The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, May 04, 1951, Page PAGE 2, Image 2

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    THE DA1Y NEBRASKAN
Friday, May 4, 1951'
PAGE 2
Golden Opportunity
What is behind the story of seven students being
taken into custody Wednesday night and why is it
shrouded with doubt and uncertainty. The situa
tioa is unfortunate ana received by all with dis
may but the students on this campus have a right
to know the true tacts.
Are these men, or some of
the notorious "paint and brush" group called d d Uh
Theta Nu Epsilon? Certainly all
stantial as it is, points to that supposition.
Sorority girls saw a group of men gathered in
front of their house Wednesday and the next
morning discovered a freshly painted TNE sign on
the exact spot Sgt John Furrow of the University
police said there was paint on the clothes of the
seven. With evidence such as this, is it preposter
ous to asssume that the men in question were en
gaged in the "sub-rosa" activities of TNE.
Is it any wonder this so-called "subversive" or
ganization is blamed for many unfortunate hap
penings on campus.?
Although we have no positive evidence the men
Dogs are having their days these days. First the
University had a "Handsomest Dog on Campus"
contest and now the University of Syracuse had a
BAOC contest which is worth mentioning. By the
way, BAOC means Big Animals on Campus."
This event was judged by three ugly men con
testants on campus and two veterinarians from a
kennel in Syracuse.
Prizes were awarded for the best all-around
dag, the ugliest dog, the best dressed pet and the
most unusual pet "The prizes included a loving
cup, dog food, and a plaid vest (for the dog, I pre
sume). The Idaho Argonaut of the University of Idaho,
made a rather surprising statement recently. It
stated that "students are being cheated in cer
tain courses and schools.
An example of this cheating was illustrated by
what one instructor told a student
" 'Well, since you can't drop the course (he
had flunked the first course), your only alternitive
is to take it' The student asked what possibility
there was of passing the course, and the professor
replied that as far as he was concerned, he couldn't
do better than an F.
Upon advice of his dean, the student continued
in the course, but didn't attend classes.
"... .A gripe about why students cheat? Yes.
They don't cheat to hurt each other's grades. They
Families Dhided Into Two
r c r Tvrj
l? roups oays ir. lueauuws t
Two major clusters of families i "In the past a husband and I
- ere developing in the U. S. those wife grew old in the midst of a ,t
of young and those of aged par- large family in which they con-1?
cuts, Dr. Paul Meadows, Univer- tinued to play a part Not so
sity sociologist said Thursday j now! In fact it is becoming clear ' j
ir: 'rning. j that our small-family system has ' J
He addressed a workshop on no place in its household and in '4
problems of aging, sponsored by 1 its routines for aging parents. ;j
the University's extension divi- j Unfortunately for the American i
sion, which featured the first family the grandmother of j'ester-
. day's sessions of the 54th annua I dav tends merely to be the moth
conference of the Nebraska Wei- j er-in-law of today,
fare association. j More Attention Needed
Doubling Aged Persons i "An aging population is going
Dr. Meadows said about half of jto require more and more atten
America's fathers today are un-jtion to the security and support
der 30 years of age. At the same ; of an ever increasing number of
time America is doubling every ! families. It is also going to mean
generation the number of aged that the number of families bro
persons. ' ken by death and therefore no
"This family system is bring- , longer independent and separate
ing with it intensified competition
for security, for housing, for po
litical privilege and leadership,
and for dependency support," Dr.
Meadows declared.
Urban Leaguer lo
A view ol the Negro s fctrug-i
file for Democracy."
That will be the topic of I
Marion Taylor of the Omaha j
Urban League when he speaks j
at the 24th anniversary program
of Alpha Phi Alpha, a social
fraternity, Sunday at 2 p.m. in
the Quinn Chapel African Meth
odist Episcopal Church.
Taylor received his bachelor's
degree from Wilberforce univer
sity, Wilberforce, O. and his mas
ters fr'om the University of
Reinhardl Wins Scholarship Honor
Susan Reinhardt is the winner
the scholarship cup awarded
4V,a Ar i4..,
achieved the hiebest firrt semeB-!
ter average.
The award was presented
Thurnday evening at tea given
by the Residence halls for Wom
en. Diane Downing, last year's
winner made the preKentation.
JIvl (Daily. Vb&MAkaj'L
Memb
Intercollegiate Press
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Editorial Comment
stop its activities.
them, members of
evidence, circum
Stolen Goods '
Syracuse U Features 'Big9
Animals on Campus Contest
By Connie Gordon
will be on the increase,
"In other words, we are being
forced to find more and better
, community solutions to the prob
lems of our aging population.
Address APA
Omaha. During tne war,
he
served as a USO director at New i
Orleans,
la. and at Richmond,
Calif.
In the
past year, Taylor has
also made an industrial survey of
Douglas county, Nebr.
Beta Beta, the Nebraska chap
ter of Alpha Phi Alpha, was
established May 7, 1927. They
went off the campus during the
war, coming back shortly after
it. At present they are without
a houwe.
wileen Brown, misti'ess
oi
ceremcmies, introduced Barbara i
Sthef'ht- governor of
the dor- ;
mitory, who gave recognition
cardB to those who were hon
ored for excellent scholarship it
the Honors Convocation.
Her average for the firrt se
was 8.6. Miss Reinhardt is in Arts
and Science college, ,
.... r ttaMiliillih
nhm, flhiK'h ftumitilattv, Vliib H"i'li"iilmi li :
l lHtMIC
are TNE's we are compelled to believe the trouble
resulted from an organized painting by the "under
ground" group.
What stand Dean Thompson's office will take
we cannot say. Previous comment from the office
indicates the dean's desire to surpress TNE and
With the identity of these men known to the
positive evidence that TNE signs
were painted Wednesday night it seems the office
of student affairs has in its possession more con
crete information than ever before. With this evi
dence it is hoped that Dean Thompson will be able
to bring a stop to harmful damage presumably
done by TNE.
It is certainly the hope of campus minded stu
dents and the Daily Nebraskan that this will be
the last "nocturnal" outburst for the University.
It is also our desire to see Dean Thompson bring
speedy action and inform the students of that ac
tion. It is a golden opportunity. The time for action is
now. Lets not lose this chance. j. w.
cheat to beat the instructor at his own game. I ace
you before you ace me."
Bitter, aren't they?
If you don't like limericks, then skip the remain
der of the "Goods" today, because the rest of the
column is quoted from the Iowa State Daily and
has only limericks. There will be a slight pause for
those of you who want to turn the page and read
something else.
For you who remain, here goes:
"You people who are so unread.
As to view art with some dread
The fact is the smartest
Could not find the artist
So they hung his painting instead.
"A limerick's really quite affable;
The side-spliting roars are unquaffable,
But the wittiest are vile
And end up in the file
And the clean ones are never so laughable,
"A man who wrote poetry fine,
With meter and rhythm and rhyme,
Said, "I do what I can, i
But my poems don't scan
I always seem to get so many unnecessary words
in the last line."
You can read this column from now on and have
no fears of ever reading another limerick in it
So much pilfered materials FLASH
KMJS
Music From
3 p. m.
Every -
where.
3:15 p. m. Sweet and Low- 4
down.
3:36 p. m. This Week on Cam
pos. 3:45 p. m. Campos Classics.
4 p.m. Music of the Misters.
4:15 p. m. Musica of the
Masters.
4:30 p. m. Great Short Stor
ies. 4:45 p. m. Melody Inn.
Senior Women
Asked to Dinner
All University senior women
are invited by the recent gradu-
ales of the American Association j
of University Women to attend
a dinner, style show and puppet !
show on May 10. j
Dinner will be at 6:15 p. m.
Shanafelt will show some of her I
floor-show puppets, and a Career !
i,i, .km, ,,;n 4k.
program. !
Tickets are one dollar, and
may be obtained at the YWCA !
oxtice in EUen smith hall, or
in room 307 c the Home Ec
building on the Ag college cam
pus. Tickets must be purchased
afid reservations made before
May 7.
Women Initiates Six
Kappa Phi. national club for even though the writer has made !
Methodist college women, uutiat-, lhem aprx.ar 6ynonomou? As the j
ed six new members recently, at wrjter said elsewhere in this ar- 1
a ceremony held at St. Paul!. have the power of de-1
Methodist chapeL ! cisiori. We mar choose conflict !
The new members are: Chere !
Darlene Podlesak, Mario rie
Thomas, Darlene Goodding
and
Dorothy Ysites.
Two Feature Exhibitions
On NU A rt Gallery Docket
The University Art Galleries j Direction in Intaglio," the Work
hat two feature exhibition; .on 1 of Maurieio SLasarisky and hi
the week's docket.
One of the exhibits is the an
nual Spring Salon sponsored by
the Lincoln Camera club. Thirty
tw prints representing the work
of the club members comprise
the -display.
Ray Morgan, assistant proJes-
sot mt journalism, and Peter j
Worth, auBirtarit pr cifessor -of de
sign, awarded hcmorabJe men
tions to the following prints;
Three by Paul Xubitacbek,
"Nona,' "Cat,'" and "Corner of
a Building,'" -"Glasses and Tex
ture" by Stanley Sohl, "lily" by
L. M. Pitchman and 'Penny" by
Paul Zimmerman.
Continue Throngli Sunday .
The Salon will .continue at the
University galleries through
Sunday, May 13.
For the Sunday gallery talk
there will be a lecture-demonstration
on contemporary print
techniqiaes by Mrs, Freda Spauld
ing, infixutlor in design and in
terior decoration at the Univer
sity. The lecture-demonstration will
show the use and handling of the
print maker's tools. The metal
plates and inks and their im
portance as expressive elements
will be discuKMfd.
This will be the final Sunday
in H'ajt Tlon which the exhibition, "A New,
Paths on Campus Lawns
Dear Editor:
And people call monkeys ani
mals! Any smart monkey would prob
ably get a laugh if he were to
see all the paths cut. across the
campus lawns, especially when
there are so many perfectly good
sidewalks (and trees) for getting
places.
"Just like monkeys," when
somebody cuts across in a big
hurry, away they all go. Every-
body has to do the same thing
until the grass is dead and a deep
path is cut across the lawn. We
laugh at the antics of monkeys
and then do such things.
Any monkey of average intel
ligence (for a monkey anyhow)
would have sense enough to pre
serve the lawns, and keep his feet
dry, by staying on the sidewalks
(or swinging through the trees,
which I don't recommend for stu
dents), and he would most likely
chuckle thinking about the "smart
humans'V wallowing in the mud,
just taking a short cut
. Signed,
Ima Notso Dumasamonke
Progress vs. Strife
To the Editor:
In an editorial in The Daily
Nebraskan Tuesday, May 1, the
writer made these statements:
"Progress is almost always the
result of strife ... A nation with
out strife, a world without con
flict would be a pretty poor place
to live." Then the writer re
deemed himself somewhat by
saying, "... good honest com
petition isg something to be con
sidered." What kind of strife, what kind
of conflict is this which is so in
dispensable to mankind? That
which sets brother against
brother, class against class, nation
against nation? Surely not What
progress comes from such new
methods of hate, new means of
destroying that in life which is
good?
What progress can come from
war? More and better ways of
mass slaughter, primarily, in this
age of science. To be sure, there
are a few scientific developments
which may be used in peacetime
that come out of a war. But are
they worth the price of the illit
erate, immoral, disillusioned gen
eration which inevitably follows
a global war? A generation illit
erate because educational facil
ities have been destroyed, im
moral because it has no homes
and must live an animal exist- j
ence, disillusioned because no
where can it see a sign of the
"brave new world' which iBi. f, v, metalled in the
leaders said would come after the northeast corner 0f the Union jcialist said, "so the machine shuts
war. I lobby j itself off when disturbed."
And what kind of progress is i Th' w, operating Thurs- Called Norelco
the waiter refemne to? Fernaps Jor the first j Manufacturer North American
this is progress: Over four lffli- The pr0jecljon type receiver, . Phillips company calls the ma
lion new automobiles per year m j 5tanding eiht feet can cnine the Norelco. It has a baked
the United States while Ina3a !seen from aU of &e TOOmenime iriish arjd "Jumbo-Yue."
begs for wheal The threat 3 , precautions Taken i The Union's new TV is the only
television agamft eeucauon iu js,
oeiieveu XT
n I r- nn wit, I a !
wneracy Ufive
while "Ifia nearly eigh-ftve
fper cent of the populatum has
A- let alone
2 by the milhon s per
Crmr ISfftl c-ontroL The master control
i the world more than one-nan tne , .
j; people today wnll face starvation.
ii Er.Ef ,v,. .r w i
The author of this article went
on to say that this would be an
uninteresting world if strife and
conflict were removed. No one
knows what kind of a world it
would be. since never has the
world known universal peace. A
few oeople bearing the name
r'Vir'itiaTi liar rid to alter this
jatalisic attitude prevalent that
-war is inevitable. Nearly two
thousand years ago the pom-er
was given to people to bring
vencn to the world. This power.
brought It, hav been rejected by j
wisp tools wno mm uidi j
out ol evil comes eooo, out jj
w ' "rZ H t
not ne'-essarilT strife and con-,
Ccmipetition, in a Christian !
sense, brings out the good in man. i
lifting him ratner tnan oegraamg j
him. j
It spurs him on to seek higher i
and finer objectives in life. It i
leads him to do his utmost Jor j
his fellow men. I
Need we have lorever lhese
and strife, crushing down that !
which is true progress, or we may
choose competition and move lo a ;
waj'leKK, progressive world.
R. E. Anderson
Students, may be seen.
rniversity Cradoitf
Mrs. Spaulding is a graduate
of the University and the Parsons
School of Design in New York.
She his also studied at Elack
Mountain college in North Caro
lina. Her art has been exhibited
throughout the middle west
Mrs. Spti aiding has recently
carried out special rtudies in
print making. Her etching, "Land
of Nod," was recognized as one
of the outstanding exhibiU in
the All-Nebraska show of last
fall.
The gallery talk will take place
in Gallery B at 230 p.m.
WHY PAY MORE
LONG PLAY.N5 RECORDS
30 off
FREE COMPLETE CAttLOCUE
avd rwcE LIST.
V tiw Tot
RECORD HAVEN, Inc. (Dept. Q
$28 West UOt Street
Jfew Ttrr. W. T.
At The Theaters
FOLLOW THE. SUN Ben Hogan,
followed the sun to success in his
illustrious golf career. The life
story of this great American ath-
lete comes to the screen of the RATON PASS The territory
Lincoln Theater with Glenn Ford which comprised the gateway be
starring as Ben Hogan in "Follow tween Colorado and New Mexico,
The Sun." where range wars, cattle stam-
Golf nros. duffers and the rw-! difference were settled
son totally unfamiliar with the
sport will find the spirit of great
sportsmanship typical of the great
American athlete exemplified in
"Follow the Sun." The movie re-
KonU nr. aM k xri
portrayed by Anne Baxter. It's
all there, their track across the
country playing in invitational
eolf tournaments. Hoean's cour-
after the accident that almost
crippled him and the winning of
the UE Open tournament twice.
Sammy Snead appears as him
self in the episodes which cover
the Los Angeles Open tourna
ment in which Hogan tied to
force a playoff, which Snead took
the golf match that captured
the interest of millions of persons
because of Hogan's valiant battle
against near-impossible odds.
THE LEMON DROP KID Bob
Hope's latest starring film, "The
Lemon Drop Kid," is a bright
and breezy comedy about a fabu
lous race track tipster who touts
himself into a hilarious series of
adventures on the screen of the
Stuart theater. Based on a Damon
Runyon story and chucked full ! the community through an epi
of gags and songs. Bob Hope is demic.
placed in the title role of a quick- CO-FEATURE "Tomahawk."
thinking schemer with an af fecta- the story of the great Sioux In
tion for lemon drops and blonde dian uprising depicts a single bat
Marilyn MaxwelL !tle which climaxed 30 blazing
When Hope gives a big time years of frontier warfare between
racketeer a bad tip on a large the Sioux nation and United
scale wager, he's faced with the States forces, stars Van Heflin
urgent problem of making good and Yvonne De Carlo,
the loss by Christmas. Hope donsj The film is backed by the stark
the costume of a streetcorner i Technicolor beauty of the Bad-
For Study Breaks . . .
City's Largest Television Set
Is Installed in
JAMES WROTH
The Union has television.
Lincoln's lareest television set
boasting a 1.200 sauare inch
Takin no Asxices on meddline
"t
TV wale hers. Union cffic als have
precautions to foul up the
well-meaning students
.
or "just try to see how
, e
The receh'er operates by re-
fa buildmfc Unkm di.
rector Duane Lake said.
If the set is tampered with on
tbe rear side, it will automatically
BABW to Award Activity Pins
To Sixty Outstanding Coeds
The Barb Activities Board Jonlotte Mason, Harriet Mortenseo,
Women will honor 60 coeds at j Muriel Matvcka, Marilyn Myers.
their annual recognition tea Fri
day fro 4:20 to 5:30 p..x in Ellen
Smith hall
A traveling
plaque will be
gi-en to the independent house
h w WpI number of house
points. House points
may be
earned by any activity which re-
quires the cooperation of all house
rnemPers, sucn as, uoais ma
house decorations.
pb borkored tioeds receive pins
n reC;0gnjtion of participation in 3
ejrtracurriculiir activitiee. This'i
participation earns points lor the 1
ludjduaL ' ,li
Mwe Thf 1 .... ,3
More than twice as many will
be honored by the organization 5
than were last year. if
Pearls and gold have been
added to the pins this year. Those 42
to receive pins are: Jane Abend, jg
Stephanie Allen, Trances Anaer-
son. iat jsau, jane can, u
dean Breese, Dorothy CappeU,
Gitch Carey, Virginia Carder, '3.
DoJTis Ctorictensea, Sandra Dally,
Majorie Danly, Kathleen Dill,
Marge Erickson. Eleanor Flana
gin, Mad-lcm Fruhling, Marge i
Garey. Darlene Goading, L'jrene
i Graver. Arlene Gray, Marlelyn
' Grouse. If
OUier Keipients
Donna Grueber, Phyllis Heaton, ;S
Phyllis Hecht, Jan Hpper3y, S
Patiy Herrop. 3 H-off, Fiarues I
I Hular. Delores Irwin, Cathy Jen-
vau Doris Kendle. Dorothy
i Kurth, Maroell Lamp. Lois Law- Is
rent. Mary Lindholxn, Mark if
Mangold. Bonnie Dee M.cCoy, Si
Marj' Jane MiCultough, Char- j :-.;
IE AST
ffllLLS
70th ond South
Saturday, May 5
Don Cosey
ORCHESTRA
ALWAYS THE
FINEST IN DANCING
A dm. $1M Tax ln L
Weekend Data
Santa Claus soliciting money for
presumably an old ladies' home
in order to replace the loss,
at the point of a gun, "Katon
Pass" sets the scene and title for
the movie at the Varsity.
Dennis oMrgan returns to the
chaps and six-guns with which
he began his movie career to play
1 trie
role of a cattle Daron wno
13 indled out of a vast cattle
ranch Patricia Neal Portrays an
adventuress and inst gator of
trouble among the people of Ra-
ton Pass.
i I'D
CLIMB
THE HIGHEST
MOUNTAIN A practical pastor
of the backwoods of Georgia
moves greater obstacles than
mountains in the Technicolor
drama "I'd Climb the Highest
Mountain" now showing at the
Capitol theater.
William Lundigan is the seri
ous, yet sometimes devilishly jo
vial and indiscrete pastor. Lundi
gan and Susan Hayward, in the
role of the minister's wife, through
a bit of horse trading, horse rac
ing, and secret maneuvering
manage to soften a hard-bitten 1
atheist thaw the icy heart of
an irate father whose daughter
secretly married what he believed
j to be a town scoundrai, and pull
Union Lounge
jturn off. Any attempt to open it
!from the back unplugs the socket
A sasety proDiem is preseniea
S5nce we macnine duuos up
the machine builds up to
1 46,000 volts, the insaLing spe-
i one of its kind in Lincoln, al-
.
thougn mere are several in
Omaha, workmen installing the
set. said.
The receiver operates from a
small tube, through mirrors.
There is little or no distortion for
j the large screen.
burveys will De taken oy union
workers to determine ihe most
popular programs. A schedule
will be set up from the survey.
! The set will run only at sched-
' uled times.
Arlene Neilson, Katliryn JCew
house. Margaret Rain forth, Carolee
j Ramey, Irene Roberts, Marilyn
, Rose, Shirley Ruff, Audrey Schul-
i Emmarie Shramek. Aria Mae
; Solfermoser, Margaret Thomas,
Rutn Trautmam. Mary Ann Vru-
j ju,d. Helen itek. Ethel Wood
ward, Mary Wright, Ina
1 and Jeanette Mundbenke.
Younf ,
I
its
Budi Djf-sse-s
ml
11 fVJk
I
lands of South Dakota In which
; it was- filmed.
a vengeiul beauty
plotting to qverthrow an army
under he husband's command, a
ruthless revolutionary fighting his
way out of wilderness exile and
a horde of ragged backwoodsmen
willing to take the knife or the
gun to gain their independence
are some of the ingredients in
"Quebec," starring John Barry
more, jr., Corrine Calvet, Patricia
Knowles and Barbara Rush at
the Nebraska.
The story is set in and around
the Quebec of 1837 during the
bloody uprising against the Brit
ish forces.
CO-FEATURE A scarlet-ting-
j ed mystery pen composing a ser
ies of poison pen letters unlooses
the skeleton in every closet of
a French-Canadian town in "The
13th Letter" with Linda Darnell
and Charles Boyer.
Slain Features Start
Stuart: "Lemon Drop
1:18, 3:22, 5:26. 7:30, 9:36.
Lincoln: "Follow the
Kid,"
Sun,
1:28. 3:30. 5:32. 7:34, 9:36.
Nebraska: "Quebec," 1:09, 4:36,
8:03. "13th Letter." 2:52. 6:19, 9:46.
Capitol: "Buffalo Stampede,"
2:28, 5:03. 7:38. 10:13. "Under the
Gun," 1:00, 3:35, 6:10, 8:45.
m!!!!N!M!l!!iM
W M n, II i t
1M1
.-C to fi! Open H:!
Smw Shawinf :
The Ben Hogan Story
"FOLLOW
THE SUM"
Glenn FORD
Anne BAXTER
Drnnio O'KEEFE
June HAVOC
Sam Sncd Jiim Drmarrt
Dr. Gary Middlrcoff
HHUBHBaVBnKjai
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THE
SWEATER .
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for only
14.95
Here is brilliant continuity
in a golfer-typ
cotton bioadddh diets,
teamed with, a dyed-torn
alch all-wool cardigan
sweater, to wear
on these cool Spring
dayal
pink grey
aqua
lilac
iM 10-20
powder blue
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