The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 09, 1948, Image 1

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Dewey States
Faith in GOP
Leadership
Governor Urges
European Unity,
Strong Defenses
Apparently undismayed by his
recent shut-out. in the Wiscon
sin primaries, New York's Gov
ernor Thomas E. Dewey ex
pressed faith in the certainty of
Nebraska Republicans voting
"with confide.-;.-, sincerity tind
real purpose" for a change in
administration.
Dewey spoke to a near-capacity
audience at the University
coliseum Thursday night. His
address was broadcast over a
state-wide network.
Praises G. O. P.
"With a Republican adminis
tration," Dewey asserted, "I am
convinced that we can solve our
problems of inflation, debts and
taxes."
He pointed out the importance
of Nebraskans, as well as all
other citizens, getting out to vote.
"You may," he promised,"be sure
the administration in Washing
ton will hear your voice. It may
not be a very bright administra
tion, but . it is politically sensi
tive." ; ; i i
The Governor declared! that
although) ;Communist Russia has
an imperial program of world
conquest,- "it seeks to conquer
the wofld not by force but by
political action, by preying on
the fears and weaknesses of peo
ple, by fraud, by trickery and
by terror."
Denounces "Weakness."
He blamed the present Dem
ocratic administration for "our
weak foreign policy," observing
that we have "not had any clear
cut objectives, any long range
goal." Dewey denounced both
the program of appeasement ad
vocated, he said, by Henry Wal
lace ,and the program offered by
the Truman government, dis
missing it with the statement
that "it is not much better and it
would only lead to war sooner."
In place of either of these of
fers, Governor Dewey outlined
a two-point plan calling for
strengthening of our national de
fenses and a United States of
Europe.
Urres Free Trade.
"If the economic barriers be
tween these nations (European)
were removed, their production
could move through a unified
European economy and great
new capital expenditures would
develop mass production, yield
ing a rising standard of living
and increased personal security,"
Dewey asserted.
Although he expressed ap
proval of the European Recov
ery Program as a step on the road
to European unity, the Gover
nor emphasized the point that
"we cannot possibly establish a
lasting peace just by lending or
500 Youths Visit Ag Campus
For FFA and Vocational Meet
About 500 youths from through
out the state will be on Ag
campus Friday and Saturday to
participate in the state FFA con
vention and vocational education
judging contests, according to H.
E. Bradford, of the vocational
education department.
Judging teams from 45 schools
will contend in the vocational
education contests, while the 90
chapters of FFA in Nebraska will
be represented by their, delegates
at the convention.
Ribbons Awarded
Ribbons will be awarded in
three groups in each judging con
test,, blue, red and white. The
ribbons will be given to the win
ning teams and the runners up in
each contest. Winners of some of
the contests will be sent to re
gional contests.
Vocational education contests to
be held Friday include: Poultry
judging; crops judging and iden
tification; Carm management;
dairy proajwis judging; livestock
Vol. 48 No. 115
F6 EtejSGll Convention
Delegates from Newman clubs
of 36 universities and colleges
will meet Friday, Saturday and
Sunday for the eighth annual
convention of the Central States
Province of the Newman club
foundation.
"Meeting the Challenge of Our
Times" is the theme of the
Catholic student organization's
meeting.
The program begins with
registration of chaplains at the
Cornhusker hotel. After a wel
come by Msgr. George Schuster,
Province Chaplain, Rev. F. Mc
Phillips, National Newman Club
Chaplain, will preside over a
general meeting.
Register at Union
, Students and delegates will
register in Parlors XYZ in the
Union. In the evening there will
be a social get-together at 8:30
at CYO hall at South 18th and J
streets. '
Saturday's program will be
largely in the Union, beginning
at 9:15." A banquet, followed by
a dance, will be held in the
Union ballroom Saturday night,
beginning at 6:30.
The program will end Sunday
April 11, with a tour of Boys
Town. Students and delegates
will meet at . the Union at 1:30
for transportation.
Plan Policy
The policy of the Newman
clubs of the region for next year
will be formulated at the forums
and discussions. Harold J. Lu
chtel, president of the five-state
province, is in charge of the or
ganization of the convenfion. He
was one of Nebraska's delegates
to the same convention last year
at the University of Illinois.
States represented are Iowa, Il
linois, Kansas, Missouir and Ne
braska.
Dr. C. Forbes, faculty adviser,
will be toastmaster. The welcome
will be given by Most Rev. L. B
Kucera, D.D., LL.D., Bishop of
Lincoln. Chancellor R. G. Gus
tavson will address the group on
"Meeting the Challenge of the
Times," the theme of the con
vention'.
giving away money and food and
machinery, no matter how noble
our intentions or how generous
our deeds."
"ii," uewey continued, "we
will use our European recovory
program to achieve the goal of
a federated free Europe, then 've
will really begin to achieve the
kind of a peace the whole world
is praying for."
Spread Democracy
Dewey urged the launching of
See Dewey, Page 2, Col. 4)
judging; dairy management; pro
ject records, and crops and soils
management. Saturday's contests
are dairy cattle judging and farm
mechanisms.
Tryouts Held
There are from 16 to 40 en
trants in each contest. Tryouts
have been held in some schools
to determine which teams would
participate while in other schools
vocational education teachers
have chosen the teams to come.
The contests are in charge of
Bradford and Claude C. Minteer
of the vocational education de
partment at Ag college.
The contests to be held in con
junction with the state FFA con
vention are in public speaking,
parliamentary procedure, and in
dividual project books. The
entrants in these contests are the
winners of the district FFA con
vention contests. The winner of
the public speaking contest will
compete f.i the regional contest
later th is spring in Waterloo,
Iowa.
Lincoln 8, Nebraska,
KK Show Highlighted
By Gamblers, Misfits
THE CHORUS LINE for the forthcoming Kosmet Klub production,
"Get Your Kicks'," works out in the Temple Theater. The play will
open there next Thursday, playing for three days.
The greatest collection of psy
chological misfits that ever de
scended on the Nebraska campus
will assemble on the stage of the
Temple TheatreApril 15, 16 and
17 to present the spring Kosmet
Klub review, "Get Your Kicks."
The show will include every
thing from professional gamblers
to sophisticated coeds.
Nightmare Created
This "nightmare on wheels" cre
ated by Bill Wiseman and Ken
Greenwood features nine hit tunes
and a bevy of all-male talent to
present them. The authors, in
collaboration with Dick Lahr and
Av Bondarin, president and busi
ness manager of Kosmet Klub, are
directing the show.
The authors claim: "The story
is a portrayal of campus life and
the leading character is so good
Third National
Photo Exhibit
To Open May 3
Eleven prizes will be awarded
to winners in the third annual
National Collegiate Dhotoerarjhv
exhibition. The exhibition is
sponsored by Kappa Alpha Mu,
honorary fraternity devoted to
photo journalism. The contest will
be judged at the University of
Missouri May 3.
Sponsoring the first prize in the
news division, the Milwaukee
Journal will award the winning
photographer seven working
weeks as a photo editor at a salary
of $50 a week.
Any student regularly enrolled
in any college or university may
enter up to ten prints with no
more than five prints in a single
class. Closing date for entries is
April 30.
Prizes will also be awarded for
winners in the pictorial, industrial,
sports, and fashion divisions.
Focal Press, Inc., will award a
set of six photography books to
each of the photographers who re
ceive honorable mentions in the
five divisions of the contest.
Entry blanks and contest rules
may be secured by writing W. J.
Bell, 18 Walter Williams Hall.
University of Missouri, Columbia,
Missouri.
Friday, April 9, 1948
y :J u d
it takes two men to portray him."
Billingham, a back slapping poli
tician, big time gambler and one
of the greatest lovers of all time,
requires the combrried efforts of
Bob Baum and Paul Harrington.
Rivals BilHngham
Paul Walchuck will play Eus
tace who rivals Billingham in ac
complishments both good and bad.
The typical campus coed, a pseudo
sophisticated young lady named
Miss Burt, will be played by tenor
Norman Walt.
Every college has a tyrannical
Dean and Herb Jackman in the
role of Newhouser gives himself
high blood pressure with his fits
of rage.
Tickets for the show are now on
sale for 75 cents and reserved
seats may be obtained Monday at
the Temple theatre box office.
"Last year's record of a packed
house indicates an early sellout,"
said Lahr.
Ag College Meet Boosts Interest
In Coming Farmer's Fair Rodeo
Farmer's Fair rodeo outlook re- meeting to be held Wednesday,
ceived a sizeable boost Wednesday
evening at a meeting of the Ro
deo committees and interested
parties. Increased interest is at
tributed in part to the convo
cation Tuesday, acquainting stu
dents with the traditions of the
event.
The arena has been laid out
northwest of the college activities
building, and chutes will be fin
ished soon. Many students have
brought their own horses to Ag
college, where they are being
kept through housing secured by
James Dunlap, animal husbandry
instructor and rodeo sponsor.
Mounts Needed
There is still a great need for
mounts to be used for pickup
horses, since many students are
unable to bring their own stock.
Interest in the rodeo is not con
fined merely to the male popu
lation of the university, but coed
interest was evidenced by their
large attendance a the meeting
Wednesday night.
Contest Tlanned
A special coed calf catching
contest is being planned which
requires no previous experience
for participation. Anyone inter
ested should plan to attend the
Stassen Says
Victory Tells
Party Growth
Aspirant Voices
Optimistic Policy
Concerning Peace
Wisconsin's recent election re
sults were encouraging not as a
"purely personal victory," but be
cause they showed that "Repub
licans are building toward prog
ress,'" Harold E. Stassen, now sec
ond in the race for the Republican
presidential nomination, told an
overflow crowd at a convocation
in the Union ballroom Thursday
afternoon.
Stassen finished far ahead of
runner-up General Douglas Mac
Arthur in Wisconsin's primary
Tuesday.
Stassen declared that although
the primary reason for our fear
of war is doubtless communist
growth, certainly the second is the
weakness of U. S. foreign policy.
"There are two extreme schools
of thought on this subject," the
former Minnesota governor said.
The first is appeasement which,
Stassen said, he rejects because
"you cannot pave the road to
peace with the jelly-like blocks
of appeasement."
Stassen rejected also the mili
tarists who say we "cannot escape
another war.." "We must never
surrender to the insidious whisper
that war is inevitable," he assert
ed, and added that he sees grounds
for optimism concerning peace.
Commenting on the communist
danger in this country, Stassen
stated that infiltration through
gaining control of lop positions is
a recognized communist device,
and that it is being methodically
attempted in this nation.
"In the face o fthese tactics,"
Stassen declared, the Communist
party should be "outlawed in
America and in all liberty loving
countries o fthe world."
This does not mean, he ex
plained, that we should restrict
the right of American? to reject,
oppose or dissent from what they
believe wrong, but it does mean
that any political organization
with its basis in a foreign nation
should be illegal.
Stassen stressed the fact that
an affirmative campaign to win
the world to democracy is neces
sary "not through propaganda,
but through information: the best
counter to communism is to make
the American system work bet
ter." Under what Stassen termed our
"superb economic system," he
pointed out that the United States,
with only one-sixteenth of the
world's peoples, is producing al-
(See Stassen, Page 2, Col. 4)
I April 14
The college rodeo is a tradi
tional event in many colleges
and universities over the coun
try. The last Farmer's Fair on
Ag campus was held in 1941,
and the rodeo was an important
part of it. All student participa
tion will make it the great event
it traditionally is, and everyone
is encouraged to participate in
the rodeo or to help on the vari
ous committees that have been set
up, according to Vaughn Johnson,
rodeo head. Interested parties may
sign on committee lists located in
the Ag Union or in Ag Hall.
Spring Election
Filings to Close
Filings for the Spring Elec
tions will close at 5 p.m. today.
The elections are held to decide
members of the Student Council,
Publications Board, Ag Exec
Board, Farmer's Fair Board and
Col Agri Fun Board, plus the 1943
Ivy Day Orator.
Additional positions on the
Student Council not listed ia last
week's -story are four seniots at
large, two men and two wsmen.