Sunday, March 7, 1943 JIul (Daikp VfabhaAkcuv FOKTY -SECOND YEAR Subscription Kates ar ji.w Per Semester or J1.60 for the Coiipm Tear. J2.50 Mailed. Single copy, 6 Cents. Entered as second-class matter at the post of fice In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Conuress March 3, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for In Section 1103, Act of October 3, 1917 Authorized September 30. 1922. Published dally during the school year except Mondays and Saturdays, vacations and examinations periods by Students of the University of Nebraska under the supervision of the Publications Board. Offices Union Building. Pay-2-718l. NMght 2-7193. Journal 2-3330. Editor Alan Jacobs Business Manager Betty Dixon EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT. Managing Editors George Abbott. Marjorle Mav News Editors John BauetmeiMcr, Pat Chamberlin, June Jarmesori, Marylouise Goodwin Mary Hckn Thorns. Sports Editor Noma Andorson. Circulation Manager Don Pupoz. 'Kiss the Boys Goodby' In the Appropriate Manner V . . Mail Clippings Pat Chamberlin, Censor The report of the situation of the EHC and n ranced ROTC in today's Daily !ebraskan is not a rumor. We hope that it is the end of rumors, that students trill react in the most intelligent manner: by not losing their heads, by settling doun to serious study until called. Approximately :!()() UN men will be affeded when the ERC is called. Few abhor the idea of leaving school 1o enter military service; almost all are looking forward to the experience with expectation and determination. But at the same time, there are few who will leave wilhout memories of college life, of incidents on ihe campus that have impvessed them ; there are few who will leave w ithout sonic regret. As for those remaining on the campus, all sadly say good by to fraternity brothers, room-mates, sweethearts and friends. For Ihe women, it means more than less boys with whom to go out. For the men, there is sort of a feeling of envv: "YOU'RE (i'KTTINO INTO THE TllINO-WUHKK WE UK LON(t, HUT W E ST A Y 11 Eli E. ' So with the same mixed emotions that is evident on the canipus, the Daily Ncbraskan offers a suggestion: Let the uni versity and student-body honor Ihose some .'100-odd men who are leaving. Let these ETC men typifying all UN men iti ihe service bead the goodbys and good-lucks of the campus which they leave. That is why this paper calls on the War Council, the Stu- i dent Council, Innocents society, Corn Cobs, the YM or any or-! ganization or all of them to plan a rally honoring the ERC men before they leave. i Remember the Rose Bowl rallies? They were for nr men who had von ureal victories on the eridiroii. Now there exisls - -J . - 1 ! 1- . - . 1 - I. - ... 1 i" 1. 1. .. 1 I ' i a situation in wnicn uw men arc to nc nuuorcw jor wnai mi;i j be even greater victories. The organization or organizations which undertake the planning of the affair should consider what has been done at other schools. At the University of Washington, for example, the senior class has produced a "stage-show program' depicting the de velopment of the university from a peacelime to a wartime school with special tribute to the men leaving for the service. Broadcast over all local stations, the show has increased school spirit, acquainted the public wtih the campus war activities, and kissed the boys goodby. At other schools, torchlight rallies have been climaxed by all school dances. Others are planning campus assemblies where departing students hear speeches, are entertained by college talent. Ideas are plentiful. At any rate, here is a projoel for the extra-curricular or ganizations on ihe campus! There is not loo much time remain ing to plan a suitable program. Why doesn't a well co-ordinated body like the Student War Council begin organization today? Report has come that Second Lieutenant PAUL KRASNE has been injured in the fight ing line on New (iuinen. He is believed to be back in action at the date of this writing. Lieutenant Krastie was a member of eta Beta Tail. Back on a short furlough is Corporal (iEORCE YET I' El J. Phi Psi of last year. Me has finished a laboratory transmission course at Fort Bliss. El Paso. Texas, and will leave tonight for Fresno, California, lie and pinmate Bat 'Fulton has been doing the town for the past few da vs. Second Lieutenant .IOE Kl KSll EM AUM is with 1he Army Ordnance department now on field maneuvers in the Louisiana swamplands, doe writes his Zeta Beta Tau brothers that once dining the early dawn be was shot and killed with the opposing arm's tracer machine gun bullets. "Ami boy, was it ever a strange feel ing to know that I was dead!' HARRY L. 1IASKINS, -T. is home on a fifteen day leave, wearing his new Navy Air Corps wings, lie received his w inns at Pens-i-cola, Florida. Ensign BILL MARSH, former Union direc tor, was back on ihe campus wilh bis wife. Maribel Hitchcock Marsh, lie is on leave until next week when he will ship out on sea duty for two months. Second Lieutenant EDWIN S. WITTEN RERf. reported for duty as an observer at the Will Rogers army air force bombardment base last month. He received his commission at Miami Beach, Florida, last August. Lieuten ant Wittenberg is a member of Zeta Beta Tau, Pi Epsilon Pi, and Sigma Delta Chi. White Space A' B' on Ben Joe College awoke one night in a deep dream of unrest, and there was Maria Monte, dancing like mad on a techni color sand dune. Waving a veil in each hand, Maria sent a semaphore message to Joe, saying lhat he must come to Bagdad to help pay off Ihe mortgage on her circus. Needing no second invitation Joe asks how they are going to get from the campus to Bagdad. Maria answered that a couple of camels would help; so Joe whips out his trusty eigaret case, and ihey light up and puff away to Bagdad. Tn Bagdad, Joe revolutionizes Maria's circus business by having her five hundred dancing girls exchange their veils for sweaters; and after persuading them to dull the pinkness of their complexions wilh Luck, the lathery hope of beautiful women, he gets Maria and her girls Hollywood contracts. As a sifin of their grati tude Ihe girl takes her magic lamp and make Joe Caliph of Bagdad. In order to accomplish Ibis feat, Alassie makes Joe the twin of the current. Caliph. Two caliphs that look alike, cause all kinds of trouble; and after battle scene after battle scene, Joe is finally facing the real caliph in a hand to hand scimeter duel. Suddenly Joe's scimeter is knocked from his hand, and as he is about to be pushed into a harem swimming pool, Alassie asks him if he has one last wish that she can fulfill. "Just tell me where Maria is," Joe says. "We were alone when this busi ness stalled.'' At Ibis moment a dutiful freshman begins sloshing cold water on Joe, and begging him 1o get up. Joe screams, "(iet out. (Jet out. I can't go to class this morning. I was out lale 1o a movie. Now, where did you say Maria is?' The moral of all of which is never buy Tickets for Ihe loge. because the usher will put you in the third balcony anyway or one Arab ian night at home is worth 1,001 at the cinema. Capital QampuA. tti 11! 81 a II! At Union Led u re . . . British People Determined To Aehieve Total Victory' Iterates Former Labor Leader The pressures of war in Eng land have instilled a spiritual de termination and not a fatalism among Britains, said Jack Jones, formerly one of the foremost labor War Drives . . . (Continued from page 1.) sum to raise the total to $1,574. The present Red Cross campaign is well underway with sororities and fraternities pledging amounts ranging from $1.25 to $2.00 per person, and the organization of the unaffiliated students enables each student to be contacted. One un affiliated group, the Pioneer Co-op, has pledged 100 membership. Nebraska students have been pressed hard for cash recently, but the reaction has been a happy jone: Less cokes, perhaps, but hearty response to every request. leaders in Wales, in a lecture de livered Friday afternoon at the Student Union. Subject of Jones' talk was "Conditions in Great Britain Today." The British, said Jones, have been able to produce incredibly, to live on increfliDiy small amounts of food, etc., only because they have achieved a high spirit of contemplative sacrifice. Money means little to the people of Great Britain at this time, for it now is a servant, not a master, of the people. All people there are now on an equal social and economic level. In the discussion which fol lowed the lecture Jones said of the India situation, "We are will ing to relinquish responsibility io India when this nation is ready to assume it. We would not make any move there politically which would be detrimental to China," 8 By Jay Richter ACP Correspondent 11 ROOM FOR RENT BY RACKETEER WASHINGTON'. (AIT) To nimble-witted gentry wilh acquisitive instincts, it's a rare iJl wind that fails to suggest a road to easy wealth. I The ill wind of Washington's wartime overcrowding is no I If - A i I Al 1. exccpnon. .Many a governnicm recruii is learning ine searcn for a room to rent may lead to the door of a petty racketeer. According to the Washington 1. S. attorney's office, here's bow hundreds of newcomers are victimized. The new ai rival i checks his bag at Union Station and begins the loom hunt. Hours later he finds a landlord who says he'll have a room available next day and a weeks' rent in advance, please. The jubilant room hunter pays, pockets a receipt and de parts rejoicing. ..Next day he returns. "No room here, sorry," says the landlord. The room hunter shows his receipt, asks for his money back. The landlord points to the receipt. It says "no fund after 10 hours.'' The war worker is out $). $10, or more and still roomless. That's small stuff. Big-time operators mulct home seekers of as much as $200, deposit on purchase of a Jamie. Few college students ever buck a racket like this. But they are old hands at the perilous, complicated business of renting rooms and living in rooming bouses. They could give lessons 1o women war workers now living in rented rooms for the first lime. To help them with their problems, ihe Women's Bureau of 1he Department of Labor prepared a list of do's and don'ts for roomers and landladies, complete with an epigram from Emer son: "Life is not so short but that there is always time enough for courtesy." EXPERIMENTAL DRAMA WPB isn't known as a patron of the experimental drama, but it's keeping an eye on an experiment among New England college theatres that involves of all things a logging project. Since the experiment concerns reduction of the manpower shortage for winter logging operations, however, WPB has a legitimate interest. Matter of fact, WPB wrote the script. It's "Woodman, Chop That Tree," a dramatization of the need for loggers. Members of the Allied College Theatres of New England pre senting the drama include Amherst, Bennington, Brown, Mount Holyoke, Smith, Wcllesley, Williams and Yale. Theatres at these schools organized last fall to integrate and enlarge their war activities. Radio Class . . . (Continued from page 1.) sound physical health. A trans script of high school scholastic record showing all grades and sub jects must be submitted with ap plication. Satisfactory completion of Course I, will be required to enroll in Course II. Forms for application for enroll ment in the course may be ob tained at Bancroft hall on the uni versity campus or by writing to the Director of War Training, University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Credit . . (Continued from page 1.1 suits will be sent to educational institutions on request. Work Toward Degree. In this way, men and women whose educations were Interrupted when they joined a- service can make use of army and navy ex periences and training to work toward diplomas when the war is over. It is up to the college and schools to decide how they will credit the results of these tests, but miny institutions have ex pressed willingness to co-operate, and the army and navy expect lhat a fairly uniform system will be worked out. Proposed by the United States Armed Forces Institute which conducts correspondence courses for servicemen and endorsed by the American Council on Educa tion, the plan has already been approved by many regional and national educational accrediting associations. vr Choice positions are ratl ing on as from states all over the Mississippi Val ley. We can make your enroll ment profitable to yon. Call or write. fa ?8v lit tjr: