H'dadlemifs T Cheer iHI ushers M Jkmllf TmsgM f Newman Club The Newman Club Dance will be held Friday from 8 to 10:30 p.m. at the Union Ballroom. There will be refreshment! and plenty of entertainment. Mem bershijti will be accepted. Coffee Hour F o 1 1 o w I n r the Nebraska- South Dakota tame, the Union Hospitality Committee will be howts at a punch and doughnut coffee hour In the Union Main lounge. lJ P "Tf Voice of a Grtat Midwestern nivtriify VOL. 52 No. 5 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Friday, September 19, 1952 CSsss CoyoDCD irths peon Filing Begins Monday; Deadline Sept. 26 Don Piener. Senior Class President, announced that f il ings for the Junior and Senior Class Councils are to open on Monday, sept. ii. Applicants must be members of the Junior or Senior Class, and should have a o accumulative average. Applications will be accepted Monday through Friday at the Student Activities Office, with the deadline for making- appli cations set at 4:30 p.m. on Fri day, Sept. 26. The Council members, six from each class, will be chosen from the applicants on Monday, Sept. 29, from 4 to 6 p.m. in the Student Council Office. "The Interest shown in the Junior-Senior Council will serve as sort of barometer of student in terest in their own government," he said. ' If there is no real inter est shown in these two, councils, we will not be able to continue them. "The Class Council's activities last year were concerned mainly In planning its program for the next year, but an active pro gram is planned for this year. The success or failure of this year's program depends en tirely upon the interest shown by the members of the two classes," Pieper added. Engineering Magazine Nebraska Blueprint Sales Start Bill Neef, Associate Editor, has announced the approaching sale? campaign for the Nebraska Blue print. The Blueprint has been in steady publication since 1902 and became the official organ for the Nebraska Engineering Society in 1938. The Blueprint is Issued October through May at a cost of $1.50 p.r subscription. Leading articles about Engineering advances and Industrial application" jpre written by and for engineering students. Included in each issue are mes sages to members of the Nebraska Engineering Society, and editor ials by Roy- Green, Dean of the College ot Engineering. Sledge Jr. is a feature containing the best of humor from various engineer ing magazines. ; The Blueprint Is staffed mainly bv engineering students at Ne braska. The staff and their posi tions: Phil Ostwald, general man ager; Tish Barry, ' editor; John Krogh, business manager; John Savage, assistant editor; William Neef, associate editor; Lioyd Kel ler, editorial assistant; John Wir sig, feature editor; Bob Peterson, advertising manager; Don Madi son, circulation; and Gene Light ner, sales manager. The Blueprint is a member of Engineering College Magazine As sociation, and is noted for its fine presentation of interesting, accur ate, and effective points about en gineering in a manner that stu dents can understand and enjoy. WORKERS WANTED Anyone Interested In working on the Business Staff of the Daily Nebraskan is requested to contact Pete Bergsten in the Business Office, 3:00 p.m. Mon day. No experience Is necessary, and all interested Freshmen are invited to apply. Cornhusker Post Applications Due Applications . for head Corn husker photographer are being accepted until 5 p.m. Monday, sept. 22. Interested individuals may ap ply lor the yearbook position in Ken Keller's office, 1125 R street. Experience in picture taking, developing and printing are im portant for the job, Keller stated. The only reauirement for the job is a weighted 4 average. The position pays $30 a month. Y.W. Plans Rendezvous For Monday Upper class Members To Form Commissions Ag Union Starts . Membership Drive Four Ae Union committees are seeking new members, accord ing to union president, William Waldo. The committees needing new workers are the dance, publicity, house and general entertainment. .acn committee is headed by a chairman while the past chairman acts as the sponsor of the group. Students interested In signing up may do so in a booth at the Ag union Monday and Tuesday. The booth will be open from 8 a.m until 5 p.m. daily. JOwWA. v. Courtwy i By STAFF WRITER get the ball rolling. nln Slr To cet the ball rolling, how about a little dig at pre-med stu dents: "Why did they evict that pre med student from the library?" "They caught him removing the appendix from the book he was reading." The weath erman pre dicts pretty cool weather for the rally. Skies will be pretty clear today and there will probably be no snow. The unceitain ad jectives are there for a purpose! Women without principle draw considerable interest! The hostess was talking to one of the football men as the two sat listening to a chinses recital. "Beautiful aren't .they?" re marked the hostess. "Pardon?" inquired the football player. "I said they're beautiful, aren't they?" "I'm sorry," he roared, "but I can't hear a thing for these . . . bells." A girl's pins hold a man better than pasting him. v Senior Coed cluelng in fresh man: "If they look young, they're young; if they look old, they're old; If they look back, follow them." Cool Truman's Scribe Dies Suddenly Joseph H. Short, President Tru man's press secretary, died at his home in nearby Alexandria, Va., Thursday night. The 48-year-old secretary was taken ill a week ago last Tuesday night, and spent several days in the hospital. He returned to his home Monday.- Short, who had been White House press secretary since Dec. 18, 1950, was appointed to the po sition after the death of Charles G. Ross. Before designated press secre tary, Short had worked for a number of newspapers and also for The Associated Press. In 1943 he joined the Washington staff of the Baltimore Sun where he was employed until the time of his ap pointment as press secretary. Wrestlers Called . Wrestling Coach Al Partin announced that all men wish ing to try out for the freshman or varsity grappling teams should report for physicals. Wrestling physicals will be given at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the field house. No previous ex perience is necessary for a man willing to work for a position on the team, Partin said. Eleven commission groups will be open to all upperclass, members of YWCA this year. Members will have an oppor tunity to sign up for various groups at the YW Rendezvous Monday, Sept.. 22, from 3-5:30 p.m. in Ellen Smith Hall. The YWCA annual upperclass membership drive began Thurs- ay and will extend through Oct. 3. Each organized and inde pendent house on campus has a representative selling member ships which will be $1.50 for the whole year. Students on the membership committee are: Chairman Pat Lindgren, . Agnes Anderson, Lee Spencer and Syvia Krasne. The eleven commission groups and their leaders are: The Battle for Ballots Neala O'Dell. Community Tours Joyce Laase. Noon Discussion B a r b a r a Bredthauer. Comparative Religions Bar bara Dunn. . Office Staff and Finance Mary Ellerbrock. Worship Workshop Jo Ann Knpaa. Christian Belief s Phyllis Knerl. Camp Counseling S h 1 r 1 e y Lahngus. Community Service Barbara Raun. Goals and Values on Campus Elaine Smlthberger. i Student-Faculty Coffee Hour Betty Brinkman. YMCA Holds Open House The University YMCA held ar open house m its new .Jocatio "Vednesday night. The YMCA moved to Tempo rary Building lust nortn ot Love Library, during the summer. Although the primary purpose of the open house was getting acquainted with new students, at tendance was sparse. The Rev. Rex Knowles. student pastor of Presby House, spoke on the topic "Your place in the Col lege Community," stressing the point that religious activities as practiced by the ymua ana smi lar organizations lend significance to an individuals life on the campus. Ice cream was served alter Rev. Knowles' speech. Attending officers were Sam Gibson, executive secretary, and Dr. M. C. Latta, chairman of the board of the YMCA. The YMCA offers reading, ping- pong, checkers and chess facilities, and students are welcome to come in during regular day hours. Mem Ag As AWS fHODD ee reiiuoe y)irs 5 ..: iwiumu-iimi i ii 'in ' iii ii iiiibmmuwm miiw vwgw ' :i i f W r 7 ft f eons Extra Show Added For Bigger Crowd Skits To Go On Feb. 23 The Associated Women Students Board in revealing plans for the 1953 presentation of Coed Follies, announced a major change in the rules. HERE WE COME . . . And there they go. as the men rush in and out of Coed Follies during the 1952 performance. However, this time, the men will enter through the original entrances and not be forced to leave by police force. (Daily Nebraskan Photo.) GlassjFord And Reynolds To Address Rally Crowd The first rally of the season willl The rally will turn south at 16th be held tonight prior to the Ne- and Vine and proceed to 16th and braska-South Dakota football! R, picking up students from the game. The rally will form at the Coli seum at 7 p.m. sAt that time the rally crowd will be addressed by Bill Glassford, Hilsker coach and Team Captain Bob Reynolds. ' The yell squad, headed ' by Yell King Ira Epstein, will lead off down Vine . street east. The pep band and (the victory bell will follow the yell squad. The Corn Cobs, Tassels, and Pep sters, in that order, will form ranks behind ther band. ' ' ' I houses as it goes. From 16th and R, the rally will go to the steps of the Student Union. The yell squad will lead the group in yells and songs. . A new yell which will be prac ticed tonight and used for the first time at the South i Dakota game is as follows: : T-E-A-M, fight, fight, win, win; T-E-A-M, fight, fight, win, win; We're gonna fight, fight, fight; We're gonna win, win, win;- , We're gjonna b-e-a-t South Dakota! .NU Cheer Squad Has Daily Practice Sessions Did you ever sit in the stands at a lootbail game and tninK wnat fun it would be to be a member of the yell squad that comes run ning down the cinder track to lead the cheering section? Sure its fun. But it isn't so glamorous" on a weekday afternoon when every word you say ecboes back at you from the empty stadium and there's nobody hi sight but the yell squad and their trainer, Jack Geier. Yet the yell :squad has been working out every night in pre paration lor the 'Opening game. They were in Lincoln all during Freshman week i and made three appearances before the new students. Yell King Ira Epstein, assistant Yell King Don Devries. Judy Wiebe and Jane Calhoun are for-i mer members of the squad. New! members are Danny Siebold, Gary Hild, Dick Claussen, Danny Fogel, Don Hodge, Marilyn Eaton and Pat Nellis. Wednesday night's workout was attended by Jerry Tubbs. Jerry was a member of last year's squad. He is now on leave from the paratroopers prior to leaving for Korea. Remember the flips done off the springboard following every touchdown? On game day they are precision-perfect. That means that they have been repeated countless times in practice. The squad works out for about two hours every night. After games start the workouts will be cut to three a week. The yell squad is not all show. If you don't believe it, you try walking on your hands. "They're doing a line job," according to their trainer. Artd he should know, because he . doesn't stop training snort ot perfection. The follies will be given two nights and will be open to the entire public this year. Before the performance has been limi ted to coeds only. The change in rules follows a recommenda tion by the Student Council that male students be allowed ad- SOCIAL OPENER University Pre-M Student Attends Class By Day, Walhs Best Of A Regular City Policeman By Might LEONARD ZAJECEK Staff Writer The Daily Nebraskan hashad a policeman in its office for the past week. Richard Pedersen, Patrolman Third Class of the Lincoln Police Force, is doing a sports story covering the athletic activities of the University in the past few years for the paper. In his spare time he attends classes, that is, when he is not on bis 11-8 night beat. Pedersen. who lives at 1424 No. 41st with his wife, Vyvene, and two sons, Richard Jr., and Jerry, intends to exchange his blue uni form for the white jacket of a heart surgeon. This semester he enrolled for his second term at the University in preparation for per haps four or more years in med ical school and special training. The 23-year-old patrolman explained his unusual goal this way, "By reading and hearing about heart surgery, I decided there was a definite need for many specialists in the field," and, added the Curtis, Nebr., native, " it would be rewarding to help people handicapped with heart disease." Pedersen's daily routine begins with his ll-to-8 a.m. police tour. Following this, the young officer attends classes or studies, usually from 10 a. m. to 5 p.m. every week day afternoon. Along with his eight hours of classes which he plans to raise to 12, he manages to work in odd jobs like assembling an article on past University's sport mm history. He is not a stranger to sports and intends to try out for tho University wrestling and boxing teams this year. ' 4 sN" k .-. - ' I -, -5a - i ' Ir-a-. I I v - lint ' f " V if , Coortejy Lincoln Journal IN-BETWEEN ... Taking a short break between studies and work, Patrolman Third Class Richard Pedersen talks to his wife Vyvene. The father of two sons, Pedersen is combining his full time Lincoln police job with his pre-med education at the University. Pedersen first became Interested in becoming a heart specialist when he was graduated from Curtis high school in 1947. Later he attended Kearney State Teach ers college for one year, and ar rived here the summer of 1952. He joined the police force this sum mer. Hobbies play an important Dart in Pedersen's free time. When he is not flying he holds a pilots license and has logged over 1,200 hours in the air he is probably out on the pistol range banging away at targets. Fishing and hunt ing also rate high on his priority list oi recreations. "My wife doesn't see me very often," he said, "She says I just come home to change my shirt." While home at Curtis, Pedersen mentioned another hobby which occupied his idle time. During one summer, he and two of his friends followed the Kansas-Nebraska-Oklahoma rodeo circuit. There were 15 to 20 rodeos on the circuit, which started at Stratton and con tinued through Kansas and Okla homa. Denver held the biggest show in which the fellows partici pated. Next summer he hopes to add to the family income by riding again m the county rodeo. Bare back riding and bull riding are his specialties. "Just for the fun of it," he may try the annual Ag col lege rodeo this spring. Dean's Tea Entertains CoedsToday All women students and house chaperons have been invited to the annual tea given by Miss Mar jone jonnston, dean of women, and her staff in Ellen Smith Ha'.l Friday from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. The tea, a tradition on cam pus, officially opens the Uni versity social season. Freshman women and new students are especially invited to attend. In the receiving line with the dean of women will be Mrs. R. G Gustavson; Helen Snyder, assist ant dean of women; and Mary Augustine, assistant to the dean. Greeting the guests will be Sy. via Krasne, Mortar Board crest dent, and Jean Loudon, president or Associated Women Students. Representatives of the women's service organizations wiU be as sisting in the dining room. Music for the tea will be furnished by Delta Omicron, Mu Phi . Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Jota, music so rorities. . .'i Mrs. W. V. Lambert and Mrs. G. W. Rosenlof will preside at the table in the dining room, and Mrs. J. P. Colbert and Mar garet Cannell at the table in the court during the first hour. At the tea table in the dining room during the second hour will be Mrs. Arthur Hitchcock and Mrs. Walter Militzer, while Mrs. David Foltz and Miss Dudley Ash ton will preside at the table in the court. mitlanoe due to the raids staged by male students to gain ad mittance. The AWS board went one step further and opened the Follies to anyone caring to at tend. Coed Follies is an annual coed show presented by the Associated Women Students. The show con sists of about five skits and four curtain acts. Each organized wom en's house prepares an act and a judging team composed of half the AWS Board and two faculty members select the best acts to present at the show. Each house also enters two candidates for Typical Nebraska Coed. Of forty candidates en tered, twenty are selected as finalists. A judging team com posed of the other half of the AWS Board and several faculty members selects the winner. This year's presentation will b given at the Nebraska Theater. There will be two evening per- tormances. leb. 23 and 24. The Typical Nebraska Coed will be presented the first night. A group of faculty members will judge the acts given in the follies and the winning act will be announced the second night. Notice to the organized houses concerning the formation of actj will be released about Nov. 1 by the AWS Board. Reservations Still Open For Dad's LuncK The Innocents Society urges all University students to place their reservations for the Dad's day luncheon as soon as possible. The luncheon, which is at 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the Student Un ion, is for all University students and their fathers. The lunch will include talks by Chancellor R. G. Gustavson and Col. C. H. Frank forter. Price is $1.25 a plate. Coach Ed Weir will introduce the fathers of the members of the football team. All of the fathers will also be honored at the after noon's football game between the Huskers and South Dakota. P. M. Headlines By SALLY ADAMS VaW j WASHINGTON American robot planes have demolished Com munist targets in North Korea. The birth of push-button warfare was witnessed by Associated Press Photographer Fred Waters on Sept, 1. Navy censors delayed the release of Waters' story cabled from the aircraft carrier Boxer. He witnessed the progress of the pilotless "suicide" plane on a television screen. Navy reports said: (1) The missile is sent aloft from a catapult on the carrier. (2) There are two electronic equipped guide planes one on the carrier and one in the air. (3) The carrier-based plane sends the missile skyward. Then the airborne guide takes it and directs it to the target. (4) The guide plane is out of anti aircraft fire when the missile hits the target. (5) The missile records its progress via telecast to the ship's electronics room. BRIDGEPORT, CONN. Gov. Adlai Stevenson opened his New England campaign drive with his views on economy and corruption. He said it is something "you've got to grind at 24 hours a day." The Illinois governor spoke in defense of his sense of humor. His Republican opponents have often criticized his humorous ap proach to campaign lssues Stevenson had been in conference with Sen. J. William Fulbright of Arkansas before the Bridgeport speech. Fulbright said the gov ernor was an excellent candidate and he strongly supported him. - SPRINGFIELD, OHIO Sen. Robert Taft said the philosophy of government spending and power can be changed only if Gen. Dwight Eisenhower is elected president. Taft's address opened the 19-state tour which the Ohio senator will make in support of the Republican nominee. It was his first speech since he was defeated by Eisenhower for the presidential nomination. Speaking out in favor of the general, Taft said, "He believes strongly in our system of constitutional limitations. He abhors the left-wing theory that the executive has unlimited powers." Taft said that the Democratic nominee Stevenson was a captive of the Truman administration and would not be able to erase corruption. i . . WASHINGTON T. Lamar Caudle testified Wednesday that Tom Clark ordered him to drop prosecution of an OPA case in North Carolina in 1944 when the defendant retained Clyde R. Hoey as his attorney. Clark at that time was chief of the Justice Department's criminal division, and Hoey bad just been nominated as Senator from North Carolina. Caudle was testifying before the House Judiciary Committee investigating the Justice Department He was fired by President Truman last November from his post as District U.S. Attorney la North Carolina. - NEBRASKA CITY No increase in the pollution of the Missouri River was reported following the dumping of garbage in Omaha Wednesday. City water department officials were still watching tests. Army Engineer observers told Omaha Mayor Glenn Cunning ham that danger from the first dumping was now past. 4