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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 11, 1949)
PAGE 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Sunday, December 11, 1949 JIisl (Dcrik VhbhaAlicuv f Member Intercollegiate Press OK I V-itAtM II VKAIt The Dally Nebraakan la pnbllahra bT the atndrata ol the CalvrmltJ ot Nebraalia aa eanresvloa of aludrnta nrwi and opinions only According to article II of ttw tti uatTs cuvrrmni student publication t and dminnterra bf the Board ol Publication It u the drrlarrd iHiliry ot the Hoard tbat puulirnllona andir I La juriadictioD luu too free from editorial eejsiirshia on the part of tnr Hoard, or oa the part at an? member ot tbe faculty ot the university: lot mrnibera ol tbe ataft ot Toe. raiU Ne4raakaa are personally rraponaiule lot what tarj aa or do or eauae to b printed.' Suhacriptloa rate are tJ.OO per semester. fZ.frO per semester mailed, or IS O lot trie enlleKC year. (4.0(1 mailed. Single copy 6e, fuDliahed daily during the school yeau except Mondaya ana Saturday . vacations and examination period, by the lalTrriity of (trhraaka ander the aniiervlaioa ot the r'uhliration Board. Entered aa dceond llaaa Matter at the I'oat ttllira in Lincoln. Nebraska, ondi-r Act of Oonareai, eiarco J, 189, and at apecial rate of pontaKe orovided lor la seelioa 113. Act of October a. laii. authorized September U. KDlTOallAL Rditor Cub Clem Managing, F.illtora .............. .frlla Slnipon, Suate Kecd NiKlit News Kditnr Bruce Kennedy NU Calendars to Conliiuie Sales Throuli Christmas A vigorous Nebraska Calendar sales campaign will continue up thiough the Christmas season, ac cording to Nancy Porter, editor. The red and white memoran dum and date book is being sold by Builders thru organized house visits, booths and campus book- CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP Deluxe Norcross Gift Wrap. Matching Tags, Seals, Ribbons Goldenrod Stationery Store 215 North 11th Street stores. It is also on sale down town exclusively in Miller and Paine department store Priced at $1. the 28 page book let, complete with fuH page phot ographs of familiar campus scenes has been designed to appeal to alumni, students and faculty of the University. Miss Porter suggested that the I publication would make a fine gift for Christmas. It is boxed, rcady-to-wrap for instant mailing. Published for the first time i last year, it is sold for the pur ! pose of building up a scholarship fund, which will bring worthy students to the university, who might otherwise be unable to at tend college. Similar to last year's calendar, it measures six by eight inches, a j handy desk size. In addition to : campus pictures, there is a page j devoted to outstanding Nebras ' kans. There is ample space for I jotting down each days schedule. vt AAVVVVVVVVVVYVVVVVVVVvVVVYVVVTVW VAX HEIJSKX SHIBtTS Are Sold Exclusively in Lincoln at Men's Store Street Floor GOLD'S . C 47. VVVWWVVVVVWVAAAVv Cvvwwvwvvvwvvvwwwwvwvvwv AVA'VVV'VVVV'VVVVX'V'V'V'iVWVWWVl'VV i for your Christmas vacation stock up on whites! t ? e . f'vJ VU Y'l '" VJ-M J M iih-sprcai 'I I J I tin Ihilt in t ' 1 ' I ,'rf"",' l",hor wJ Van Tux uilh fine pique front, fj.'Jt It's going to be a uhitc Christmas in shirts and if you're going to do your home town up right, you'd better be well supplied. Popular daytime shirt is the wide-spread Van Britt with French cuffs. For evening?-, it's Van Tux with French cuffs . . . white pique front and attached wide spread or regular collar. Look your best this Christmas in Van Heusen shirts! Van Heuseif i ohipte "the world smartest" Uilll IO PHILLIPS-JONES COir.. MEW IOK 1. M . T. Man of the Week A tip oi the hat to Kay Sim mons, member of the Student Council and leader in the Uni versity party. Simmons' letter to the editor, which appeared in Thursday's Daily Nebraskan, is the deed that singled him out for Man of the Week honors. An exposition of the University party's theory on campus politics, it is a credit to the party and the man who wrote it, whatever your views on the matter. The work of the judiciary com mittee of the council, of which Simmons is a member, also de- ( serves credit. Its proposed Stu- j dent Court is another indication ' that the present Council is doing something concrete. As The Daily Nebraskan's eighth Man of the Week, Sim mons follows: Dr. R. G. Rosenlof, registrar and director of admis sions; Keith O'Bannon, business manager of The Daily Nebraskan; Prof. Karl Arndt, chairman of the convocations committee; Tom No vak, All-American center; John Connelly, editor of the 1950 Corn husker; Prof. Don A. Lentz, di rector of the University band: and Roswell Howard, president of the! Student Council A Right Step . The University Party, better known as the faction, has finally come out into the open. In its letter to The Daily Nebraska:i, which appeared in Thursday's is sue, that party stated completely the principles upon which it operates. This step by the faction has long been awaited. We have al ways felt that a "sub rosa" or ganization has no place on the Nebraska campus. Such an or ganization creates trouble and ill will. Now, however, the faction cannot be labeled "sub rosa." It has told the entire student body its beliefs, proposals and dislikes concerning campus politics. Many will still feel animosity toward the faction simply because it can win elections as a result of its own organization. This feel ing, however, can only come from those who do not have ambition enough to organize and oppose the faction. The write-in vote which won Tuesday's election did not par ticularly show faction strength in sofar as numbers voting is con cerned. Four hundred and seventy-one votes out of the entire junior and senior classes is no large number. It did show, how ever, that student interest in the election did not extend very far beyond the faction organization. So, until some student or group of students has the interest and ambition to organize and oppose the open faction, it has a perfect right to control whatever it can in the student political scene. FRITZ SIMPSON. Six NU Coeds Gain Positions Nearly 1,000 Will Register livuvvvvvvvvuvvvvvvtvuvwvvvvvvvv KC Organizations Offer Scholarship The Kansas City, Mo., Board of Trade and the city's Chamber of Commerce have given the Univer sity a $50 scholarship to be awarded a college of agriculture student, it was announced Friday. The presentation of the scholar ship was in connection with the high placing won by the insti tution's crops judging team at the intercollegiate contest held at Kansas City last month. The team placed third in that event and won third placing in the recent competition in Chicago in connec tion with the international live stock show. The team, coached by Dave Sander, assistant professor of agronomy, consists of James Mc Dowell, Lloyd Wirth, Wayne Niel son, and Dale Flowerday, alter nate. The boys competed against 27 students from nine colleges. Classified HAMhll kiiie to lj.ivin,n, loa 2 mfn -Cull .ri r,40 Will .'I. are tjitnft. FOR SA1.K Iiark MoLt.i7 coat "it u-! :-:xccirt romiition. Pair pirls hie fin i-katcs. Sizr . Fitier roller. 4-3175 after ft. ask for lor''thy. MKALS on Caniiti. Sjerial monthly rate. JM Aj.ts. available oon lor 2 or 3. 2 4i::s. ATTKACT1VK (.it-ciit,,; rooms for t.oys. newly decor.ite1. mnrr.prir.g maT're!e. rlose in. Reasonable rate. Studenl'e Hotel. :27 so. isth st. r-:;o20. KOOM lnl Imard lor t.tl. Ni.e ro.-rn. tr-ak f;, st . evr-ronc meal. Inuri'jry B!o k from tins line. Axai.aMe now or Jan. 1. Call 2-.'.:,.2'. KOK HKNT- I r-Minr. private l,..th, on rampo. fa'UMy. available Jan. 1, (12 per week. 2-4Kr, WANll.ii Kule to San KranciM-o. "l,nt maa. Call K'aine Kouioun. ,V7.'2. W ANTKIi F.ide ba k irom Oreiron. Cali fornia, or ashnifcton at end of Crinst maa vacation. Oregon preferred. Call Wild. 2 7371. WANTr.l hide to taicrnta or Ixdi;e City. Kanaaa. Iec. 16 or 17. Call Janice Kate. 2-7371. WANTKl Hide to New Vork City, will altar? exreriAef and driving. Caii Mike. Vhtthri KM, we hate a larce aotortmi-at aalltrd jacket, la gahardiae, ptalda, twllla, rie. raw ItM-in at AthKM, Hue O SI. WANTl.l'-Kidera to Alabama, intermedi ate prnnta, for Cbrimmaa vaeation. Will aliare exenaea. Ask for Herb. 1'hone 2 2Mi. Nu-Med Cornhuskcr picture will be taken 5 p.m. Monday, IX'c. 12, in West Stadium. MEET YOUR FRIENDS at the DIAMOND GRILL On Mile. Z?OtirJTotlav Hoovci Six University coeds have been named to represent Nebraska on Mademoiselle magazine's college board for 1949-'50. They are Janet Kepner, Eliza beth Schneider, Nancy Porter, Emily Heine, Norma Chubbuck and Mary Webber. They are among 850 appointments from col leges and universities all over the country. Almost 4,000 students competed this year to join the college board. The college board members will report campus news, fads and fashions in addition to completing three magazine assignments dur ing the year. They will also com pete for one of the 110 guest edi torships to be awarded by the magazine next June. The Nebraska college board appointees were notified last week of their appointments. Janet Kep ner, a junior in arts and sciences was a member of the college board last year. Elizabeth Schneider was also a board member last year. She is a senior in journalism and president of Theta Sigma Phi, journalism honorary. Nancy Porter is a junior major ing in English and speech and is a member of Alpha Epsilon Rho, radio honorary. Emily Heine, a senior majoring in journalism, is a member of Theta Sigma Phi. Norma Chubbuck is a journalism junior and a member of Theta Sigma Phi. Mary Webber, a new member of Phi Beta Kappa, is a senior with an English major. Harvard Prof To Address Union Convo Dr. Kirtley Mather, professor of geology at Harvard University will speak at a convocation in the Union ballroom Tuesday, Dec. 13, at 11 a.m. on the "Eaith's Re sources and Man's Needs." Dr. Mather, who has six de grees from five colleges and uni versities, has been a geologist with the U. S. Geological Survey since 1319. In 1919 and 1920 he took part in explorations in east ern Bolivia. At present he is also chairman of the Scientific Book club, inc. His other activities have in cluded several positions in adult education work and as a member of the Newton School committee. Books authored by Mather in clude: "Fauna of the Morrow For mation;" "Old Mother Earth;" "Science in Search of God;" "Sons of the Earth;" "Adult Education," "Dynamic for Democracy" (with Dorothy Hewitt); "Source Book in Geology" (with S. L. Mason); and "Enough to Spare." Born in Chicago in 1888, he re ceived his B.S. from Denison uni versity in 1909 and his Ph.D from the University of Chicago in 1915. About 800 to 1,000 students will go thru the first day of registra tion today. Dr. Floyd Hoover, as sistant director of admissions, es timated today. The second semester registra tion is scheduled to begin at 8 a. m. today beginning with num bers 1 to 100. All registration pro cedure will be held in Temporary B. Dr. Hoover said that procedure will be much the same as it has been in the past. Filling out their class schedules and pulling their IBM cards constitute most of reg istering. Each student will regis ter as his assignment card num bers are called. The past week has been spent in issuing these assignment cards and meeting with advisors. Work sheets were also filled out during this preliminary registration. Fees will be paid Jan. 23, 24 at either the Military Science building or Grant Memorial hall. The definite site of the payments will be announced later. Emergeney Aid Expedited for Chinese at NU Emergency aid to Chinese stu dents at this and other American universities is being expedited. That was the word that Dr. G. W. Rosenlof, Regis-trar, received Saturday from th U.S. Depart ment of State. The awards are now being mailed, according t' the depart ment's communication. Dr. Rosen lof said he hopes to have the aids available to the local Chinese student group within the week. The emergency aids were ap propriated by Congress in the ad ditional sum of four million dol lars as financial assistance to undergraduate and giaduate Chi nese students in this country. The State Department, in an nouncing the added grants, wrote: "While the United States has no j responsibility for the foreign stu I dents within its holders, the re- cciii jjijiiiivcii iiiiu ecoiiuiinc de velopments in China justily this aid, as originally requested by the Republic of China." Union to Sell Used Records University students will be of fered several second-hand rec ords at low cost at a Union sale next Tuesday, Dec. 13. The records, which are too scratched to be used on the loud spealcing system at the Union or too fast to be used for dancing, in clude renditions by the Dcrsey brothers, Stan Kenton, Sinatra and many others. Block & Bridle InilialesTwelvt; Twelve new members were initiated into Block and Hi idle, honorary husbandry club, Thurs day night, according to Wilbur Pauley, president. The new members are: David Armstrong, Roland Cookk-y, Steve Eber hart, Dean Eberspat her, Bruce Guffey, Ralph Hild, Rich ard Hovendik, Roger Kreutz. Rex Messersmith, Frank Thimm, Jerome Warner and Clayton Yeutter. Block and Bridle is a charter member of a national animal hus bandry club which has 20 mem bers in the United States. Every year the local club sponsors the animal husbandry department judging teams. In addition, it holds the Jr. Ak-Sar-Ben ball and livestock show. This show is a combination horse show and livestock show manship contest. Over 2,000 peo ple attended last year's show at the state fair pounds.