PAGE 2 . " ' Member Intercollegiate Press r OUT Y -SEVENTH VKAB ' ' Th Dlly Ntbrukaa M publiibad by th itudtDtt of th Unlverjlty ot N ""' twaska M xpreilon of atudanta' nw and opinion! only. According to Article II - of th By Lawi governing atudent publication! and administered by the Hoard - of Publication, "H la the declared policy of tne Board that publication!, under It lurladlctiott ahall be free from editorial cenaorehtp on the part of the Board, or on the part of any member ot the faculty of the Unlveralty but member! ol the staff ot The Dally Nebraikan are personally . reiponitbie for what they say or do or cause to be printed. ; Subecription ratea are $2.00 per lemeeter. $2.60 per aemeater mailed, or $3.00 tor the college year. $4.00 mailed. 81ng)e copy 6c. Published dally during the school year except Monday! and 8aturdaya, vacation! and examination period!, by the Unlveralty of Nebraska under the lupervlslon of the Publication! Board. En- tared ai Second Class Matter at the Post Office In Lincoln, Nebraska, under Act of Crowes!, March S, 1879, and at special rate of postage provided for In Sec tion 1103, Act ot October 8, 1817, authorized September 10, 1922. EDITORIAL rt,tor i.... FrttI Simpson a .1,1. i VAiiZi . Susie Keed ManEdl?oV Kennedy, Gene Berg ijfw. Editors Norma Chubbuck, Poochie Redlger. news jmuhot..... Jgrry Warren Kent Axteu, Joan Krufger Sports Editor .... Kimon KarahatBOK ;'"!""""!:::::::!:::"::i;::"''.:.!'.;'.'.'.;".!'."!'.'.".'pat wiedman Feature Editor Photoerauher ................ BUSINESS , ' Keith O'Bannoh Assistant Builneu Manager. Ted Circulation Manager Wight Newa Editor Union Questions . . . Additional questions have been brought to our atten tion concerning Union expansion. And since no one has felt it necessary to express his opinions through The Daily Nebraskan Letterip column, we will attempt to answer some of the student queries -hand sources. A problem which still seems to be bothering students concerns the need of a Union addition and a new Ag Union before other classroom buildings are constructed on the campus. The questions are running something like this, ''Why' should we spend our money for a new Union? I think we need a new music building or a new Temple first" 1 This question has been answered several times in pre vious editorials, but we will attempt to clarify it once again. Buildings such as the music college, Temple, Andrews, Burnett, Social Science and Morrill hall are constructed and financed by Nebraska tax money. They are financed by the budget which is appropriated to the University by the .state legislature. And any building which is used for actual classroom or laboratory purposes is built at the discretion of the Board of Regents only. These buildings are not financed by the tuition fee paid by each student at the beginning of every semster. But the Student union is imancea Dy money xaicen irom me activities allocation which tuition fee. It is not a classroom building, which means " that the Board of Regents cannot authorize Union con struction unless the students themselves approve a raise in fees which will cover the cost. This is exactv what happened 12 years ago. Students at that time decided they would pay three dollars for a new Union building. If they had not made this decision, the present Union would never have been constructed. Another opinion concerns the housing of a billiard room in the proposed addition. Evidently some students feel that a billiard room woud might give a "beer hall" flavor question will probably seem a little humorous, out to others, it may have a definite bearing on their attitudes toward an addition. In the first place, the a 1 a '11 1 a say-so as to wnat wui De inciuaea in me proposed wing. They will have an opportunity to choose the recreational facilities which they most desire. And if it is at all possible, within the space of a new wing, Union directors will con form with student wishes. If students want a billiard room, bowling alleys, or other game facilities, every effort will be made to include those facilities. In the second place, many other Unions throughout the country have billiard rooms. Many people naturally associate billiards and pool with beer. But on the other hand, many homes, clubs and lodges contain billiard and pool tables without losing the respect of citizens in their communities. We doubt if the Union will be considered a "beer hall" if it offers a few billiard tables for some good, clean recreation. A third question concerns the old problem of Barbs vs. Greeks. Some Barbs have said that the Union benefits Greeks more because they and activity spaces. And some fit more, because the Union pus where they can go for meals, recreation and relaxation We fail to see any reasoning in either of these areu merits. True, the Union is ideal for Barb eating facilities, recreation and relaxation. But the activities are alwavs available for their participation. And it is true that Greeks are the most frequent users of office and activity spaces. But the dining rooms, lounges and game rooms are alwavs available for their use. The Student Union is not a matter of whether Greeks or Barbs use it more, but a matter of what it will offer to all students enrolled in the University. A new Student Union addition and a Union building on Ag will cost each student only three dollars more rer semester. Three dollars is a lot of money, but is it really such a tremendous sum when one considers the cost of a Saturday evening date to the movies, restaurant or dance ? we reel that the benefits received by University stu dents from the construction of needed Union facilities for many years to come will far one-dollar bills. Editorial Morrill hall is again open to students and faculty members who are interested art. Four separate exhibits are now on display, free of charge. One is an exhibit of photographic enlargements of medieval European manuscript paints, chiefly religious work, dating as far back ' as 860 A.D. Another 18-piece display includes work done by Drake universitiy students during the past year. A third exhibit contains 60 block Hints, representing the work of 13 American artists. The ast display shown includes the 11 art works recently pur chased from the Nebraska Art association's sixtieth an nual exhibition. Art from the past and the present, the work of students and those who have devoted their lives to art, fills the Morrill hall galleries. '. It Isn't the students who asKea to pledge university honoranes. It is those mdivid uals who are taking their education seriously and who de serve this form of recognition ranks of higher scholarship. ana me 4.J engineering students who have been pledged to Pi Lambda Theta and Sigma Tau can be proud to receive the honor which goes with joining such organizations. Opportunities can't come XaJ:3 that which the university madrigal singers will pre f - nt Friday evening. Under the direction of David Foltz, r fingers will put the words of 17th and 18th century . i y to words when they gave their concert, "An Eowres , creation m Musicke. Audiences will not think of the "Jr? as a performance, but rather as a leisurely gather .' " c I fricnd3 to enjoy thi3 delightful music of the past Emily Heine Bank Lammers Randolph, Jac Cohen. Chuch Burme ster Wendy Gauger ...Norma Chubbuck brought to us from second is included in each students be undesireable, because it to the Union. To many, this students themselves will have V 1 1 Jt J ! . are the ones who use office Greeks say that Barbs bene is the best nlace on the cam outweigh the value of three, Briefs in the most varied forms of lag behind in grades who are who are invited to join the The 43 Teachers college coeds too often to hear a program By Patricia Marvin. Guest Author. In these unfortunate times when our language is being shaped and made for us more by technologists and psychiatrists than by poets, it is good to read a novel such as Elio Vittorini's "In Sicily." This short novel, the first of Vittorini's to be pub lished in English translation in America, was written in the Italy of 1937 when Sicily was under the tyranny of the Fascist boot, and is therefore to be read with this in mind. Because of the nature of his society, certain ideas and persons in the novel had to be veiled to pass the cen sorship, but these devices are easily understood by the dis cerning reader. The story begins and progresses in a simple manner. Silvestro, a linotyper, living1 in the north of Italy, wearied and haunted by the "abstract furies" and by his sense of the "doomed human race," prepares to send his an nual birthday card to his mother in Sicily, the only contact he keeps with his family and with his past since running away from home at the age of 15. But before he completes this routine, a letter comes from his railroad station-master father, telling Silvestro that he has left his mother for another woman, presumably to follow his life long desire of becoming a Shakespearian actor. Silvestro then takes the birthday card to his mother in Sicily, and re turning to the land and people of his childhood, is heartened by the people there who also are concerned for their outraged world and for humanity. In a sense, Silvestro's Journey is the only event in the book; the three days and nights he spends with his mother and the people of the mountain village represent an extended conversa tion, as he says in the epilogue. From the time he boards the ferryboat for his island home, the mountains, the sulphur mines, the call of crickets, the malaria, the roasting herring on the brazier, and the chickenry all the things he has seen and eaten and heard in his child hood slowly take their places in his memory. But most important are the people he meets the great, blond, blue-eyed Sicilian who, riding on his great horse surely looks like a king, and who is concerned continually with his conscience and his "other du ties," (Silvestro calls him the Great Lombard) Silvestro's mother, the small shriveled woman wearing a red shawl and big men's shoes, who is at once the spirit of woman, of the mother, of life and concrete re ality, and whose pride of her own father and love for her hus band Ret mixed in her mind with Silvestro's concept of the Great Lombard and finally, Calogero, the Knife-Grinder, who brings Silvestro into the company of the other men who Would fight the Injustice, human outrage and indignity they see around them. The deeper mean ing of these characters was read ily perceived by Vittorini's Ital ian readers, when during the war, the leaders of certain bands of partisans adopted such names as the "Great Lombard" and the "Knife-Grinder" from Vittorini's book. It is rather difficult to deter mine Vittorini's "literary ances tors." Ernest Hemingway, In his introduction to the book, is en thusiastic about his directness of style that somehow reminds him of rain come to a dry and dusty earth. In matters of style, form and substance, this novel owes a debt to Hemingway's works, perhaps more to his earlier works than the later ones. Hemingway's realistic-mystical advocacy of democracy was based upon his belief that the democratic society, with all its faults, could still provide the In dividual with the personal free dom necessary to the fulfillment of his being, to the establish ment of his personal identity in a chaotic and spiritually mori bund society. Silvestro's return to his mother repeats this pattern, but in a larger sense, he and the others are attempting to escape the de cay of the whole Italian and Si cilian society, which is In reed of returning to the fundamentals of the "earth mother," of reality. Because the realistic portrayal of character tends to blur toward the end of the book and a kind Home Ec Club To Hear Editor Carol Wempe, homemaking editor of the Nebraska Farmer. will be the guest speaker at the Home Ec club meeting Thursday. The meeting will be in the Home Ec social parlors at S p.m. Miss Wempe was assistant homemaking editor for two years previous to her present meeting. She is a graduate of the Uni versity and also attended Kan sas University. Her topic will be "Home Eco nomists in Journalism." She also plans to tell about her own job and the courses advisable to home ec journalists. In addition to the talk by Miss Wempe, Home Ec club members will also discuss the trip to Kan sas State campus planned for Saturday, May 13, The group plans to take a tour of the Kan sas State home ec departments. THE -DAILY NEBRASKAN gjaimnwr Mr JaiiigH' ff of Kafka-esque dream-vision takes its place (probably in or der to realize the novel as a parable) the resemblance to the Hemingway character - type also blurs. It is questionable whether or not this is a serious defect in the form of the novel, but lit tle of the purity, simplicity and poetry of the language is lost. Vittorini studied English in order to read in the original his favorite book, "Robinson Cru soe," and became so proficient at it that he undertook profes sional translations of Faulkner, Eliot and Hemingway, It is to be conjectured that each of these writers has in some way con tributed to his style and thought. Unquestionably, "In Sicily" remains one of the most forceful and impressive of the new Eu ropean novels, not only for its' affirmation of what may be vaguely termed humanity, but also for the great number of pas sages which show a writer who has successfully and artfully fused together form and feeling into a meaningful whole. Thursday Humanities group to meet at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in room 204 in Morrill hall discussion of the Renaissance period.' y Delta Sigma Rho meets Thurs day at 5 p. m. in room 203 of the Temple. Kosmet Klub workers to meet in Klub room at 7 p. m. Thurs day. IUCF will meet in room 315 of Union ,at 7:30 p. m. to hear Dr. Gavin Hamilton and Clyde Decker. UN Dames to meet Thursday, April 27, at 8 p. m. in Ellen Smith hall. Kappa Alpha Mu dinner meet' ing in Union Thursday at b p. m. Guest speaker. 4-H to meet in Ag college Ac- j tivities building gymnasium j Thursday at 7:30 p. m., craft shop j in Ag Union Thursday at 7:30 . p. m. Gamma Alpha Chi will not meet this week. Ad sales should be turned in to Dr. Swindler. Cecil to Present Concept April 30 Joseph Cech, concert pianist, will make his first appearance at Nebraska Sunday, April 30, when he presents a concert in the Union ballroom. nis concert win oe one in ai series of piano artists who have appeared in the Union during this year. It will be sponsored by the Union music committee, headed by Rod Riggs. Cech, who is a brother of Henry Cech, Husker basketball player, tours several universities and cities each year. Durmg the re mainder of the year, he runs a piano conservatoire in Chicago. Known for his concert style, Cech made his formal debut in Chicago. He has been making tours throughout the United States for the past ten years. NU Bulletin Board All-Male Yell Squad.. (Continued from Page 1.) Squad Advisory board will se lect the members. Requirements are the same as those for' par ticipation in other campus ac tivities. One unique feature of the new system, points out Connelly, is the training program. Very few schools have such a program; of the 15 schools polled, seven of fered training. The Innocents ex plained that such a training system would "help make Ne braska's squad the finest in the midwest, and that is the goal. The planned training period will continue from the time of the squad's selection thru the entire year under the supervis ion of both the gymnast and speech coaches. Potsy "Clark, athletic director, has stated that he feels the re organization is "the best move towards promoting a unified squad and successful cheering section since he has been at the University." He says that he is highly in favor of the new plan." Reasons for Change Reasons given by the commit tee for the decision to have an all-male squad include: The greater .opportunity for the members to be trained and work out under a gymnastics coach and better chance to train the men, especially in tumbling; the better chance for the squad members to become acquainted with the team by visiting the locker and dressing rooms; less trouble about taking outstate trips; and the probability of a more flexible squad. Another change in the present system is the new awards to be given to the squad upon comple tion of the season. The Yell King will receive a letter sweater and letter: tSophon1ore members will be awarded numeral sweaters, Since junior members will al ready have won sweaters, no ad ditional awards will be presen ted to them. Out ot Town Games. At least one cheerleader will be sent to each out-of-town conference game. Traveling ex penses will be met by the Ath letic department upon approval of the Advisory board. This de Dental Students To Hear Dr. Bliss -" Dr. Cecil H. Bliss' D.D.S., prac ticing dentist from Sioux City, la., will be guest speaker at a program sponsored by the Junior American Dental association, Monday at 7:30 p. m. in Love library auditorium. "Developing a Pleasant Per sonality" will be Dr. Bliss' topic. He will speak principally on the importance of acquiring accept able personal qualities and their influence on success. - All dental students of both the University of Nebraska and Creighton are irfvited. mil mm BY GEORGE WILCOX Air Clashes Cause Concern Washington The possibility of further s o v i e t-American air clashes along the uneasy front of the cold war in Europe is be ing carefully studied by top of ficials. They are deeply con cerned about the reasons why the Rus sians alleged ly shot down a U.S. Naval plane in the Baltic. These officials have demand ed but doubt that they will Wilcox receive Soviet assurances that no such thing will happen again. Knowing full well that the Russian reason is mysterious, several possibilities as to why the shooting incident occurred are speculated. One is that the Soviet government has deter mined to try to close the Baltic, a key Russian defense area on its eastern shores, to American flights and has resorted to an act of terror to accomplish this. Another possibility is that the Russians sent out fighters to in vestigate the American plane even though It was over inter national waters and that one of the fighter pilots fired in a "trigger-happy" moment. A third possibility is that Russian fight ers fired in order to cause the big plane to land and thus learn about secret American instru ments aboard the plane. The next American moves are based on the assumption that United States is up against a new aruj tougher development of Russian anti-Amefiean policy, However, the Baltic incident has resulted in two important developments in Washington One, it has tended to heal the breach in bipartisan foreign pol icy. Two, it rallys strength be hind the growing movement of build up the air force. Also, one important senator is oreparing a resolution to arm all American nlanes abroad with orders to "shoot to kill" if attacked. This resolution if adopted and carried out could lead to the combat be ginning of World War III. The news is indeed grave. Postal Service Cuts Washington Ren. Thurman C. Crook declared , that' Americans won't stand for the postal serv ice cuts announced by Postmas ter Donaldson. These cuts par ticularly apply to delivery. There will be only one delivery a day, and a 30 day notice is to be al lowed on the curtailment of services that effect business op erations such as receipt of mail at windows and at back, plat forms. Night pickup delivery will be limited. Reductions in personnel effects some 10,000 mail carriers and handlers. Sav ings were estimated in the mil lions, t partment will also furnish the cheerleader's sweaters and coats, and all megaphones and ampli fiers. Another recommendation cf the committee included that the student body be located in one block at the football games as 13 out of 15 the schools pol led indicated their students were seated. A Rally committee, com posed of two Corn Cobs, two Tassels, the Yell King and a band member, would plan and have charge of all rallies dur ing the football season. Publis Eye The Innocent committee feels that with the proposal put into effective 'use with the co-operation of the student body, the re sult will be a closer co-operation between various concerned organizations and "the placing of the cheerleading squad in the public eye so that it may 'see' the University as much as the band and athletic teams do." The organization also, points out the society, will place the Yell Squad on such a basis that its members "command the respect and dignity due persons playing such a vital role in moulding the student spirit on this campus." MAIN FEATURES START "Th Sundowners" 1:32, 3:32, 5:32, 7:32, 9:33 "Deputy Marshal" . 1:15, 4:05, 6:57. 9:49 ""Squars Dance Jubilee' 2:46, 5:38, 8:30 "Loveable Cheat" 1:00, 3:42, 6:24, 9:10. 'Trail of The Rustlers" 2:18, 5:00, 7:46, 10:18. ? - - vis i Econ Better Than Ear Plugs As Sleep Aid, BV HERB ARMBRUST People who study won't need to read this. Probably more opinions have been voiced on the reasons peo ple are not able to sleep and on ways to make them sleep than -on any other subject ever discussed by man. Manufacturers have capital ized on the fact that people with insomnia will try anything to get a good night's rest, and have come up with some weird con traptions to lure people into ob livion for the night. .This was brought out in a recent article in Life magazine, which pictured the various sleep-inducing gad gets offered for sale. Now comes a feature " writer on the Hofstra (Hempstead, N. Y.) Chronicle, with some more ideas on the subject. He has By Pat Wiedman Delts are at it again! Another picnic planned for this week end. Traditional celebration of spring by the Betas, Phi Delts, and Sigma Chis openings with the Miami Triad Satur d a y night. Dancing at the Lincoln hotel will be Paul S h e d d and Tikki R o t h e n berger, John Dean and Joan Nors worthy, Dee Riddell and Subby Ruma. Bill Bergnin and Sal Savage, es taster than a greased pig will be the term of endear ment given to the winner of one of the many Fiji-Tau contests held this weekend as part of the Fiji-Tau tussle. All women are cautioned not to invade the scene of action. Later in the evening a dance will be held at Antelope pavil ion. Loser of the tussle will choose the king of the dance and the winner will elect the queen. Wonder if Hal Abramson will be able to attend the Sammy party Saturday night. After watching Jerry Ferguson down a Spencer's Special 75-cent sun dae, Hal boasted that he could do the same in five minutes or less. The record set was four minutes and 20 seconds. Sad to relate the. second sundae offered Hal on the house was refused. The party won't offer sundaes to its guests, but it will offer Rambling under the guise of ca sino. The Jack Wells combo will play for guests Milroy Zveitel and Beth Logle, Joe Polack and Lenore Hershon, Jordan Halper and Ceci Rottman. Going Steady: Liz Olson and Dick Dunnuck. Pinnings: Bob Hinds and Car oline Cameron, Tom Varney and Grace Ovitz, Rod Riggs and Marcia Pratt, George Abbott and Ginger Taylor, Dick Beatty and Lola Johnson, Mack Robin son and Lois Elwell, Carol Har ris and Dick Clark, Pat Dishner and Pat Cloweres, Peggy Marble and Harris Carnaby, Jack Sav age and Joan Van Valkenburg. Engaged: Donna Micklich and Bill Hackman, Jackie Anderson and Don Morrison. Friday Chi Omega, formal. Belt 8l(tma Phi danm. Flock and Bridle banquet. Uellan Union banquet and danca. Saturday. Kappa Telta houae party. Brown Palace Vanqiict. Sigma Alpha Mu houee party. Phi Gamma Delta dance. GOLD Gray and gold in bold stripes mix with solid colors in 1950 Denims To match your fancy , . . mix or match 1 these colorful denims. Solid gold or gray to comfine with the stripes. Biree and easy to sport or play:, 1 Cf llrt and smart too. aizes iu to 16. Slacks . Pedal Pushers . Shorts . Sunback Wesklt.. Sleeveless Bloirie . . Suspender Skirt .... Jacket l Sportswear Shop Second Floor Wiedman 395 Thursday April 20, 1950 Student Claims seemingly done some investiga tion and would have us k iow that "research is constantly going on concerning 'How to get a good night's rest.'" Wide Beds If you follow this writer's ad vice, you are going to have to get rid of that narrow bunk on the top of the second row in the fraternity house dorm. That mattress is just too small. The author says the mattress should be wide enough to make a certain amount of tossing and turning possible. He claims that "the first conclusion reached by scientists - is that tossing and turning is necessary to health ful sleo." You're going to have to shut that window even if the guy next to you does grjne. Because, says this writer "vn en eight hour sleep your breathing lifts the blankets seven th(..sand times," and it would seem to fol low from this that a blanket heavy enough to keep you warm would be much too heavy. 'Ear Plugs' "And," he says, "ear plugs made of synthetic wax and cot ton are safe and eliminate much troublesome noise." Any student rlA 1m,a. 4m n iA m. .vrtn wuu uvea in a uuiiu v. isigau ized house of any kind will prob ably agree that he may have something there. "If you are a night worrier or are beset with a feeling of guilt because of incomplete day's duty,'' he says, "count sheep, re lax, read something not too stimulating or do homework." Here is an obvious mistake in the man's reasoning. The aver age student, who goes to bed becaues he is tired of studying, should study if he can't sleep. Maybe the thing to do is bump your head on the bed-post and put yourself to sleep that way. One look at the econ book does it for me. 'Shucks' Queen Contest to Close Friday is the deadline to vote for Corn Shucks queen. Pictures of the five nominees for t h title appear in the April issue of Corn Shucks. Ballots also may be found in the April issue. The five candidates are Pat Berge, Nancy Dixon, Julie John ston, Clo Ann Kaul, and M. J. Rooney. The winning candidate's picture will uppear in the May V issue of the magazine. Ballots should be mailed or left at the Corn Shucks office in the Union basement. latin Toe-Teasing In Dance-Tempo 15 "Migueuto Valdks (above) plays Ernesto Lecuona". . . Malaguefia, Say Si Si, Always In My Heart, and 3 others in this new danceable album! RCA Victor has just come out with 15 new albums ALL "Designed For Dancing". Everyone's stepping again! 15 great bands, 15 great com posers, 90 hits! And what an album Miguelito has! Get all 15 at SITTNER RADIO 27TH & RANDOLPH ,,'""'a'L"L'""" a "l 4 X