Tuesday, October 30, ,1951 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN 1or!nrh VlnnAnv finite Can't Cnmnnm Wj esufs By CONNIE GORDON Feature Editor Blood a miracle substance? You might look at it that way. When we speak of miracle sub stances, we usually think of syn thetic drugs that are products of modem medical science. Blood is the one miracle substance for which medical science cannot find a substitute. Little Man On Campns Eh, eh, Margaret Fedcfe Speaks At Ellen Richards Dinner I Margaret Fedde addressing the annual Ellen H. Richards dinner Thursday night spoke of her ex periences la Germany. - The former chairman of the University home economics de partment spent the past year In Germany wonting lor tne state department of education. She il lustrated her talk with colored slides of the places she has visited. Miss Fedde also told of life in the Free Berlin university and of the founding of the German Home Economics association. Over 250 persons attended the dinner held in the Union ballroom. Sponsored by the Home Economics club, the dinner was attended by students and faculty of the Home Economics department and their guests. Toastmaster for the evening was Joanne Engelkemier, vice WANT ADS r WHEN YOU WANT RESULTS USE EMILY EEBMSUUI mm hds CASSL RATES Ma. mt Om I te I Una I tnt I rir. U-1I.I J M Lit l.tt I.U It Jt lj IM M U-M .UI U L7I 1.M ktirtHM when flptr- Estftg 4s ft Cclr Nebraska fcwfeau ffle. gfariant Unloa, mr aaa wtHi eemet anwont CTOP WOHEYJNO nbout Jnc music far txrilei. Reqtmrt Jimmy Phillip CemtW S-S831 Bar K771T Evenings. LO.T-railtat wmtch. 1 Jewel R- waro. Hjtroui x. uioeuca. w norm 13H fttmet. J-Illl. Uth0 "OISIOaiE OFTliE YEAR" KATIONAl BOARD OF REVIEW "9VE0FTUEUEEK"-UFr BESICA'S - English Titles , FEATURES AT: 7:24 and 9:02 VM. Of fJaf ore's Own AleJiclfio Rlnnri and nlasma. not strento mvrin of nenicillin. are the only "wonder drugs" that would save human beings in a national emer gency. A RDprinl defense book oub- lished by the Federal Civil De fense administration stated mat a siirnriso A-homh attack on an averacre American city, could kill n ininva l'jfiiifin nan A i nn Eiir. by Bibler those fools. president of the Home Economics club. Joan Skucius gave the tribute to Ellen Richards, founder of Home economics, speaking of the debt that every person present owed to her. Alice Anderson, president of Ag YWCA, gave the invocation. Bev Kunc led the group in several songs. General chairman for the dinner were Betty Kelso and Lura Ann Harden. Faculty adviser was Mrs. Sulek. Banner Space Reservations Made At Union Student organizations wishing to advertise in the banner space at the corner of 14th and R streets should make reservations in the Union activities office. Banners posted must be made the university photo lab. This ruling has been made so that some consistency and neatness can be maintained. Also, the banners must be made on weather and wind re sistant sign cloth and lettered with special outdoor paint The cost of the banners is from $5 to $8.50 depending on the in tricacy of design and processes used. The Union charges only for the cost of labor and materials. No profit is made. George McKien, Union cus todian, posts the banners on the day specified. Banner space has already been reserved for certain periods of the year. NU BULLETIN BOARD Tuesday Rally committee meeting at 6:45 p.m. at Union. Tell aquad meeting at 4 p.m., Men's PE building. Wednesday Kostnet Klnb Cornhusker pic tures at 4:45 p.m., west stadium. T .. ...a 221X s5U TODAY ; , L vivors of such an attack would suffer either from burns, general injuries or radiation injuries. Blood and plasma would be among: the chief "medicines" that could save most of the in jured. Of 80,000 Japanese who died at Hiroshima from the single A-bomb attack, experts claim that blood might have saved most of the fatally injured. Although there is no present na tional emergency, blood is needed in Korea more than ever. An army medic in Tokyo recently showed concern over the limited Korean blood supply. He stated, "We have enough whole blood on hand for about one week of heavy fight ing." Blood donations have dropped almost a third since last summer, In contrast, the number of Korean injuries has increased from a summertime average of 300 a week to a recently reported figure of 1,380. Blood is being- used at the war front three times as much as it was during World War II. The. .reason? Medical science has found that blood and blood plasma can often be the decid ing factor between life and death. There cannot be a substitute for whole blood because it con tains living cells. Although whole blood is best for most injury and shock cases, it cannot be stored more than three weeks nor can it be given to the injured on the bat tlefield. Plasma is the next best sub stitute. It will keep indefi nitely. In emergency shock treat ments, doctors use plasma 'ex tenders" such as salt solution, dex tran or gelatine. These are poor plasma substitutes, for none of these "extenders" contains the complex chemicals found in plasma. None of these substances would have to be used if enough blood plasma were available. Because of the scarcity of blood plasma, sailors and flyers on the aircraft carrier "Boxer" gave 2,377 pints of blood in the midst of combat operations off Korea. It was mainly because of serv icemen's donations that a week's total of 49,000 pints of blood was met. This total was slightly more than half the weekly goal set at 75,000 pints until July 1. Is this goal too high? Not when you consider that this wonder substance is used daily on the Ko rean front. Is this goal too high? Not when you consider that stockpiles of blood will be needed in case of a national emergency. The blood mobile is in Lincoln today at the Scottish Rite temple at 15th and L streets. It is your privilege and duty to help keep an available supply handy of blood the miracle sub stance. You might look at it that way. j t , VhutkM-jlchimii t . -J y Yeah? ABDICATES . . . Marie Aber, Miss Colorado, abdicated her title after returning' from a trip to New Mexi co daring which she was reported missing. She failed to appear at a Jaycees luncheon in Denver to claim $500 wardrobe prize. Faculty Artists Enter Paintings In Exhibitions Several members of the Univer sity art department have their works entered in three nationally known art shows. Walter Meigs' oil, "Big Red,' and Rudy Pozzattfs monotype, "Folly is Set in Great Dignity," were chosen by the Walter Art Center, Minneapolis, Minn., for the third biennial six-state exhi bition of paintings and prints. Art judges recommended that Pozzatti's oil, "Kites," be pur chased for the centers permanent collection. The following works of faculty members have been selected for the Mid-America Annual, which opens Nov. 4 in the William Rock hill Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo.: David Seylers oil, "Juarez; Rudy Pozzatti's oil, "Still Life;" Walter Heigs' oil, "Peace in the Sun;" Gail Butt's watercolor, "Target for Today;" and Peter Worth's Cuban mahogany carving entitled, "Small Construction." Purpose of the Mid-America annual is to exhibit creative works of artists living in the re gion from the Mississippi river to the Rocky Mountains. The show will run through Nov. 28. Another faculty member, Freda Spaulding, has had her brush-and-ink drawing, "Departure," picked for the 11th Annual Missouri Ex hibition at the city art museum in St. Louis, Mo. w www iiyii MWiW.i.i.y.j 1 1 . V -A !, If C'" )M' i f i t 1 ?-. 1 j v ! v " ' i" - j fit f i r h It's Not Fiction . . . Argentina Student In Expedition To Unexplored Amazon Jungle An expedition to the unexplored Amazon! It sounds like something out of a jungle fiction magazine; but not to Ricardo Luti, Nebraska botany major from Argentina. Luti was one of an expedition of four who spent 11 months among various Amazon wild tribes. The members of the ex pedition were particularly inter ested in the habitant and health conditions of the tribes in the northwestern part of Matto Grosso in Brazil and Bolivia. Many of the tribes the group visited had not seen a white man in over 14 years. The last white man to have visited the tribes was a German ethnologist who wrote an article about the canniblism among certain Bra zilian - tribes. The expedition traveled to this territory about about which the ethnologist Minn. Dean Cradle-To-Grave Science A discussion of "Science from the Cradle to the Grave" will be presented by Dean J. William Buchta of the University of Min nesota, Thursday, at 7:30 p.m. The talk, to be given in Love Memorial Library auditorium, is an Avery Memorial lecture. Dean Buchta is chairman of the department of physics and assistant dean of the senior col lege of science, literature and the arts at Minnesota. The annual Founders Day ban quet celebrating the . 80th anni-; versary of the Palladian Literary Society, oldest student organiza-j tion on the University campus,1 will also hear Dean Buchta. "Reducing International Mis understanding" will be the topic of his Sunday speech at the pub lic affairs forum of the Lincoln Unitarian church. Dean Buchta, a native of Osceola, received a B.S. degree in electrical engineering in 1920 and an M.A. degree in 1921 Psychiatrist Will Address Ag Y7s On Mental Diseases Dr. Mildred J. Stingley, of the state mental hospital, will be the main speaker at a joint meeting of Ag YM and YW Tuesday night. The discussion -topic will be mental diseases. Dr. Stingley is a staff physician associated with ad vanced psychiatry. The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Home Ec parlors. Bible study starts at 7 p.m. on first floor of the Home Ec build ing. A movie entitled "City of the Sick" will be shown a week from Tuesday. It will also be on the subject of mental diseases. wrote. Their purpose was to see if these tribes still observed this custom. Luti stated that the practice of cannabilism has ceased among these Brazilian tribes. Loss of tribe members and outside in fluences were the two main fac tors in the discontinuation of this practice. "Certain tribes used to eat pris oners of war or members of their prevalent between tribes, many tribes found that their manpower had been greatly diminished be cause of this custom. As a re sult cannabalism among these tribes has been abolished." Living condition among these tribes are very primitive, Luti declared. "In one tribe com posed of many small villages, all of the tribe's inhabitants lived in a house only 100 feet in diameter. Except for walls sep- To Discuss from Nebraska. He obtained his Ph.D. degree from Minnesota in 1925. Avery lectures are endowed by a $5,500 trust fund established two years ago by the Palladian Alumni association with the Uni versity Foundation. The fund honors the late Dr. Samuel Avery, a former Palladian, who served the University as chancellor from 1908 to 1927. - NU Sororities To Participate In Workshop "Loyalty foundation stone of fraternity life." This will be the theme of the Panhellenic Workshop week Nov. 4 to 7. The 14 Greek sororities will be gin activities with "go-to-church" Sunday, Nov. 4. Workshops, training schools and exchange luncheons will acquaint the sororities with one another. Loyalty to the University, com munity and the fraternity will be stressed by the three chief speakers: R. G. Gustavson, chan cellor; Mrs. Emmet Orme, city councilwoman; and Mrs. Julia FuquaOber, Kappa Delta national president. Student chairmen for the week are Elizabeth Gass, general chair man; Hester Morrison, exchange luncheons and training school schedule; Shirley Schonberg, ban quet; Jane Jackson, program; Shirley Ransdell, tickets; and Cathy Cox, publicity. The Elsie Ford Piper banquet, Nov. 6, will climax the workshop. At this time, an annual award will be presented to the most im proved sorority on the Nebraska campus. aratingr family from family, there was little privacy." Even with very primitive liv ing conditions, the Amazonian na tives are surprisingly healthy. Luti stated that digestive and gas tric diseases were the most prev alent diseases among most of the tribes. He said that this was due to the excess of fermented acids that many tribes consumed. Goiter and certain thyroid conditions were also common ailments of many tribe members. An iodine deficiency in the diets of many Amazonians caused this condition. Civilization had reached the two Bolivian tribes Luti visited. "The Brazilian tribes we observed were completely uncivilized. We were the first white men to visit one Brazilian tribe and the sec ond to visit another." Even though many tribes hadn't seen a white man for over fourteen years, they were very friendly. "One tribe, how ever, posted arrowed guards around us for two days until they were sure of our inten tions." Luti added that "most of the tribes were more afraid of us than we were of them." Much of the unfriendliness and distrust of these natives is due to "the white man's exploitation of them." In the past, many of these natives have been taken away from their tribes to be used as slave labor. Luti added that "Once the natives found that we were visiting them on a friendly mission, they are very kind to us." Luti stated that during the Amazon expedition, the group visited seven different tribes in Bolvia and Brazil. They cov ered over 1,000 miles of Ama zon jungle in 11 months. Indian guides' led the expedition from tribe to tribe. Richardo Luti's expedition to the unexplored Amazons was fiction come true. As far as Luti is con cerned, truth is stranger than fic tion .-. . even jungle fiction. Wesley Foundation Adds 39 Members Thirty-nine University students Sunday became official Wesley Foundation voting members at the annual membership consecra tion service at the Methodist, Stu dent house. The service, consisting of sign ing the foundation constitution, was conducted by Elaine Eddy,, Julie Bell, Marion Urbank and Les Smalley . The consecration service was part of an intensive membership nrnfram Hesiened tn unite Meth odist students on the campus. Hallowe'en Cards and Hallowe'en Party Supplies See Our Samples Goldenrod Stationery Store 215 North 14th Street ..';.,... m