The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 29, 1950, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

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    Wednesday, March 29, I95J
PAGE 4
llT T
Show Sparks
union
'IN
Drive
for Addition
. .
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LATIN AMERICAN RHYTHM Dressed in native costume, the Latin American com ho renearscs
for their numbers to be presented at the Cosmo Carnival, Saturday, April 1. rictured from left to
right are Rafael Polaneo plaving the tumba; Richard Wilhclm. playing the acordian: Chmo .lara
rnillo at the piano, Pedro Marida playing the maracas and Julio Sanchez playing the bongon. (Rag
Thoto by Hank Lammers.)
Cosmo Club
To Perform
Before Vets
The Cosmopolitan club will
present it's show "Ship Ahoy" at
the Veterans hospital Friday eve
ning, March 31.
The show, consisting of skits
end several individual numbers.
Is part of the program scheduled
for the Cosmo Carnival dance at
the Union Saturday night, April
1.
Lincoln clubs and groups fre
quently furnish entertainment
for men at the Vets Hospital, en
couraged by the Red Cross and
the hospital Special Services sec
tion. The American Legivin Aux
iliary will assist the Cosmo club
members with Friday's show.
Some group from the University
annually joins in this entertain
ment program.
The need for entertainment for
the veteran patients is mostly
met through radio broadcasts. 16
and 35 m.m. movies, and USO
shows. Outside acts and shows
provide welcome variety.
"Ship Ahoy"
"Ship Ahoy" opens with a
water-logged sailor, played by
Ray Hohljoo, crawling onto a
beach nearly dead from drown
ing. Juergen Herbst, as his con
science, proceeds to parade the
sailor's past before his eyes. The
ensuing acts, as far as possible,
use students from various coun
tries in depicting the wilder mo
ments around the globe. Thus
Hawaiians present a hula, French
students satirize a black market,
an American hillbilly flourishes
a pair of long red-flannels, and
soon.
The show will probably give
veterans a new slant on parts of
the world they visited in a seri
ous mood some years ago.
'Ag Ec Chairman
To Talk at Convo
Classes will be dismissed on
Ag campus Wednesday at 11:15
a. m. for an address by Dr.
C. Clyde Mitchell in the College
Activities building.
Dr. Mitchell's talk will be
Winning the Cold War." Dr.
Mitchell, chairman of the Ag
Economics department, came to
Nebraska recently. He worked
with the National Land admin- j
istration of Korea from 1946 to I
1948 with the U. S. occupation
forces.
The convocation is sponsored
by Phi Upsilon Omicron, an hon
orary home economics organiza
tion. College Expands
Religion Courses
Milwaukee-Downer college
will expand its program in reli- of education i ne sou ncasi
Kion to include a new program school will be built at J.th and
preparing young women for ! High streets. Money lor the pur
church positions, according to a : chase of the tract will be mkon
statement issued recently by ! from the building fund and re
President Lucia R. Briggs. 1 placed within three to five years
The new nrncram will prepare I Lincoln Nebraska s capital
B student Tor Beginning worn in
such positions as director of re
ligious education, pastor's assist
ant, church social workers, mis
sionary, parish visitor, publicist
on church council, journal or
denominational board and for
later graduate study.
One of the few undergraduate
schools to ofier this training,
Milwaukee-Do vner will intro
duce special lectures and direct
ed field work in local churches.
"The course will be built around
a liberal arts course, permitting
a threefold major in religion,
psychology and sociology, and
leading to the bachelor of arts
degree.
Senior Moot Court Finalists
To Compete at
Senior law college students
Glenn Feiberg and Don Boyd will
square off against Kichard Berk
heimer and Forrest Fugate in the
r fate capitol supreme court
chambers, Tuesday, April 14, at
7:30 p. m.
The moot court finalists, win
Tiers of four consecutive years of
competition, will argue a case
considering wire tapping by gov
ernment agencies before three
Supreme court judges from Ne
braska. The Allen moot court competi
tors of second year students who
have been unbeaten so far are
Lewis Peirce and Leonard Ham
Tiaas. who recently defeated
James Jones In a case concerning
Wlls and notes.
Junior Moot Court
William Fuhr and William I
Wiii
By George Wilcox
National
Ottawa, Ontario A United
States embassy plane crashed
apart in flaming wreckage with
an explosion "like dynamite"
killing Ambassador Laurence A.
Steinhardt and four other per
sons. The two engincd C-47. en
route to the United States,
smashed only a few minutes
after taking off. Visibility was
good.
Police and military authori
ties declined to comment on the
pnssibil i t y of
sabotage, but
e y ewitnesses' 'r
reports of the "
explos i o n re- 1
called memor-
i e s of the
time -bombing v t
of a commer
cial airliner in
Quebec last
summer, line "
crew member
survived the
blast. Wilcox
Key West President Truman,
sunning and relaxing in Florida,
rejected a senate investigating
subcommittee request force the
opening of government FBI files.
At the same time, the president
set up machinery through which
the government loyalty iciu cuss ac.tjv;lv problems.
board will assist the committee : " .
in investigation of the records of Try rjag want ads they pay
persons specifically charged with 0ff
being communists. .
Washington In an altermam
of a denial by the President, the
senate investigating committee
subpoenaed loyalty records of
the state department, civil serv
ice commission. Senator Tyriings.
chairman of the foreign relations
subcommittee investigating Sen.
McCarthy's charges of commit
tee in the state department
signed the subpoenas.
International
The Hague Chiels of staff of
11 Atlatic pact nations agreed
unanimously on a integrated
defense plan. The plan will be
submitted to defense ministers
on Saturday.
London Winston Churchill
believes that war is not immi
nent or inevitable. Opening a
foreign affairs debate the con
servative leader declared, "There
never was a time when the de
terrents against war were so
strong."
State and Local
Lincoln A new high school
in Lincoln looms on the horizon
as the purchase of a 17.28 acre
tract of land for $10,900 was
authorized by the Lin-oln board
city may again become a train
ing center for the air arm of
the defense department. Air
force otficials are interested in
the Lincoln Aviation institute in
an attempt to determine whether
private schools can train me
chanics cheaper than the Air
Force. AF officials have sug
gested 150 to 275 men in an ini
tial training phase.
Always a Nebraska topic, the
weatherman sees small hope for
a change in the crisp, biting
weather now present. Reports to
News and Views state that the
weather will warm up today but
it will be cold again for the first
April week end.
State Capital
Carlisle will oppose Gayle Stahl
and Robert Moody in a Junior
moot court competition in the
first floor of law school, Friday,
March 31, at 7:.?0 p. m.
Freshman competition has been
partially fought out. The fol
lowing decisions have been ruled
on the appelate cases:
Bevins and Walker won over
Raymond and Rice in a tort case:
Salter and Pollack beat Seimers
and Filman in a contract case;
Downing and Dugie Doyle won
over Metrakos and Rogers in a
tort case; and Sanford and Sel
leck won over Liljedahl and Rou
bicek. Competition for freshman law
students will be argued daily un
til April 5 at 1:30, 3:30, and 7:30
p. m. in the first floor of law
school
iPilt U. Favors
'Advising Frosli
Beginning fnshnien have re
sponded favorably to the new
upperclass counselor plan, ac
cording to Edwin J. Mcintosh,
assistant dean of men at the Uni
versity of Pittsburgh.
Designed to give increased
aid to confused freshmen, the
new nlan provides one counselor
for every five or six students.
Formerly, there was one
selor for every 30 students.
I The plane provides each fresh-
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! nirill nun iin uiuri nnu iii'nv
i perienced student to act as a
j friend and guide in learning the
I traditions and customs of the
I school, and 1he various phases
of student life.
According to Mcintosh: "Some
of the freshmen were reluctant
to participate in the former plan
because they could sec no value
in it. Now, however, I believe
the freshmen will cooperate,
realizing how much the new
plan will help them m then
college careers."
According to a survey con
ducted hv Bowline Green uni-
! versity, 65 to 70 percent of fail
ures in college result, not from
lack of time or mental capacity,
but from a wrong attitude. The
new plan attempts to remedy
this situation.
Included in the plan arc seven
weekly meetings of each coun
selor group, at hich the frosh
will tour the campus, learn the
i srnor,i snnps ano rheers, and flis-
Recent
p wfl
l I Copyright (95ft koonr
By Recent National Survey f
i v ;:, -..w,
Nebraska next!
This is the large bold red cap
tion which greeted students just
as they entered Union doors,
Tuesday afternoon.
Part of the exhibition now be
ing displayed by the Union ex
pansion committee, the caption
was painted across the top of a
large poster hung on the front
wall before the main lounge in
the
afternoon to remind stu-
dents of a proposed new addition
for the Union.
The display shows the facili
ties, present and contemplated,
of other representative Unions in
the midwest which have enroll
ments the same as Nebraska's.
Ten Unions
jli, , .jtiH hi-ir f
information w'as included about i tratod too. Photographs and cap
ten Unions, beneath the large j tions describe the large billia.d
ljon room and 16 bowling alleys.
The pictures and photographs , Michigan State, whose 8.000
all led in a sequence which fo- s "dents now enjoy the plush
riwd the reader s eve on the I Union completed in June of 1949,
white space with an accompany- ! spent $2,500,000 on ultra-mod-ing
label "Reserved for Ne- ; cm furnishings for recreation:
biaska'"
V i., f ih nrrawsprf
r,i,..v,ri University U ii ion,
shows the final working draw
ings of a $2,500,000 Union, the
construction of which will begin
soon.
Kight thousand students of the
school have voted to include be
side many othei facilities: rec
reational area with billiard
rooms, table tennis and bowling.
Even a barbershop and book
store are shown in the plans.
$5,000,000 Union
Ohio State plans a S5.000.000
Union which the exhibits show
in, an architect's sketch. This
Union, when it is completed, will
be the largest Union building in
the nation up to date.
Eight thousand students pay a
$5 per quarter self-assessed fee.
Included in the future taciimes:
J a Tip-Top Terrace overlooking a j
Mirror Lake. Food is served
I n..rn Twn h:ll 1 rooms will .'lCCom-
n,0(i:(te a total of 2,300 couples
, ,.nn ,M,,,C
I -i.""" 1
However, the ballrooms serve
a multiple purpose and there is
no waste space while the rooms
are not in use
iowa State Addition
Iowa Slate is starting this
spring on a $700,000 addition to
Memorial Union. This is one ol
many additions that have been
made to the Union in past years.
Students also numbering 8.000
pay S3 per quarter in order that
the addition might be possible.
To be added: A chapel, more
meeting rooms, offices for cam
pus organizations, more recrea
tion space for billiards and table
tennis. The Union already has
lfi bowling alleys.
Also pictured on the display is
Wisconsin's new Union theatre
built to accommodate 3, SOU per
sons. Texas A. A M.
Texas A.&M. college, an all- -mov.s"
male school, has been construct
ing a S2.000.000 building which mou.k
will include three units, to be
ready for use by this coming
tall
The third unit has been
4'
Eey're Mfflft Tiey're TOPS-
Mvtu Toiacco Co
planned to allow the installa
tion of eight bowling alleys and
11 billiard tables directly follow
ing the completion of the struc
ture. Later, guest rooms, hobby
shops and a theatre will be add
ed. The guest rooms are built to
i ' " "
dents, and representatives of in
dustry and business.
Arizona
Arizona lias secured through
student assessment, nearly $1.
000,000. The enrollment there is
$3,000.
Minnesota's enormous Coff-
in.in iucmoi UH union
illus-
i oimarns ann uowinig .
Included, too, was a new
grill
decorated in red
chartreuse and
taupe, and a music room with
separate listening booths, and a
commuters lunch room.
RaK Poll
In Thursday's edition. The
Daily N'ebraskan will publish a
pnl revealing student opinion
based on these posters.
Questions will include:
Would you be in favor of a
Union addition? (It has been 12
years since the Union was built
and no large improvement pro
gram has been initiated.)
What would you like to see
added'.'
Do you think S500.000 (the es
timated cosy would be the right
amount?
Would you be willing to pay
$3 a semester more? (Student
assessment would then be a to-
tal of Sfi each semester.)
Which do you think we need
most more meeting rooms, or
ganization rooms, game room
space, billiard rooms, bowling
alleys or commuters lunch room?
In viewing the facts of other
midwestcin colleges with the
same enrollment, making defi
nite plans for improvement
(Ohio State, Iowa Slate, Colo
rado and Michigan State) do you
think that our school (enroll
ment, 3,000 alsol could afford a
new addition? The original cost
was only $475,000. We paid 55
percent of that amount and the
rest was paid for by WPA).
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MOXKKY BUSINESS Margaret Dutton and Barbara Malm re
hearse for their skit portraying monkey dancers for the Cosmo
politan Club Carnival to be held in the Union ballroom Saturday
night, April 1. (Rag Photo by Hank Lammers.)
Debate
Continued from page 1
the national tournament at West
Point Military academy.
Graduate Students
The Scottish team members
arc both graduate students. Ac
cording to Olson, both should be
"well versed on the subject of
nationalism."
Reid, 24. is ex-president of the
N IJ Bulletin
Hoard
Wfrinrsday.
Cosmopolitan C'luh meets at
7:30 p. m. in Parlors X and Y,
Union. Abdul Ayazy will talk
about communism in Asia. Final
plans for Cosmo Carnival will be
discussed.
"N" club meets in Union par
lors XY Wednesday, March 29,
at 12 noon.
Wesley Foundation Lenten
services to be held at 7:15 a. m.
Wednesday morning. Chaplain
Thomas Jones will speak.
Thursday
Alpha Kappa Tsi luncheon a'
Capital hotel Thursday, M.u
30. at 12 noon.
Friday
As College Country Dancer.
regular meeting to be held Fri
day, March 31, 7-8:30 p. m. in
Ag Activities building. Business
on preparation for spring formal.
Important that all members be
present.
Oklahoma's football squad has
just presented Ted Owen, long
time Sooner trainer recovering
from a hip operation, with a
Slml. H .... u-ai.-h. oocket model.
i On a years leave ol absence,
Owen will resume his duties this
I coming season.
a mum quit
emu lym-QBifffi (luTagMji
ilfe cBrnif? (i.'liJiiilsilID ife
JANE WYATT
Famous Barnard Alumna says:
"Chesterfields always give me a lift.
They're wonderfully mild and they taste
so good. They're my favorite cigarette."
STARRING IN
"HOUSE BY THE RIVER"
REPUBLIC PICTURE
MM7MCA'S COGS
WTH7N TOP
1 Wm Tff KOUVWOOD STARS
I Glasgow University Scottish Na
tionalist Association. As a licu
I tenant during the war, he served
I in Persia, Iran and Egypt. He
obtained his masters degree from
Glasgow in 1048.
At present an intern at St,
Luke's hospital in Bradford,
Ynrks, Low was graduated from
Edinburgh with a Bachelor of
Medicine and a Bachelor of
Surgery in 1949. He was presi
dent of the Koval Medical So
ciety in 1948 and 1949.
Eloise Paustian, four-year de
bater, and president of the local
chapter of Delta Sigma Iiho, will
serve as chairman tor the debate.
Admission to the debate is
free. The public is invited to at
tend the event. A forum will be
held immediately following the
debate at which time the audi
ence may ask questions of the
speakers.
MAIN FEATURES START
r
"THE OUTLAW"
1:17,3:19.5:19,7:19.9:21
"Blondie's Hero"
1:19, 3:55, 6:31, 9:07
"Mule Train"
2:16, 5:02, 7:38. 10:14
r
IS 1H AMO 'Q'
"Ride Em Cowboy"
2:02, 4:45, 7:34, 10:?1
"Idol of the Crowd"
1:55, 3:46, 6:32, 9:18
&
MN N SPOtTS
VZ
Y
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