Coll- Apri-Fun board at the oreaniza- return to school. . I A i: A- TTTV, Jnnn-4 tion's first meeting. rauunt w uci,.- in speakinB of the condensation werel mental organizations on Ag Cam- that Reader's Digest has published pus will be included in tne sKits and tne letters tnai nave oeen re- as well as oreanized houses. ceived in regard to tne dook, car. Last year's winner was Other Officers elected Joyce Shaner, assistant manager, nd Jo Knotts, secretary. Coll-Agri-Fun board sponsors a prpgram of skits and curtain acts in the fall of each year. The board announced that this year's skit eight is Oct.. 20. Another member to the board to the winning skit and a cash Will be elected by the present prize to the wmning curtain act. sent him copies of the letters. "I couldn't think of a House fraternity with "Good Knight Irene." The "Play With out Words" by YMCA. was the winner in the curtain acts. A traveling plaque is presented Inn - : -J The book itself in complete length is just off the press. It went on sale Thursday, Sept. 20. Wenstrand Plugs Tryouts Wenstrand spoke at the The-iDowning, Charles Kossow and atre'a free variety show in the Charles Peterson. Union ballroom. Jack Wenstrand, business mana- The preceding program included ger for University Theatre, Sat- rftiot Hr Marilvn 'Lehrlurday urged all interested stu- Moh in H, nd Jack Ched ester, two dance elections by Jack Moore and Mary Kay Tolliver, and a one-act play, 4The Marriage Proposal," starring Anton Checov, Diane dents to try out for parts in "Othello," the Theatre's first play of the season. The tryouts will be conducted Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week at the Temple. STATIONERY U ol N 10c pkgs. Also 25c, 50c, $1 and $1.75 in boxes GoldenrodStationeryStore 21S North 14th Street T OR E The nations fastest grow ing Tire Bervlce organisa tion 1,100 Store to serve you. .70xl Sjg95 C.OOxl Only Nitionwidt Recaps Guaranteed 12 Months 15,000 Miles On the Spot Adjustment In any state In the U.S.A. OPEN EVENINGS OK RUBBER WELDERS T. O. HAAS BOO Weet "On S-J81I MILTON HESTER 21th Cernhaiker Hwy S-7431 RecajM New Kepaln Uaed Capital Parking Garage Same Building as the Bus Depot 10c per hour inside Parking Weekly or Monthly Rates Delivery Service Texaco Gasoline Lubrication Car Washing Socrates preaclied: "THE BEST SEASON FOR FOOD IS HUNGER. FOR DRINK, THIRST - Cicero Score one for Soc. He's absolutely right ... thirst knows no season. That's why anytime la the right time for Coke. 11 IOTTLED UNDEt AOTHOIUTY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY IT "Cale" if rhtonJ aA 1951 . THf COCA-COLA COMPAMT Student Directory Blank ' - Check: Fresh.... Soph Jr..... Sr..... Grad 9 STUDENTS!! YOUR LAST OPPORTUNITY TO SECURE STUDENT FOOTBALL TICKETS for 1951 seasoa Wednesday Sept. 26 9:00-12:00 in Coliseum Lobby rame ... (Last) Lincoln Address College Hometown Address ... (First) (Middle) ,........,... Phone ' (Street)' (City) (State)'