n Picture Deadline o if r Friday Rally Lincoln Mayor Victor Ander son, Coach Bill Glassford and members of the football team will be Introduced at the Home-coming- rally tonight at the Un ion. The rally will beg-in at 6:45 p.m. at the Coliseum. u VOL 52 No. 44 Voice of a Great Midwestern Dniversil Friday is the deadline for Cornhusker individual picture appointments according to Don Noble, business manager. Persons who have not had their picture taken may sign up at the Cornhusker office before going to Colvln-Heyn studio. n n nJ BTniD013a Thirty-Five Plan House Displays w 15) jnS. By DICK COFFEY Staff Writer Thirteen sororities and 20 fraternities will participate in the honecoming house deco rations contest Friday night Two independent student houses, Terrace Hall and the Men's Dorm, will also participate in the house decorations. The decorations will be judged on size, originality, movement and the centering of the theme around the game of the week and welcome to alumni. Regulations governing; the decorations set a $50 limit on expenditures and a deadline of 6 p.m. Friday for completion of the entries. A list of expenses must be turned into Bob La Shelle -by 6 p.m. f Winners of the men's and women's divisions of house dis plays will be awarded a travel ing trophy by the president of Innocents Society at the Home coming dance, Saturday. House decorations will be judged immediately following the rally Friday. The judges are: Marge Mengsholl, manager of Magee's advertising depart ment, Charlotte Workman, ad vertising manager for Ho viand -Swanson, Col. C. J. Workman, professor of military science and Frank Hallgren. assistant dean of Student Affairs and Man ford Keiier, professor of art. To facilitate movement of traf fic Friday, Innocents Society co operating with the University po lice, are asking for cooperation in following their- traffic pattern Cars must be out of the traffic pat tern by 1 p.m. Friday. Friday night, the traffic will enter from 17th and R to 16th and R, turn right on 16th to Vine, left on Vine to 14th, from 14th to 16th on R. Turning right, they will exit at 16th and Q. Signs will be posted giving directions, and all traffic will be one-way. Any cars found parked on these streets after 1 p.m. will be hauled away. Saturday at 10 a.m.. Homecom ing festivities will continue with a Homecoming parade. Thirty floats are entered in the parade. Judging will be based on art work, unity, orig inality, good taste and welcome grads theme. The marquee of Magee's will be used for the judges' stand. Judges will be Dr. Josephine Brooks, associate professor of home economics, Leroy Burket, assistant professor of art, and Don Lodge. A traveling plaque will be awarded at the Homecoming Dance to the first place winners in the men's and women's divi sion. Honorable mention will be riven to the runners-op. Floats for the parade will line up in front of Avery Laboratory, start at 12th and U Sts. and pro ceed down U to 14th St., north on Vine, east on Vine to 16th, south on 16th to O St., west on O to 11th. north on 11th to R, east on R to 12th. north on ,12th to R where the parade will disband. An alumni luncheon will be held for returning alums and their families, Saturday from 11:30 to 12:45 In the Union ballroom. Mortar Board alumns and active members of the Alumni Associa tion have special tables. Oifscfi To 1952 Pep If Hi f V 'V H ..Sit.1! ' i " -a. i 3 4. i li f -1 ASS t, . 0 Dentists' HC Activity Plans Ready Approximately 150 dentists from 25 different states are ex pected for the annual homecom ing" of the University College of Dentistry to be held Friday and Saturday. The program for the con vention includes registration and open house at the Dental College on Friday morning, and k short business meeting that afternoon in the Love Library auditorium. Friday evening will feature a banquet in the Corn husker Hotel at which about 300 are expected. The Friday afternoon session AUF Workers Receive Recognition Certificates Award and certificate presenta tions highlighted a meeting of the All University Fund Workers Thursday night. Receiving the award for out standing publicity work during the drive was Jack Gillisple. Sally Solon on was presented with the ssvard for outstanding work toward solicitation of funds. Joan Hanson, AUF presi dent, presented the awards. Thirty-one workers received certificates for outstanding work Ag Educators Award Honor To Chancellor during the annual drive. Among those recognized were: Sally Solomon, Bridget Watson, Barbara Beck, Agnes Anderson, Bud Lingo, Jack Gillispie, Martha Lee Miller, Beverly Jackson, Joyce Schobert, Jan Steffen, Nancy Hemphill, Bill Hunt, Kay Woolman, Mary Jane Mapes, and Jim Adams. Marilyn Bourck, Shirley Suk storf, Judy Pollock, Phyllis Knerl, Eileen MullaiTty, Elaine Smith- berger, Georgia Hulac, Paul Means, Sharon Cook, Mimi Du Teau, Marilyn Irwin, Mary Flynn, Phyllis Colbert, Diane Young, Helene Sherman, Frances Locke and Ann Kokjer. Colin Jackson To Speak At University Tuesday it happened at nu With everyone rushing to the Cornhusker office to make last minute picture appointments, the editor appointed one of the section heads to handle the ap pointment book. Everyone who entered the of fice was confronted with her question "Would you like to make an Individual picture ap pointment?" She became embarrassed, however, when she was in formed that one person whom she just asked was none other than Frank M. Hallgren, Assist ant Dean of Student Affairs. NU Student Chanrpllnr ft. CI. fiiistavsnn wns wiU be the scene of the election honored Wednesday by Epsilon ftmmanf C fin of officers for 1953. The present Sigma Phi, national honorary fra-;VVf I II IJC7III O Wll officers and their posts are: Dr. termry 01 agricultural educators, ior jeaaersnip m services 10 iarm and rural life. Chancellor Gustavson addressed a general session of the 66th an nual convention of Land-Grant Elmer F. Bay. president; Dr. R F. Krejeti, secretary-treasurer; and Dr. Glenn Laymon, president elect. On Friday afternoon there will be a technical session ini which the dentists will hear a dis cussion of denture implant pro cedures by Dr. E. J. Kresse of Denver. On Saturday morning there will be a discussion of diagnos ing cancer of the mouth by Dr. B. A. Thomas of the University of Washington School of Dent istry at Seattle. Saturday afternoon will feature a work session to be held at Love Library auditorium. The work session will conclude the two day convention. European Trip "Agricultural and industrial practices- are the main differences College and Universities in Wash-!$ctwe Yugoslavia and Russia ineton Tuesday. Dr. Knute O. Broady, director of the University Extension Divi sion; Miss Florence Atwood, Ex tension Home Economist; Dr. Dor- etta Schlaphoff, chairman of the Department of Home Economics and Dean Roy M. Green of the College of Engineering and Archi tecture completed the University convention delegation. Dean Green was a member of a committee reporting on irri gated agriculture and water resources. Joan Krueger, University senior, said at a Hiram Club meeting Wednesday. While touring Yugoslavia last summer, Miss Krueger discussed industrial and agricultural prob lems with governmental officials and journalists. Cooperative farms on a volun tary basis, machinery owned by the individual larmer, sell-set production goals, and self-selected markets are Just a few of the mmy steps taken in the break from Communist Russia, she said. Beauty Queen Judging Set Wednesday Judging to determine the 12 finalists for Cornhusker Beauty Queen will be held Wednesday night in the Faculty lounge of the Union, according to Bernie Wishnow, Beauty Queen section head of the 1953 Cornhusker. Houses are asked to submit the names of their candidates to Har riett Wenke In the Cornhusker office no later than 3 p.m. Tues day. Each house is entitled to one candidate for every 25 Corn- huskers sold In that house. The names of the 12 beauty queen finalists will be announced at the Mortar Board Ball, Dec. 12. The finalists and the six Elig ible Bachelors will be presented during the dance Intermission. A prominent British lecturer. ,vesticate social and nnlitira! cin. broadcaster and writer. Colin 'ations. Jackson, will speak at a Univer sity Convocation Tuesday night. The Convocation, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in Love Library audi torium, is not an All-University Convocation. No classes will be dismissed -for that hour. Jackson has lectured at uni versities throughout the United States and Canada, and spent' last summer as a guest lecturer at the University of Kansas City summer session. During World War II, Jackson was a major in the India Army for five years, serving throughout the Middle East and also in Italy, After completing graduate stud ies at Oxford, he toured South and East Africa studying political and economic problems. He also carried out an extensive tour of the Middle East, India, Pakistan, Ceylon and Malaya in 1949 to in Jackson is now preparing a book comparing- the aims, meth ods and achievements of Ameri can and British Universities. To gather material for the book, he plans to remain in the United States until early in 1953. When in England, Jackson broadcasts frequently for British on the basis of quality of nartici' Broadcasting Company on British 1 pation in activities, Interest, en- By PAT PECK Feature Editor Music by Ralph Materie, a Pep Dance by the Union and a new queen by popular choice will highlight the galaxy of Homecoming events this weekend. Following the rally and the review of house dis plays on Friday, the Union invites students to drop in for dancing: in the Round-Up. The dance, a stag or couple affair, is one of the Union's come-as-you-are dances. The 1952 Homecoming Queen, Barbara Hershberger, will be pre sented at halftime of the Minne sota-Nebraska game. Miss Hersh berger was revealed as Pep Queen at the annual Homecoming dance last season. Five finalists for the 1952 Pep Queen were chosen by the mem bers of the Tassels organization from their group. The Pep Queen, was chosen after the rally preced ing the NU-Missoun game, by an All-University election. The iden tity or the Queen will be revealed at intermission time during the Homecoming dance Saturday night. The finalists are Darlene Goodding, Susan Reinhardt, Norma Lothrop, Connie Clark and Barbara Bell. Ralph Marterie and his or chestra have been engaged to play for the Homecoming dance Saturday night. The bandleader, whose rise to popularity has been attested to by Billboard's poll of the nation's disc jockies, is hailed as one of the country's foremost music makers. Rumor has it that the smiling maestro is also an amateur cook of the first order. Tickets to the dance sell for $3 and are available from Corn Cobs and Tassels. Dancing will begin in the Coliseum at 8 p.m. Returning alums arriving Fri day night or Saturday morning will find the campus looking much as they remember it, but they will have missed the prepa ration. Their ears will not havs been assailed by the Corn Cobs and Tassels hawking dance tickets. The corps of balloon salesmen, cowbell peddlers and N-flowef hucksters, however, promises to function as usual. This year the alums of recent vintage will have missed the last minute rush to get house decoration up by the dead line and the sleeping in shifts to guard the displays. Corn Cob and Tassel alums will have missed wallowing in bales of crepe paper and nap kins to decorate the Coliseum and build the float. They are now entitled to attend the alumni luncheon and to attend the game wearing "plain clothes." Grads to whom the "welcome" signs are addressed have one privilege which belongs to them alone. When they hear hammer ing on Sunday morning that sig nals the demise of this season's Homecoming they can turn over and go back to sleep. Activities Queen Filings Due Today Friday is the filing deadline for Activities Queen applications, ac cording to Harriet Wenke, chair man of special events for the All University Fund. Candidates will be announced Monday. Eleven campus organizations eligible to nominate a sopho more coed for the honor: BABW, Cornhusker, The Daily Nehras kan, Coed Counselors, Union Activities, Builders, TWCA, Tassels, WAA, and AWS. The AUF executive board will interview the candidates Wednes day at 7 p.m. in Room 313 of the Union. Six finalists will be chosen Religious Groups To Study Union Baptist and Disciple (Christian) youth groups will hold a series of three joint meetings to study their denominational histories and the proposed plan of union between the two denominations. The first meeting will be held Sunday at 5 p.m. in the First Christian Church, 16th and K. Olga Arrlaga, Donna Keys, and Gerald Britney will present the history of the Baptist Church. The second meeting will be at the Baptist Student House. The final meeting will concern the possibility of combining the groups. and American affairs. He also lec tures for the Imperial War Col lege and the Bankers Institute. At thusiasm, scholarship, and ability to worx with people. The names of the finalists will be made public on November 20. Dresent. he Is lecturing on British The Queen will be chosen on Dee. social history at the University of ivRtJhe AUF auction b ticket Kansas City. ballotini Jackson's appearance here is' being sponsored by the University Convocations committee. Ag Union Hobby Show Invites Student Entries The general entertainment com mittee of the Ag Union is spon soring a hobby show, to begin Monday. Any student interested in dis playing his hobby should contact Mrs. Peters, in the Ag Union of fice Immediately. Mrs. Peters asks that students displaying hobbies make a list so that there will be no mistakes in returning the collections. The col lections will be locked in so that there will be no chance of losing them. All Ag students are Invited to brine their collections In for display. Swindler To Speak Sunday At Presby "From the Hellbox," a discus sion of religion and journalism, will be Dr. William F. Swindler's topic Sunday afternoon ' at the Presbyterian Congregational Stu dent house. Dr. Swindler, director of the University School of Journalism, will address an open meeting which any University student may attend. The meeting will begin at 3 p.m. Special invitations have been sent to Presbyterian and Congre gational journaliism students, but any interested student is welcome. Arrangements for Dr. Swindler's address were made by The Post. Presby house publication, under the direction of the editor, Mary Kay MundelL i 13- I" ' O n O fruity nmn. w vm