![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjHRQcuSdSR2zxrF3QeBdsOSgkPnUYIkazagRd_cLCODIYOMvbefUUULcKC-G6TpO6QmnUXklbBaMWVbbWuMmaJnEQUs-fB63z5-zNtEQWocg6FxCbfvc8KOj8f0ixbtBk8ShxOow53KAs/s400/Pavalon%252C+postmarked+1949.jpg)
Note that Ole Rasmussen and his Nebraska Cornhuskers were playing. Ole wasn't a musician himself, but I understand he ran a great Western Swing band. Naturally, the Nebraska Cornhuskers were a California band. I found the photo of the band shown below in a post at The Steele Guitar Forum. This photo is also from the late 1940s, although it was not taken at the Pavalon. (I've been listening to a lot of 78s lately, and I'm developing a bit of a soft spot in my heart for Western Swing. You could do worse than Spade Cooley's "Oklahoma Stomp.")
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhTTEZH9EQ50isKg8BknBtOXMMtGjShXtjkgWPUW-k32-jDqWaegY80Q7MooNo4Uyx8FC1HdkWInDWwSbdNIAMxhRLp1OgohfS6BiXLQBRULT-_k7QTSFB2fecCbc0JA9v6Yrqz93iVyKg/s400/cornhuskers+ca+1948.jpg)
Sorry these posts are a little thin, folks. I've been writing a long article for the forthcoming Orange Countiana (Vol. 7), and it's eating some of my spare time. I'm enjoying the chance to tell a story in more depth and do more original research. But I'm also a little more anxious than usual about doing this right, because I'll be sharing the pages of Vol. 7 with historians I greatly respect. Anyway, I think you'll find the subject interesting, even if it's obvious that I'm the new kid among practiced pros.