The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 04, 1949, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Friday, February 4, 1949
Page 2
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
JIuL (Daily. Thbha&karL
Member
Intercollegiate Press
fORTT-SEVENTH TEAS
Tte Dtilj Nrfermksii to published by the students of t"w Cnlrersfty of Nebraska s
. exprrssina ! students news and opinion only. According to arllela II of tbo By
lin governing student publications aad administered by the Board of Pohllcatloni:
II la the deduced policy of the Board that piihllratlona nnder Its jurisdiction sr. a P.
a free from editorial censorship on the part of the Board, or on the part of any
cremher of the faculty of the university; but member of the staff of The Daily
Nebraska are personal! irapotsihle for what they say or do or rauae to be printed."
rinnscrlptioo rateo are M.0 per semester, 2.80 per semester mailed, M S3.0 tor
(he rollcKe year. $4.00 mailed. Sinrle eopy Sc. Published dally during the school year
eicept Mnndrys and Saturdays, ncations and examination periods, hy the University
f Nebraska under the suervision of the Publication Hoard. Entered as rireond
riass Matter at the Post Office in IJneoln, Nebraska, under Act of Congress, March
, I87. and at special rate of pout ace provided for la section 113, Act of October
X. 1917. autbonFd September 10. 1912.
r.DlTORI Al,. Feature Kditor Kmily Heine
Norm Ieger
t ub Clem,
Frit Simpson
ManaKing Kaitnrs
f Kditors ..l.oulse MrDIII. Susie Ki-cil,
M. J. .Melick, tiene Berg, Bruce Kennedy
Ak New Kditor M-ron tiusfafson
. . . : . . . . L .lit.... I !.'..
Snort, Kditor Harlan Bcld.-ck
Assistant Sports Kdilor Jerry KinC
'
Night News Kditor Bruce Kennedy
NU Bulletin Board
Friday
Palladia ns, 8:30 in Palladian
hall, Iran program.
Ag square dance, 8:30 to 11.30.
Three films on spring flowers
will be shown at Room 306 of Ag
hall at 8 p. m.
UNESCO Natural Sciences com
mittee, 4 p. m., Room 315, Union.
Registration for the Ping Pong
tournament, evening of the eighth,
closes at 5 p. m.
Education committee of UNES
CO, 4 p. m., Room B of the Union.
Sunday
Channing college group will
VJhat makes it worth having?
BY ITSELF, a Boll telephone is useless What
makes it so valuable to you is that it brings
the world within easy speaking distance when con
nected to the Bell System network.
' This network has billions of parts. All hcul to be
designed and manufactured to uork together for
good telephone service.
To assure a dependable 60urce of good equip
ment that will uork together with all other parts of
the nation-wide telephone network,Western Electric
long ago was made the manufacturing unit of the
Bell System.
e member of the Bell System, Western Klectric
people can uork most closely with Bell research people
who design equipment and Bell Telephone company
people who operate it Result: You get the ruost de
pendable, most valuable telephone service on earth. '
Western Electric
A UNI1 OF THE BELL
Assistant reature r.ditors lluth Ann Sand
ntedt, Krank Jamb
Society Kditor. . .
faculty Advisor.
. rat ordin
William Hire
Bl S1NKSS.
" Manager. Irv rhesen
v.lslant Hosl.nss MssMen . Merle Stalder,
Boh Axlell, Keith O'Bannon
Circulation Manager Al Ahramson
plan their new semester.
5:15 Executive committee meet
ing. 6:00 Dinner.
7:00 Business meeting.
7:30 Victor Seymour's comic
opera.
planNThallDecDec.ToMe' di-fs
Monday
Ag Colleens will meet in the
lounge of Foods and Nutrition
building, 7:45 p. m.
Anyone interested in Corn
Shucks advertising work meet in
Corn Shucks office, 5 p. m.
SYSTEM SINCE 1882
i' ih'vsNVv'.iV
'.rmnsmrrtfjl 'HeW--vymnw "nj"srt''T7"' Wr-reja-
3 Jionv iliSL
J Ao J tt (paqsL
BY BRUCE KENNEDY
Senate Republicans challenged
the president's power to stop
strikes by court orders as demo
crats and republicans clashed
over labor dif- fpr'2&?.V
ferences Thurs
day. Sen ator
Taft (rep., O.)
stated that such
action should
be made into a
clear law. And
such a law, he
said, is provid
ed by the Taft
Hartley bill, of
which he is co
author. Accord- Journal
ing to President Taft.
Truman's political campaign, the
president Congies sis pledged to
repeal this bill.
Stalin's offer to meet Presi
dent Truman behind the Iron
Curtain to "talk peace" was re
jected by Secretary of State Dean
Acheson. Speaking at a news
conference late Wednesday after
noon Acheson charged Stalin with
playing international politics with
world peace hopes. Acheson be
lieved that since the United Na
tions is pledged to furthering
peace, and because both Russia
and the United States are mem
bers, there is little need for
"traveling half-way around the
world" to make a pledge of peace.
Other news from Russia in
cludes the Soviet statement to join
the world pact of wheal export
ers and importers. Russia will
supply about one-filth of all the
wheat exported by other coun
tries in the pact. Canada, Austra
lia and the United States. The
amount now exported is around
500 million bushels.
Congress appropriated another
$600,00 for the storm region,
making the total money voted by
Congress to almost one million.
President Truman has already
made $300,000 available from his
emergency fund. The bill was
passed by the senate immediately
after receiving it from the house.
J creek i Installed
ASAE President
Gene Jarecki is the new presi
dent of ASAE since new officers
were installed on Wednesday,
Feb. 2.
Other officers in the engineering
society are: v ice-president, How
ard Lamb; secretary, Zane Fair
child; and treasurer, Alan ITo
Kelvie. Dean Roy M. Green of the
Engineering college installed the
newly-chosen officials.
V;
-
&7 w
r
12
"Seventeen's for me,"
says campus queen
Campus queens depend on
Seventeen Cosmetics for that
natural look men look for.
Follow their lead. For make
up, for skin care, choose Sev
enteen Cosmetics. Remember
they are free as possible of
allergy-causing ingredients.
All Seventeen Cosmetics are
priced to fit easily into cam
pus budgets.
SEVENTEEN COSMETICS
on sale at
P & c.
f .I
Two Chances
1111a inuuLii w ilu
AUF drive students have a double chance to prove their
potentialities as active American citizens, ready to work
of peace and the welfare of humanity.
High flung phrases? Perhaps. The skeptics laugh
"What real good will either project accomplish?" Our answer
must be as idealistic as the aims of both projects: UNESCO
that peace can be obtained through education, interna
tional cooperation and understanding; AUF that man will
realize his duty to assist those who, unlike himself, lack the
fortunes to provide a semblai.ee of "the good life."
AUF, this year, means World Service Fund, Community
Chest United Negro College Fund and National Infantile
Paralvsis campaign. In order
the All University fluna, is asKing muucuw w bvc .p.w, ur
more, per person.
Americans have become callous to the phrase, people
in Europe are starving"; they have forgotten that this phrase
is true. A five minute conversation wun any lureign siu
nt nr n nuirk reading of reports on universities from
central Europe to eastern
picture of existing concuuons.
fully grim.
r v,;,-;,-,ct ih nnrnoses
erous other groups working for peace, Wendell Willkie's
"one world" will be made a reality instead of a mere phrase.
hv the conflict between East and West
can be brought to accept democracy as the better way only
under the leadership of men who knojv the truth.
Such leadership must come from students. To pro
vide these students with adequate living conditions and
proper materials for college training the World Student
Service Fund calls on YOU.
It is the responsibility of American students to recog
nize the vital need of helping students all over the world
by giving liberally to the
through the AUb drive.
Four Delegates
To Atteinl4-II
National Camp
Names of four outstanding
state 4-H'ers who will be
delegates to the National 4-H
camp in Washington, D. C., in
June have been announced by
the state 4-H committee. They
are Norm Jorgensen, Clayton
Ycutlcr, Pat Hanlon and Joan
Skucius.
Jorgensen has won a total of
86 blue ribbons through 4-H
work and his 1948 steer won top
honors at Ak-Sar-P.en.
Ycutlcr is an animal husbandry
major :;t Ag college. In 1 04(3 he
was state health champ and in
1938 won a trip to the National
4-H Club Congress in Chicago.
Pat Hanlon is a student at Ag
college. She won the Carey Ray
mond Gray scholarship for Home
Economics achievement.
.loan Skucius is also enrolled
at Ag college. In 4-11 work she
specialized in raising sheep and
in 1947 showed a lirst place sheep
at the State Fair.
YWCA to Offer Three New
Commissions at Rendezvous
Jan Nutman, YV president,
has announced that three com
pletely new commission groups
will be offered at the second se
mester rendezvous Friday between
3 and 5 p.m. in Ellen Smith hall.
A commission on beliefs on
trial will spend the semester dis
cussing "what we believe and
why," according to its leader, Kuth
Speer. Members will try to dis
pense with "inherited" religion
and find their own.
: 4
JANET KEPNF.R will lead a
group on summer projects. The
commission will learn about and
discuss such things as Youth
Hosteling, summer volunteer work
and woik-stuciy seminars in
Europe.
U. S.-P.ussian relations will be
the topic of the Coed Russian dis
cussion commission. Sue Allen and
Rudy Nelson will lead this group
of YM and YW members
Due to the popularity of the
knitting-discussion groups, Jj e
more proficient knitters may knit
in any discussion group and only
those who need help in learning
to knit should sign up fur the
knitting-discussion group.
OTHER CHANGES in the pro
grams of the commission groups
include leadership of the high
school YW groups, Y-teens, by
members of the youth leadership
commission led by Alice Jo Smith.
Leaders of all commissions will
be present at the rendezvous to
explain their respective groups.
Included in the program will be
hp TINF.SnO conference and ih
to serve these groups AUF,
Asia, will give a pretty clear
ine piciuic is, auQiiie-
of UN. UNESCO and num.
world Muaent service rund
Cribbin "Tricks
Told by Shucks
Exposed!
The art of cribbing!
Though too late for student use
this semester, the Corn Shucks
third edition of the year hit the
stands yesterday with the com
plete 'know-haav" on passing final
exams.
The campus humor magazine is
on sale in the Union lobby from
10 a. m. to 5 p. m. every day this
week. Past issues can also be
picked up at the Shucks office at
the same time.
The magazine sells for 20 cents
a copy, or $1 for six issues per
year.
All Corn Shucks advertising
staff members will meet Wednes
day at 5 in the enlarged office.
All students interested in this side
of the magazine are urged to
attend.
The major menaces' on the
highway are drunken driving, un
controlled thumbing and indis
criminate spooning. To put it
briefly, hick, hike and hug!
a talk by Miss Nutzman and a
skit between 3:30 and 4:30. Re
freshments will be served all aft
ernoon. Monson Heads
Home Ec Club
Five new officers of the Home
Ec club will be installed at a meet
ing Th-irsday, February 3 at 5
p. m. They are: Gwcn Monson,
president; Marilyn Poettger, vice
president; Vivian Frasicr, secre
tary; Mary Chacc, treasurer; and
Janet Ross, historian.
Miss Monson, who has held the
office of Home Ec club secretary
in the past year, was a delegate
to the district Home Ec club con
ference held al Manhattan, Ks.,
this fall. She is a member of Tas
sels, Ag Exec. Hoard, and 4-II
club.
Newly elected vice-president of
the club, Marilyn Boettger served
as Home Ec club treasurer last
year, and attended the . National
Home Ec club convention at Min
neapolis, Minn., last summer. Miss
I'oettger is social chairman of Ag
YWCA, and secretary of the Uni
versity 4-II club.
Vivian Frasicr, secretary for the
coming year, is vice-president of
Phi U, and a member of Ag Yw.
Filling the office of treasurer,
Mary Chace is a Tassel, and mem
ber of Ag YW. Janet Ross, new
historian, is a member of Home
Ec club an3 YWCA.