1949 On the Beam November 10. PAGE Z ulLi r Hembti Intercollegiate Press rORTT-SKVENTH VF.AK a r.prr.Mno l .tadrala mm a apialoaa wily. Acrordil M " '"?"' I. th. drr'irrd policy ot lh Board thai aabltratlnaa ander It. "?,'rV0" J to fra cd.tarlal ..r,hip o- th. pari .1 " "jl. twmbVr at th. racnHj ol th. OBiTrmlty: "t ajetnber. af th. " '2?. Monday, and tW.rd.ra. i-SSSui'TlJiJf a. 111. authoriid rpieniCT . Caa Otm .Frit Stmptaa, 8oa. Reed EDITORIAL Frfitor Manailnt Kdltor n... MiKeBe Rfri Brure Knfdy Nomm cholbuf,, ,r, rwjj. Mljj. Pporta Killtnr .'..'... . Arlca Beam As Kdilor Bl'SINKSS nriin if fnitiii .Ted Randolph," Jark Cobra. i:hack Burneirt Bniitneiin Manager Aiktant KusmrMi Manacrrs. Maht Nr Kdllor Brnrr Kraardy Then There Are Students . . . There are students and there are students. First there is the AUF head soliciter. We couldn't help but notice her sincere enthusiasm when one of the campus organizations voted to make the AJJF richer to the tune of S100. What was it to her if the AUF had another donation. No money in her pocket. It's just that she showed herself bis enough to support a worthy cause. And then there is the guy with the "don t-give-a-damn attitude. You've seen him around. He gripes about anything and even-thing, but this week his particular gripe is that he s bored with hearing about AUF. Well, he bores us, too Maybe he just doesn't know a worthwhile project when he sees one AUF is down in our books as one of the greater campus activities. By greater we mean "great" in the sense of doing our share, "great" in the sense of realizing our responsibility. u Students have two days left in which they can contrib ute to AUF, two days in which they can show whether they are students ... or whether they are students. . Susie Reed. i''lV'VVVVAVVV'VVVAaVVVWWWWW'V v VAX IIHUSEX -SflfilllTS f Are Sold Exclusively in Lincoln at Men's Store Stree t Floor FOLD'S if IVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV'VVW-WWV1WVVWV'? 1 be a man... not a mouse ! 4- i mi1' . w (SI AUF has come to the Ag col lege. Everywhere on the campus we see signs "Sacrifice for AUF" or "Give Till It Hurts." In my mind neither of thes' signs should be representative of this All University Fund drive. In the first place it shouldn't be a sacrifice to give two dollars for this one big charity drive of the year, and in the second place it won't hurt anyone to give this small amount. Mary Francis Johnson, head so licitor for Ag, stated that there will be no personal solicitation on A? except in the organized houses. Any contributions by students not in organized houses must be purely voluntary- This should be a challenge. The money collected from the University will be divided three ways. The Community Chest, World Student Service fund and the Displaced Persons on our own campus will all benefit. A small quota of $450 has been set for the Ag college. It should be easily doubled. The Ac college has always been proud of the support it gives to all campus activities and here is a chance to prove it again by putting this AUF drive far over the top. Friday night there will be a box social in the Ag Activities building. The money from the boxes will be turned over directly you students to have some iun and also boost the drive. Two booths to take contribu tions have been set up on the campus. One is in Ag hall and the other is at the Ag Union. Let's all stop at one of these booths and give two dollars or whatever you can afford and make the College of Agriculture the first 100 per cent college on the campus. AUF Donations Reach $1,159.63 Wednesday's contributions raised the AUF totals to $1,159 63. Contributions by students to solicitors, booths, and thru or ganized houses boosted the fund contributions. Alpha Tau Omega handed in $30.85; Beta Sigma Psi, $34.50; Sigma Chi, $7.75; Tau Kappa Epsilon, $12, and Towne club, $23.55. Donations totaling $17.38 were received at booths, and $20.60 thru independent student solicitors. Faculty contributions thus far total $20. The drive, the year's one charity drive, will last until Nov. 14. "And the next question is, 'Did you give to the Community Chest this year?'," NU Bulletin Board Theta Thursday Thursday Sigma rhi at 5 p. m. hall. Absentees initiation in Ellen will be Smith fined. Sigma Delta Chi meets 7 p. m. Thursday in the regular room of Burnett hall. Cosmopolitan club will be held in Room 316 of the Union at 7:30 p. m. Block and Bridle will meet at 7:15 p. m. Thursday in the Ani mal Husbandry building. WAA Rifle club meets at 7 p. m. Thursday in Grant Memorial. Pi Lambda Theta meets Thurs day at 7:30 p. m. in Room 15 Teachers. Miss Gertrude Mc Eachen will speak on her tour of Europe. Phi Chi Theta will meet Thurs day at 7:30 p. m. in Ellen Smith hall. Tri K will hold initiation at 6 p. m. Thursday in the Crops lab. New members are selected on the basis of scholarship and inter est in agronomy once each se mester. No Album hour will be held Thursday at 4 p. m. No coffee'1 hour will be held Sunday. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellow ship meeting. Union Room 315, 7:30 p. m. Friday Comenius club will meet Friday hi 7:30 p. m. in Room 316 of the Union. I I I is.-. , V l ' 'TT nan 'M j J i I ...get into bold, bold colors leopard skin, Don Juan tights . . . am now Bolder IsxiV colors vin fair maiden. 10 clear, l.riglit pasU-ls and vlu'te . . . Van Bold wide spread collar . . . extra ide center pleat assert your lie-man qualities. F-squire inspired the Bold Look . . . college men introduced it . . . Van Ilensen makes it more popular than ever vith its new Bolder Ixok shirts . . . $3.9 j ! 0 Van Heuseif i . , ''llie world's smartest" SIllFIS PHILLIPS. JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1. N . T. We Give S & II Green 4 V tl ft Lincoln's 1)-I. Store Gold Days Special! DRESSES 9 for S1S New lots added! Marvelous dresses for those special dates . . . for school and casual wear. Bring a friend or add by 2's to your own wardrobe. Sizes 9 to 15, and 12 to 20. COI.P'B , arfowd Floor. .vvvvwvwvvvvvavvvvvvvwvuvvvvvwvwvv':' YM to Show German Film In Library "Murderers -Among Us," a Ger man film with English sub-titles, will be the second YM-sponsored foreign movie of the year. It will be shown Friday and Saturday nights, Nov. 11 and 12, in Love Library auditorium at 8 o'clock. Termed "the first German made film produced amidst the debris of nostwar Berlin," the movie stars Ernst Borchert and Hildegard Knef. It was directed by Wolfgang Staudte. Admission to the picture is fifty cents per person. The German motion picture is said by Newsweek to "riva-i the postwar Italian products both in artistry and depth of mean ing." Variety, entertainment world magazine, wrote, "It has a superb camera and montage technique recalling some of the first-rate German productions." New York er magazine said the movie is "artistically written and directed and superbly acted." "Murderers Among Us" is a psychological drama concerning the topical issues of mortality and guilt in post-war Germany the other side of the story presented in "A Foreign Affair." It pri marily conveys the despair and disillusionment of the German people, but it closes on a note of hope for the future. It is one of the few German films to be ! shown in all four occupation zones I of Berlin. jSlmlcnl Directory Sales to Continue The sale of student directories, now in process, will continue until the third or fourth week in ! November, according to Mickey I Fike, who is in charge of student sales. The directories are being sold I by receipt. Students give their ! money to a salesman, are given i a receipt, and will later receive i their directories. The date when i the directories will be available is not yet known. Any student unable to contact a salesman may go to the Ne braska Builders' office, 308 Stu dent Union, between five and six on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. A representative will be there at that time. Two persons from each or zanized house are authorized to sell the directories. They are competing for a $10 prize of fered to the person .making the most sales. Washington Offers Scholarships A new scholarship plan has been announced by the chairman if the scholarship committee at Washington. The new plan establishes ten four-year national honor scholar ships carrying full tuition and ad ditional amounts up to $550. Twenty-five full tuition scholar ships are provided and also forty half-tuition scholarships. Scholar ships based on certain determin ing factors will be awarded on a semester to semester basis.