'YV Need Worker the r"T7 g N For Mock Primary wT JT I M W ft W Silk K TOM Stopfl s ' ,": yffw lift'-- - '4' - fV i fit 1 V ' i I Vv 1.,. ,.,..,., .,.,,. ,, .J UNIVERSITY BALLOT ... Syvia Krasne (left )and Marvin Stromer look at ballots to be used by University students Mon day in the YMCA-YWCA mock primary election. Results of the election will be published in Tuesday's Daily Nebraskan. (Daily Nebraskan Photo.) Students who would like to serve on the boards may apply More workers are needed to conduct the YM and YWCA spon sored mock primary elections Monday. A voting: board of two Re publicans and one Democrat and a counting board of one Republican and one Democrat are yet to be selected. The two one ratio on the voting board alternates with each primary. Panel To Discuss Primary Elections Following the YMCA and YWCA sponsored mock primary, from 5 to 6 p.m. Monday, the same groups will hold a joint all-membership meeting open to the pub lic in the Union Faculty lounge. A panel will discuss various conceptions of the primary elec tion system. One member will advocate a national primary. Another will suggest an all-star primary in which voters could write in names not approved or registered within the state where the primary is being held. A third member will stand up for the present system. The fourth member of the panel will act as moderator. Sen. Estes Kefauver will be invited to sit on the panel If Bus Trip Fills Course Requirements A 8.250 mile bus trip through Western United States is being sponsored this summer by the University Extension division. The trip is cataloged as geo graphy 164 for three hours credit with a prerequisite of sophomore standing or above. A $22.50 tuition fee and a blan ket fee of $181 covers costs of the trip syllabus, transportation, lodg ing in motor courts and hotels, admission to national parks, es corted city tours, boat trips and hririea tolls. Students must pay for their own meals estimated to be about $60. Buses will leave the Univer Buifett, Wedemeyer To Ask Students For Taft Write-ins Representative Howard Buffett and Lt. Gen. Albert C Wedemeyer will support the Taft write-in campaign at 8 p.m. Thursday night in the Union ballroom. Buffett stated he will explain to University students the sig nificance of the- Nebraska pri mary to Taft's candidacy and to the course of national events. Gen. Wedemeyer's talk will in clude comments on the nation s military problems and the inter national situation. t lotior in The Dally Nebras kan, Buffet announced, ..the big story is the attempt of New Deal elements in the East to take over the Republican party by dic- House Represenfofvcs To Meet With Council Representatives from organized houses are to meet wun me Junior-Senior class council Tnurs jn n r. m in the Union activl- ties office on the. second floor of the Union. All class omcers .m council members are to attend the ' meeting - Absentee Ballots Students voting in primary elections by absentee ballot must vote in the presence of a notary public. The National Bank of Commerce has an nounced that their notaries will provide this free service for students. The bank is open from 9 ton. to 2 p m. he is available at that time. at YWCA headquarters in Ellen Smith hall from 4 until b p.m Thursday and Friday or at YMCA offices in the Temple building at noon Thursday or from 3 until 5 p.m. Friday. All University students are eligible to vote in the election be tween 10 a.m. and 5:20 p.m. Mon day in the Union, ' Ferguson hall or Ag Union. Corn Cobs will assist in getting the vote out with a mobile pub lie address system. Syvia Krasne, chairman of the YW battle for ballots com mittee, has urged campus or ganizations for specific candi dates to go ahead with active campaigning. But the law requires that no campaigning take place within 100 yards of the polling places. I Plans have been made to carry out absentee voting. Students who can not reach the polos may ap ply for absentee ballots at the same times and places as those who are interested in the elec tion committees. .J The ballots will be delivered and picked up. Returns will probably not be complete before the official state primary Is over but the , results will be announced as as they are ready Monday eve- ning. The Dally Nebraskan will : carry the returns Tuesday. i slty July 27 and return August 17 allowing students to attend the University summer session and go on the trlii also. Harold A. Classen of the geo graphy department is the instruc tor assigned to the tour. Grand Coulee dam, Yellow-, stone park, the Grand Tetons, Mount Hood and Mount Ranier, Crater Lake, the Garden of the Gods, Royal Gorge and the Colorado Rockies are a few of the points included in the trip. Full information on the trip and application blanks are available at the University Extension divi sion offices. lating or rather decide for the Republican part;, who they shall nominate." "-This propaganda blitz," the congressman added, "is the most amazing story of this year, if not of our time." Buffet stressed he and General Wedemeyer are looking forward to the question period to follow their talks. Buffet said he is anx ious to discuss students' questions so that they may understand Taft's campaign. "Your judgment," stated Buf fett," Is only as good as your in format'on." He continued, "We will be there filled with infor mation." Delta Theta Phi, legal frater nity, is sponsoring the meeting. Lincoln citizens included on the executive committee for the cru sade for Taft" are Chnrles Thone. B. Frank Wrtson, Russell Brehm, and Cal Cu!ter. A non-partisan campaign en couraging presidential write-In votes ha b?en started. John II. Agee, retired Lincoln business man said money has been raised to buy a half-page ad in all the state's dailv naners. "We tell the neople," said Agee, "who all the candidates are on both tickets. People should express their own choices," he aaaea, "and should not be limited to vot ing for only those few persons whose names will be included on the ballot." . ... . : VOL. 51 No. 114 Danforth Award Offered ToAg Coed One outstanding ' freshman wo man majoring in home economics will be chosen recipient of a $50 Danforth scholarship this spring. Winner of the award will attend a two week leadership training school at Camp Miniwanca on Lake Michigan. Four-fold development social, religious, physical and mental will be stressed when applications are judged. High school religious, scholastic and activity records will also be considered for choosing a winner. Ag freshmen desiring to apply for the Danforth scholarship should contact Carolyn Kuby, as sociate professor of home econ omics, by Friday. Application For College Representatives Open Monday f or 1952 Student Council Filings for Student Council col-! lege representatives will open at 8 a.m. Monday, George Wilcox, chairman of the Council elections committee, has announced. Application blanks will be avail- Council Plans All Sports Day Program George Cobel, Student Council president, Wednesday asked the Councils support for all-sports day, April 5. Cobel also asked the student organization representa tives present if, in the event of a Union open house that night, the organizations having offices in the Union would open their offices and have representatives present to talk to visiting high school students. Cobel said it was up to the student body to sell the Univer sity to visitors. The Union open house will be held during a free dance spon- sored by the N-club and Union All high school and college stu dents are invited to attend. In further Council business, John Adams, engineering, exec board representative, registered a formal protest against the cir culation department of The Dally Nebraskan. The protest was referred to the Campus im P.M. Headlines By CHARLES GOMON Staff News Writer John Foster Dulles Resigns WASHINGTON John Fos ter Dulles, Republican advisor to the state department, re signed his position. In his resignation statement to reporters, Dulles said he hoped soon to be able to ex press his own views on for eign policy. He added,, how ever, that he did not intend Army Uses FT. HOOD, Tex. Til. army confirmed the use of an atomic artillery shell in the Operation Longhorn manuevers at Ft. Hood. The towering cloud of radioactive dust and smoke betrayed the presence of the first such shell fired in con nection with troop operations. Earlier an air force F-80 surprised a group of 300 men on the leeward side of a hill French Arrest Tunision Premier TUNISIA The French to be leaders in a nationalistic clumped tight censorship on news from Tunisia after ar resting the native premier and three members of his cabinet. The jailed m?n are reported UN Early Straw Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has taken a strong lead by iirv.ita.in vntpa fnr nrftsident l... fTM- rtn;i. TVToVM.ac.b conniving to.""'-"-" "J , V, . i dates entered in me rMeuia&n.ci yumaiy r- in Wednesday's Nebraskan. Ballots may still be returned in at the Nebraskan office until 3 p.m. Thursday. Complete results will be announced in Friday's paper. Results of Wednesday's balloting: Republicans & PRESIDENT Eisenhower Robert Taft WornlH TC. Stassen Mrs. Mary E. Kenny Douglas MacArthur Earl Warren RFNATOR fFull terrrrt Val Peterson Hugh Butler SENATOR (Short term) f A Wlolenn Walter A. Nielson Howard Buffet 1 COVERNOR Robert Crosbv 4 vi.fr AnrWwm 21 Victor Anderson . . . Democrats PRESIDENT Est ps Kefauver . 15 w,r Truman SENATOR (Full term) Stanley D. Long SENATOR Hwo-vear term) William Ritchie Henry Fillman Clarence Miles GOVERNOR Walter Raecke Lead 5 Ira Epstein was chosen the new Yell King Wednesday night by members of a yell squad advisory board. Don Devnes was named:Corn Cobs, New Studem, week assistant Yell King at the tryouts. committee, rally committee and New males to the Yell squad are Pan Fogel, Don Hodge and Roy Curtis, regulars, and Don Seibold and Gary Hild, alter nates. Two new females to the squad are Fat Nellis and Marilyn able in Dean Frank Hallgren's 'office, Boom 209, Administration building, until Saturday noon, Ap ril 5. Any freshman or sophomore, with the exception of Law col- To Support provements committee for In vestigation. The complaint came from a claim by Adams that few, if any, Nebraskans are distributed in the Mechanical Arts building, Ban. croft hall and Avery lab. George Wilcox, circulation manager, said that only 4,000 papers could be printed for the approximately 6,000 students and 1,500 faculty members. Wilcox attributed this shortage to a paper shortage. Council migration committee members are trying to cut the price of football tickets to the Colorado migration. Cobel re ported that an exchange student rate on the tickets might be worked out. This would mean that Colorado students coming to Nebraska could attend the game at our student ticket price and Nebraskans traveling to Colorado would attend at their prices. Such a cut might reduce the ticket price from $3.50 to $i.uu to torpedo the bi-partisan policy of the government, nor would he attempt to embarrass the state department. Dulles was formerly for eign affairs advisor to Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, and he is considered the architect of the Japanese peace treaty. Atomic Shell by dropping a simulated atomic bomb. Men of the "ag gressor" 82nd airborne division were caught flat-footed while umpires called out, "You're all dead." It has not been definitely disclosed that we actually have an atomic bomb small enough to be carried b y a fighter plane, but the report from Ft. Hood seems to indicate that we do. movement which aggitates for more Tunisian self-government. Communists have al lied themselves with the cause and riots are frequent. Vote Returns in ine siraw vuic uciug wn- - an The rVlPpk list fOF Candl- ;,,, 0iatirna wns m-inted 36 18 7 . ; 52 19 2 9 ' H l 1 16 Voice of 6000 Cornhusken LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Eaton. Epstein is a member of Student Council, N-club, gymnastics team, president of Sigma Alpha Mu. Devries, past Yell King, is a member of Kosmet Klub, Yell squad advisory board, chairman of the rally committee and be longs to Phi Delta Theta. Forty-five freshmen women lege students, may file as a candidate to represent the col lege of which he is a member. Freshmen in the four-year Law college curriculum may file to represent their college. All candidates must be carry ing 12 University hours and have a weighted 5 average. Each candidate must fill in the following information on his ap plication blank or his filing will be invalidated: 1. Name, address, sex. 2. Position sought. 3. Grade average, class, col lege. 4. Membership and offices in social fraternity or organized house. 5. Membership and offices in professional fraternities and so cieties. 6. Membership and offices in campus activities 7. Signatures of 25 bona fide students enrolled within in the candidate's college, Candidates must also sign the following statement: "I hereby agree that if elected to the Student Council I will serve to the best of my ability and I will arrange my school schedule to permit mv attend ance at the regular meetings of the Student Council." Council positions will be filled by elections scheduled for May 5. Students in each college will vote for their representatives. The number of college representatives on Council will be: Agriculture two (one man and one woman). Arts and Sciences three (at least one man and one woman). Business Administration two. Engineering two. Law one. Pharmacy and Dentistry one representative for both colleges. Teachers three (at least one man and one woman). Qualifications and filing dates for representatives from campus organizations will be announced later. Egg Dance Planned For Ag 'Bunny Hop1 First signs of the 1952 Easter bunny will be seen Friday night when the Ag Union presents its "Bunny Hop" danse. The dance will start at 8 p.m. and will be held in the Rec Room. Admission will be 25 cents plus one cent per inch of shoe. Proceeds from the money for the feet will be given to AUF. The program will include an "Egg Dance" and an Easter egg hunt. Free tickets to the Starlight Terrace ball will be given to the winners of the hunt. Runners-up will receive sundaes. By STAFF WRITER "Just one second!" Sen. Robert Kerr promised his campaign manager as the manager tried to break him away from a question-answer session in the Union ballroom Wednesday night. With only 11 minutes befogs he was scheduled to make a radio address, the senator was still ex plaining the theory behind the Kerr natural gas bill. And strangely enough, he had not even been asked about it. He simply volunteered to an swer a question that was cer tainly paramount in a 1st of minds. "If you believe in the validity of the contract," he told a crowded haiirnom. 'vou believe in the Kerr bill," for as long as pro - Senator Kefauver To Address Students In Union, March 31 Sen. Estes Kefauver will speak to University students and faculty members on the eve of the Ne- braska primary elections. 1 As Democratic candidate for president, Senator Kefauver, (Tenn.) will make his last state appearance at the Union before 'Nebraska voters go to the 'polls. April 1. He is scheduled to speak at 8 p.m., in the ballroom, juon- day, March 31 Plans for publicizing Senator Kefauver's Lincoln schedule will be made at the Young Democrats for Kefauver meeting at 7:30 p.m. this evening in Parlor C, at the Union. Particular functions of the Uni versity Kefauver - for - president campaign are delivering handbills eviries IMlainnied Ye and 15 men were present at the I tryouts for the Yell squad. There were three candidates for Yell King. J Fogel Is a member of the gym- nasties team and Sigma Alpha Mu. Hodge, also a member of the gymnastics team, is a Union com mittee worker and belongs to Delta Tau Delta. Curtis is a member of the "Girl Crazy" cast and Sigma Phi Ep silon. Seibold is a member of the "Girl Crazy" cast. Hild is an Ag Builders worker and a member of Alpha Gamma Rho. Miss Nellis is a Union commit tee worker and a member of; Alpha Chi Omega. Miss Eaton is a member oiiLynn Holland, Joay beireri ana Builders, Red Cross, a CornhuskerlMimi DuTeau. MOCK UNITED NATIONS NUCWA To Elect Two Conference Chairmen Two committee chairmen for the Nebraska University Council for World Affairs spring confer ence will be elected at NUCWA meeting Thursday evening. Mem bers and delegates are to meet in Parlors X and Y, Union, at 7 p.m. The three-day session, to be held April 3 to 5, will be a mock meeting of a United Nations char ter amendment conference. Ac cording to Charles Gomon, secretary-general of the mock Secre tariat, in charge of arrangements for the session, the purpose of the conference is to draw up possible amendments to the UN charter and make recommendations to a theoretical drafting committee. Fat Allen, head of the depart ment of conference procedure of the model Secretariat, chair men will be elected at the be ginning of Thursday's meeting. One chairman will lead the veto problem committee and the other will direct a committee to discuss the powers of the gen eral assembly. Both committees will work to ward finding "some plausible amendments," Allen said. After the election, Allen plans to announce that Jack Solomon, senior in Law college, will act as president of the plenary sessions. "A mock election will be held the first day of the conference in ac cordance with actual UN proced ure," Allen said, "and delegates will elect Solomon at that time." Several points of parliamentary procedure will be discussed at Thursday's meeting, after which Allen will explain rules of pro cedure for the spring conference. NUCWA members will be ap pointed to go to various campus houses Monday evening to give two or three minute speeches pub licizing the conference. Students who wish resolutions to be considered by the mock delegates in April should bring the resolutions to the meeting Thursday, President Virginia Koehler announced. Allen said the resolutions will be mimeographed by the model Secretariat and distributed at the; time they are brought up during the April session. Delegates must propose each resolution orally, Al len explained. When a resolution is suggested at the model session, its intro ducer may speak for seven min utes in favor of it, Allen said, and then may move its adoption. One nnnnsitinn sDeaker may then speak for seven minutes and each ! j Unv.n-fit ffrtm a rnntrnct. UULC13 aav.a. , they are bound by it. The pur pose of the bill, he said, was not to raise natural gas prices, but only to keep the federal government from interfering in the natural re sources of a state. The question-answer period, which lasted only 20 minutes de - spite Kerr's insistence on another second, followfid a speech of about the same length. Quoting Thomas Jefferson and Alfred Lord Tennyson, he told his audience of the "con cept of freedom, liberty and justice of the country." He linked together the Christian cross, the statue of liberty and the standard of the Democratic nartr. A lanky, bulky man (somewnai resembling the late Sen. Kenneth announcing Senator rieiauvers speech, holding Kefauver signs at Lincoln voting centers and pajr HciDation in the southeast Ne braska caravan. These activities will be coordinated with the plans of the Lincoln-Lancaster-County group. No demonstrations will be tolerated before, during or after Senator Kefauver's Sunday and Monday visits according to Dr. Carl Schneider, chairman of the Union committee. Other nTembers of the Union; convocation committee, sponsors of the political program, are Dr, George Rosenlof, Dr. LeRoy Laase, Dr. Frank Sorenson Duane Lake, Julius Cohen, Lynn Kunkel and Bob LaShelle. Thursday, March 27, 1952 worker and belongs to Pi Beta Phi. Holdover members of the squad are Dick Claussen, Judy Withe and Jo Berry, Members of the advisory board are: Jerry Johnson, Inno- cents society president; Gene Robinson, Corn Cob president; Mary Ann Kellogg, Tassel presi dent; George (Potsy) Clark, ath letic director; Don Devries and Ira Epstein, Yell squad; Jake Geier, gymnastic coach; Donald Olsen, director of debate; and Don Lentz, University band di rector. Other eight which were in the top ten are: Marilyn Meuller, Jan Harrison, Marybeue Baldwin, Mary Jane Mapes, Rita Angell, speaker thereafter may talk only three minutes. According to Allen, the type written resolutions due Thursday evening should be set up as fol lows: Upper right hand corner date, language used (English), original language (the language of the country proposing the resolution). Seven inches down First Plenary Session and Charter Amendment Conference. Centered names of sponsor ing nations and title of resolu tion. Body of resolution. Motions and amendments may be considered during the mock conference, Gomon said, but no major resolutions will be consid ered except those mimeographed by the Secretariat in advance. (pWwL By DICK RALSTON Staff Writer Absent Minded Professor: "Do you know what time it is? Student: "Yeah." A. M. Prof: "Thanks." The sergeant -walked into the lounge of the Military and Naval Science building and shouted, "All right you lazy s, hop to and fall in." The students grabbed their hats and lined up all except one who lay on a couch blowing smoke rings. "Well," roared the sergeant. "Well," replied the student, "There certainly were a lot of them, weren't there?" More of the same. That's the weather prediction for today. Skies will continue partly cloudy and the high will be around 38. If you're plan ning to go sledding you'd better do it soon it won't b e long before all the white stuff is gone. For good I hope! Cloudy Wherry), Kerr had to bend over to speak into the michrophone. But his voice was that of a true orator he could have been heard throughout the room without the public address system. The senator warned against j"the architect whose knowledge is .based on the specifications of the past." Democracy is dynamic, he said, and the "keystone of Demo cratic thought and principles is that we look to the future." Labeling Jefferson the radical of his day, Kerr declared that he "is disappointed in youth who are not radicals and in old people who are not conservatives." Young persons, he added, must have the "capacity to dream and to plan a further journey without the bur den (conservatism) which age brings." As proof of the progressive principles of the Democratic party, he pointed to its record during 20 years in national power. He reported that whereas in 1932, the average per capita income was $400, it is now more than $1600. When quizzed later concerning the increase in prices due to infla tion, he estimated that "the aver age man is still a little better than twice as well oil" as he was in 1S39. The United States is the "greatest, richest, most produc tive, strongest nation in Qe world today," he said; "no one can conquer us." Breaking into the oratory for which he has long been known, always Deen ijke this There were 12 years wher things were different when we hardened under Harding, cooled under Cool idge and hungered under Hoover." Continued On Vw ' ,