V, 4 r V" c .a V. y e PAGE 2 Edit nisi C Stolen Exams . . . Once again, examination time is upon us. And pre paratory study is taking top priority with most students as they ready themselves for the exams. Yet, earlier than usual, approximately 113 members of one University class are talking about exam stealing be cause they recently discovered a few persons are back at their old racket. It may seem silly to talk about the same thing year after year when test times come up, but the problem of exam stealing confronts us again. A dictionary defines a parasite as an animal that lives upon an organism at whose expense it obtains some ad vantage without compensation. Again this year, a few parasites are at work on our campus. And everyone di rectly affected in this class of 113 students would like to lay hands on this animal which some people classify as a human being. It happens that at one of the college libraries just re cently, a nearly-complete set of sample exams available to all 113 students were stolen. And as usual, the dirty work happened at the worst time two days before the class was to be given a six weeks exam. The stolen exams were typical examples of those given In previous years and many students made reference to them before a test. And many claimed such reference was helpful. But, some person or persons decided that they could better benefit at the other person's expense. And so the others suffered. Perhaps the parasites figured that it was easier to de prive their fellow students of the opportunity to use these sample tests, rather than to steal the "real thing." It goes without saying that this old stealing racket has been a little overdone in the past, and the parasites' "bene factors" are fed up with it. The the warning that exam stealing of any kind has no place whatsoever on this campus this year and for years to come. K. A, of he (Rap Go BILL GLASSFORD, HIS STAFF AND THE MEN HE COACHES ... for their combined efforts to improve foot ball at the University. Evidence of the success of their work came last Saturday when the Cornhuskers defeated Minne sota. Through cooperation, teamwork and a strong willing ness to play the brand of football that wins games, the members of the 1950 squad and their coaches have earned the respect and admiration of countless fans. JERRY MATZKE . . . and his committee for their work in sponsor ing the Crusade for Freedom. Matzke, representing NU CWA, coordinates the various activities of interested cam pus organizations and supervises the overall Crusade pro gram. KOSMET KLUB ... for their efforts to launch a new entertainment program at the University. Foremost in their plans, the members of Kosmet Klub wish for coed participation in the spring musical. If thev succeed in re voking the Panhellenic rule now in effect which prohibits coeds from taking part in the shows, entertainment on the campus may very well improve greatly. ALL UNIVER SITY FUND ... for its decision to contribute a lump sum of $300 from its total collections for the Crusade for Free dom. This contribution will promote the Radio Free Europe program which broadcasts behind the iron curtain. DR. A. F. DOMBROWSKI ... a Polish imigrant, who is now a staff member on the University faculty. Dr. Dombrowski came to the United States in 1947, penniless and without a job. Through hard-work and initiative, he soon advanced to his present position on the University staff. Besides col lecting and arranging statistics in his office at the Social Science building, he has made a comprehensive study of Nebraska's alfalfa industry, the first study of its kind. His story from a penniless immigrant to faculty member in three years is an excellent example of why the United States is the "land of opportunity." Union Plans Dance Saturday Baton twirling, saxophone playing and ukulele strumming these are the entertainment acts that will highlight the dance at the Union Saturday night, Oct. 14, at 8:30 p.m. Shirley Fries, Shirley Whit ker and Barb Young will do the honors. And, there'll be dancing, too. Canned music and candlelight Till lend soft lights and sweet Birsic atmosphere to the affair. Calling all dance fiends! Here's your opportunity to shine nd really show off all those Intricate foot patterns you've Mambai Intercollegiate Press rOHTI-EIOHTH TEAR Tn Dally Nehrajkan t publlaheC B th tudent of th CJntveraltr or Ne raalca U xirMiim of tudtnti' nvr mt tht Bjr Law governing nudum publication tod admlnlatered by the Board f Pnbilcatfona, "It la th declared policy of tha Hoard that publication, under Ita turladlotion ghall b fr from editorial eenorbip on tha part of tha Board, pr on th part ol any member at th faenlty ot th Onlveralty but member of th ataff of Tha Dafly Nehraakaa ar paraonally reaponalbl (or wnat thy say or do or eau to be print. BnbierlDtlon rate ar tZ.OO lr (emeater, 11.50 tr aemeata' mailed, or H.(0 for th collets year, f.00 mailed, fllntfa ropy Re. Pnbllahed dally dm-lnr. the erhonl Erar exerpt Patnrdaye and flnndaya, vncatlone and examination peiindi and one an online th month of Aoruat by th I'nlveralty of Nebraaka nndrr the anprr. vision of th Oommltte on Sliidrnt Pnbllcatlona. Kntrred a Nrrond (Jlaa Matter at he font Of fie tn Lincoln. Nrhraaka, under Art of (onrreaa, Marrh 3, IH7a, and mi aperlal rat of pontare provided for la Section 110, Act of Congreaa of October , 111, atnortwd September 10, let. EDITORIAL a?4lfr Ma(1c Editor Mvw Editor ...loao Glenn BoaenqnUt, Tom Rlache port Editor ., Bill MondeU AaftHpoft Editor....... ....Bob Bank reatnr Ed.tor '.. Jerry Bailey A a Editor Rex Heaeeramltb fnelety Kltr ' Van Valkenbnr raotorraplier Bod Riff BCStHEIM Baalaeaa Manarer Ted Randolph jjaa't Bnalneaa Manager ......... Jack Cohen, f'hoek Bnrmelater, Bob Relehenhaeh f'iriiilaflon Manatee Al rilraalnic Mght Mew JKdltor ,. Betty be Weaver greedy few had better heed I yngratulates... been brushing up on for so many weeks. Stu Reynolds, dance commit tee chairman, said the stags' problem has already been solved. The Union committee has recruited a battalion of host esses, all of whom will be around to dance or just sit and talk with any of you. Reynolds asked students not to forget there will be no ad mission charge. Soft drinks along with popcorn, doughnuts or cookies have been planned for all those who work up ravenous appetites when they dance. and opinion only. Aecordlni to Article II Brae Kennedy Norma Chabhnrk, Jerry Warren Kruerer. Kent Axtell, Hetty Dr Weaver, Thin Mlnmn la nrOvlded for the enrelon of atmlent opinion. Annnvmoii letter will not be pnhllahed. However, pen nrnnn will be used upon request If nnmca and addreaaea accompany each letter. Addrcaa letters to "The Editor, The Dally Ne braaknn, Student I'nlon Building." If Harvey Rabbin's letter in Thursday's Rag reflects the views of even a small number of the University students, certainly we are in a precarious situation. Perhaps the Crusade for Freedom may at times take on "tinny football atmosphere," and the petition may contain many "hackneyed phrases," but certainly a crusade for free dom should be a worthy objective of every University student. I wonder if Mr. Rabbin, enjoying his freedom and privileges here at the University, realizes what the situation is like in many other parts of the world. I spent three months this summer in Ger many, during which time I was able to get back of the Iron Curtain in east Berlin for short periods. The Communists use every kind of a crusade, bell ringing, parades, and slogans, to stir up support and enthusiasm for Communism. They must think such crusades work or they wouldn't spend so much time and effort on them. Eastern Berlin and eastern Germany are literally plastered with signboards and slogans proclaiming the merits of Communism. In fact, all of the signs designating the Russian sector of Berlin are labeled "you are now entering the democratic sector of Berlin." Appeals to sign the phony Stockholm Peace Appeal were everywhere. All the build ings devoted to Communistic propaganda have huge signs across the front of them saying "German youth for work and peace." The Communists know the value of crusades, parades, bell ringing, and the like. If Mr. Rabbin were a student in a university behind the Iron Curtain, he would have to be able to defend thoroughly Marxian Doctrines and explain the Soviet Doctrine before he would be al lowed to graduate. The first question asked a student in the Uni versity of Leipzig recently was, "Explain and define the third chap ter of Karl Marx, "Das Capital." Students in secondary schools in east Germany have to write compositions on the political structure of the Soviet Union and on Soviet doctrines. The principal of the school harangues them three or four times a week on the merits of communism and the evils of western capitalism. Two girls were ex pelled from a high school in Leipzig because a classmate reported to the Communistic officials that Russia. Agreed, crusades may be a little "tinny" at times, but they are a lot better than controlled thought and forced Communistic rallies at the end of the school day. Galen Savior Chairman of Department Secondary Education Teachers College To the Editor: Today I read about a man biting the hand that feeds him. His name was Harvey Rabbin. Mr. Rabbin, who has the great fortune to live in a land where people can gain a college education whether they are black or white, Christian or Jew, Republican or Demo crat, has the gall to suggest that our desire to spread such equali ties and freedoms to less privileged peoples of the world is to make a mockery of the dignity of the individual. Were those men who met in Philadelphia one hundred and seventy-four years ago to sign a very similar scroll, asserting their beliefs in freedom, also making a "mockery of the dignity of the individual?" Or were they too victims of what the author of yesterday's Letterip calls "some brand of herd spirit" but what you and I call the American Way of Life. The Crusade for Freedom is not a political football (if Mr. Rabbin will pardon the use of such a "tinny" word), nor is it a spontaneous demonstration. Great ideas have always come from great leaders and who would attempt to deny the sincerity or the abilities of such Crusade sponsors as Dwight Eisenhower and Lu cius Clay. In General Eisenhower's own words, the Crusade for Freedom is "a campaign sponsored by private American citizens to fight the big lie with the big truth." Are these the words of "political cynicism' or were -the words of yesterday's author truly the cynical comments? Mr. Rabbin, I fear that you are guilty of sniping at the very freedoms that have put you where you are today. Wm. P. Dugan Welfare State jTTrk - if at Hi0!.! 1 School Meet Approximately 250 students from Nebraska high schools will arrive Saturday on the Univers ity campus where they will par ticipate in a speech and social studies institute. The conference, which is an annual even, is presented chiefly to acquaint high school students with the national debate topic for the year. This year's topic is: Resolved: That the American people should reject the welfare state. To aid in interpreting the ques tion, the delegates will partici pate in two informal discussion groups on the question: "What problems threaten the security of the United States citizens?" and "How should the federal government deal with these prob lems?" In addition to the student dis cussions, Prof. Curtis M. Elliott of the economics department, and Joseph S. Sewall, manager of the Social Security field office in Lincoln, will speak and anal yze the topic. A briefing on "How to Partici pate in Discussion" will be given by Jane Kinnie, director of speech at Grand Island high school. Directs Meet Bruce Kendall, associate direc tor of debate, is in charge of the one dav conference which is sponsored jointly by the Univers- : ity department of speech, the NHSAA and the State Depart ment of public instruction. Prof. Clarence Flick of the speech department will preside at the conference. Debaters representing the University and the University of Mississippi will participate in an exhibiton debate on the welfare state at 3 p.m., Saturday In Love Library auditorium. Last year's conference drew about 250 students from about 40 Nebraska high schools. Helping with registration will be various Builders workers under the direction of Poochie Rediger. Registration begins at 8 a.m., Saturday. HALLOWE'EN Send s friend a rarey, humor ous Hollowe'en Card. Goldanrod Stationery Store 215 Korth 14th Street THE DAILY NEBRASKAN they had spoken derogatorily of: LINCOLN: "Rocky Mountain," 1:07, 3:16, 5:20, 7:36, 9:46. STUART: "Mv Blue Heaven," 1:07, 3:13, 5:19, 7:26, 9:33. NEBRASKA: "Thieves High way," 1:22, 4:42, 8:02. "Sierra," 3:08, 6:28, 9:48. CAPITOL: "Asphalt Jungle," 1:22, 5:16, 9:10. "God Is My Co- s Pilot," 3:36, 7:30 COOPER FOUNDATION THEATRE Amboah! Knrlrrlemrnt ! . . for a t'aptlve Yankee Beauty ! "Rocky Mountain" ERROL FLYNN PATRICE WYMORE 44c "Chnt-llc McCarthy to Mortimer Knerd li Sweden" In Technicolor TUES.: LANZA & GRAYSON A COOPER FOUNDATION THEATRE BETTY GRABLE DAN DAILEY Pi La Ooofy Gander Cartoon T Pete Smtth'a 1 "THAT'S HIH HTORT" DOORH OPKN 12:45 44c to MM i til COOPER FOUNDATION THEATRE OPN 12 r4A 44c to : 2 FIRST RUN HITS AIJDIE MITRPHY WANIIA HKNDKIX IN "SIERRA" In TrXHNtrnMIR With HI HI. IVr li Kirnard 'onie m 'Thieves Highway aljOli r fag ACDOPrR FOUNDATION THEATRE Amateur Mhow at 8 Ptaa Aaphalt Jonfle ft (Sod la My Co-Pilot Marta Hat. Thru Tne. JAMES STEWART "BROKEN ARROW" IN TECHNICOLOR r AI'RKI. HARDY "GREAT GUNS 8c TO 0 THKN Me rv m )i U Dp By Arthur 3. Vennix I was browsing around in the University Libraries this morn ing in quest of something signifi cant to report on. Browsing, in cidentally, is a term loosely used hy some of us librarians to denote periods of physical movement ac companied by mental frigid ity. I picked up a book pur porting to pre sent the fool proof method of predicting plertinns and Vennix figured that it might be signifi cant since there are elections just ahead. The only trouble was that the book had been written prior to the last presidential elec tion and the method of predic tion had been already proved badlv in need of rehabilitation. All of which reminds me that I was working in nn insurance office in Denver when Truman upset the nation's forecasters. I recall hew one of the best known of the agencies had already mailed out a few hundred thou sand copies of brochure telling what business conditions would be during Dewey's term of office. Casting about for ideas for li brary displays, it was brought to my attention that this week is national Wine week. Getting down to the matter of books WORTH READING, there's a wealth of material on every conceivable subject avail able in the Documents Reading Room, Love Memorial Library. The U. S. Government is the larg est publisher in the world, with an annual output of somewhere in the neighborhood of 30,000 titles per vear. Ruby Wilder, Documents Li brarian, handed me a copy of Mr. Symington's recent report to the President on the conditions of civil defense in the United States. The instinct for self-preservution being what it is. this report should rapidlv become one of the nation's best-sellers. It's concise, hard hitting, and remarkably readable. Here's a little 50-page pamph let which will be invaluable to anvone studying the Russian situ ation. It's titled "Background In formation on the Soviet Union to International Relations." It's not antiquated either, having been written only six weeks ago. We are already in possession of five volumes of the official history of World War II. If you think you'd like to read the en tire series you'd better get an early start while you're young. The plan of .the Historical Divi sion of the United States Army encompasses no fewer than 98 volumes. If present indications Ihc A Wm Campus A-man ISA v T WM NHDC Host to 40 Nebraskans More than 40 Nebraska women are scheduled to leave wennes- day to attend the National Home are scheduled to leave Weanes at Biloxi, vMiss., Oct. 16 to !U. Miss Florence Atwond, state home extension leader at the University said that the theme for the meeting is "Family Re sponsibility in Today's World." Miss Atwood will accompany about 30 of the women by char tered bus. Others are going to Biloxi by pi-ivate transportation. She said there will be "southern hospitality" with sight-seeing trips and social gatherings. Meet ings will include talks by family relations specialists and discus sions among the delegates. Rodeo Fans Organize Club S3 The University Rodeo associ ation was formed Wednesday night at a meeting of rodeo fans in the Ag Union. Officers elected were as fol lows: Rox Coffman, president; Jack Manning, vice-president; Gayle Gutherless, secretary, and Virginia Baskin. treasurer. A committee was formed to ob tain constitutions from other col lege rodeo associations in order to have some ideas with which to pattern a constitution for the Ne braska club. The main purpose of the organization is to provide the necessary animals, judges and other equipment for the Ag col lege Rodeo to be held next spring in conjunction with the Farmer's Fair and College Days. The club also hopes to have some sort of Rodeo practice ses sions between now and time for the show if they can be arranged. But these plans are entirely tent ative and must be approved by the proper authorities before any action can take place. The next meeting is now scheduled for October 25 in the Ag Union for the purpose of studying the findings of the Con stitution committee. Members of this committee in clude the officers and Keith Young, Don Bever, Gene Gerdes and Jack Manning. have any meaning, they'll all run near 1000 pages each. There's no immediate rush, however. We've just received the finals numbers in the 17 volume documentary history of World War I. DANDEE DIAPER SERVICE "DOUBLE PROTECTION" Baby talk magazine free each month. For informa tion call the "Double Pro tection" diaper service, 1920 So. 12th St. Ph. 3-8853 stands for "Activities and lot of them. Plays first-string basketball. Repre sents liis class on the student council. Writes for the school paper. When it comes to campus doings, his major is Servicx!. Telephone people arc like that, too. They believe in giving good telephone service cour teous, friendly, helpful service. And because they believe it so strongly, their spirit of service shows up in community affairs. That's why you'll find telephone men and women working on charity drives, joining service clubs, leading Scout troops. Both at work and at home, telephone people try to help out wherever there is a need and enjoy doing it. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM Friday, October 13, 1950 Four Debaters To Participate . p All ,0111 ' PTfMIPftS . Four members of the Univers ity debate sauad will participate in the team's first activities of the year Saturday when they present exhibition debates for high school students. The debaters, Doris Carlson, Joan Krueger, Jack Solomon and Charles Rossow, will discuss the national high school debate topic before conferences of the stu dents at the University campus and the University of Kansas. Debating at Lawrence, Kan., will be Miss Carlson and Miss Krueger, who will uphold the affirmative side of the debate proposition advocating rejection of the welfare state. Solomon and Rossow will meet two University of Mississippi de - baters Saturday at 9 p.m. in Love Library auditorium. The Nebras ka speakers will debate the nega tive against E. C. Ward and ffay Hedgepeth. Donald Olson, director of de bate, will be one of the speakers at the conference at the Univers ity of Kansas. Squad members traveling to Kansas will leave Friday after noon and return Saturday even ing. The Mississippi team is scheduled to arrive in Lincoln by plane Friday at 3 p.m. Solomon is a senior in Law college, Rossow a freshman and both members of the women's team, sophomores. The debates Saturday are the first scheduled with other schools for the season. Before Christmas vacation, squad members are planning to meet Wesleyan uni versity, Doane college, the Uni versity of Omaha and Midland college. A major .ournament is scheduled for the first part of December at the University of Iowa. EAST MULLS 70th and South 1 MCE SATURDAY, SEPT. 16 DAVE HAUN ORCHESTRA ALWAYS THE FINEST IN DANCING Adm: $1.00 Tax Incl. lie 8 in a 1 t '3