The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 01, 1952, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE DAILY
fslEBRASKAN
Friday, February 1, 1952
W'eminiisfoBii Cited
NU Student
Given Local
Jaycee Title
Lyle W. Denniston, freshman in
the University School of Journal
ism, has been named as "Out
standing Young Man of the Year"
by the Nebraska City Junior
Chamber of Commerce.
He served as secretary and
publicity chairman for the Jay
cces during; 1951. As a reporter
for the Nebraska City News
Press, he started his journalism
career. Denniston is now a
member of the editorial staff of
the Lincoln Journal.
In Nebraska City he took an ac
tive part in local and district
Lions club work, the Order of
DeMolay, local and district Boy
Scouts and the national guard.
In June 1951, he received the
Degree of Chevalier awarded by
the DeMolays. Five Nebraska
DeMoIays received the degree
"for outstanding DeMolay
labor." Denniston received the
honor while serving as scribe-
treasurer of Otoe chapter.
Denniston was public relations
non-comissioned officer, secre
tary of the Non-commissioned
Officers club and a weapon squad
leader of the Nebraska City Na
tional Guard detachment, Com
pany A. He was eligible for a
second lieutenant's commission
but did not make ppplication
when he was discharged to attend
the University.
AWS Expands
Coed Follies
Competition
Associated Women Students
will introduce a new form of com
petition in the traditional Coed
Follies.
Between-act entertainment
those acts between curtain acts
and skits will be on a competi
tive basis.
Tryouts tor the acts will be held
after finalists have been selected
for skits and curtain acts. The
system has been adopted in order
to give an opportunity for partici
pation to those whose acts are not
included in the formal program.
Dates for tryouts have not been
determined but will be announced
in The Daily Nebraskan.
Judges for acts will be the
AWS court and several mem
bers of the faculty.
All interested women students
or women's organiations are urged
to contact Sue Holmes at 2-3287.
,r f. .1 "i H " '
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SCHOLARSHIP HIGHLIGHTS MB TEA
Nine Sr. Women Will Be Honored Sunday
Af Tea For 460 High-Ranking Coed Scholars
Sophomore, junior and senior ophy; Alpha Lambda Delta,- Lambda Theta, honorary edu- , he d at fciien hal I rom
women with outstanding scholastic scholastic honorary for freshman! cation fraternity for women. ? hf!f nl.ti will ,!! Phl
records will be guests at the an- women; Pi Mu Epsilon, mathe-! Mrs. Joan Peters: College of, w" "rve-
nual Mortar Board tea, Sunday matics honorary; Phi Sigma Iota,; Business Administration account-1 Mortar oard alumnae-Kath-afternoon.
' I romance language honorary: anding, Alpha lambda Delta; Be a ryn Swanson -rs. Angelina An.
Nine senior women who have , Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholas- Gamma bigma . nonorry ' r rnlhnrt vTS;
nmH mr. th.n on tip fratern tv. tic iraternuy lor uusuios r: . ..w . ..
wh anvr& 1 IIHI1 VV ftVM " .
wancy Benjamin; Arts and aems.
hours will receive special recog
nition. Also at the tea, will be
165 senior women with high
scholastic records.
Women receiving special recoe-
nition, their majors and honorary
amnations are:
Beulah Beam; Arts and Sci
ences, mathematics and philos-
PING PONG
-J.
'id
Courtesy Lincoln Journal.
OUTSTANDING YOUNG MAN . . . Lyle W. Denniston, Univer
sity freshman and member of the Lincoln Journal editorial staff,
has been named "Outstanding Young Man of the Year" by The
Nebraska City Junior Chamber of Commerce. (Courtesy Lincoln
Journal.)
Union Members Attend
Conference At Kansas U
Table Tennis
Tournament
Opens Feb. 8
Sciences, journalism and psy
chology; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha
Lambda Delta; Theta Sigma Phi,
women's journalism honorary;
Kappa Tau Alpha, senior journ
nalisin honorary.
Lois Frederich: Arts and Sci
ences, art; president of Delta Phi
Delta, art honorary.
Annette Luebbers, Ag Col
lege, dietetics; Alpha Lambda
Delta; Oniicron Nu, home econ
omics honorary.
Marilyn Mommey, Arts and Sci
ences, sociology, Alpha Lambda
Delta; Alpha Kappa Delta, soci
ology honorary, Mortar Board.
Jessie Murray: Teachers col
lege, secondary education; Pi
Marv Sidner: Arts and Sci
ences, philosophy and sociology;
Pickett, president of the alumnae
will pour.
Dean Marjorie Johnston, Assist-
Draft To Call
Fewer Men
Competition in the intramural
table tennis tournament spon-j .
sored by the Union recreation! Thrill Fnrfrmd
committee will begin Friday, Feb.!' ,,U" ' U,C-UJ'
8. There has been a major change
the first place winner and
Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Lambda ,ant Dean of Women Helen Snyder,
Delta. Mary Mieienz, xvirs. i. j. momp-
Miri'am Willey; Teachers col- son, Mortar Board president Shar
lege, elementary education; Al- on Fritzler and Sara Fulton will
pha Lambda Delta; Pi Lambda form the receiving line.
Theta, Mortar Board. Delores Irwin and Jayne
More than 460 coeds have Wade are in charge of arrange- .
been invited to the tea to be 1 mcnts for the tea.
Connies Corner
1 Connie Gordon
held on an individual basis, will
be an elimination tournament
until the quarter-finals. A
round-robin will complete the
competition.
Five persons from the Union
met to discuss Union improvement
with student, union officials from
11 other schools at a regional con-
Students may sign up in the
Union activities office Friday or
at organized houses from Mon
dav until TiipsHpv mnmiru F.pph
large, varied activity program that, house -is limited tc five contest-
nis amereni mieresis. ants.
home ol the topics covered were All who sign up for the tour
the needs of students, need forjnament are requested by the
fprpnrp at Kansas linivprsit v last ".. uniun tuiiuuiiiee iu cnecn in uie
ierence at is.ansas university last ordination of union activities with I activities office, Thursday, Feb. 7,
niuay ana oaiuraay. otner campus lunctions ana pub- to learn the names of their part
Union director Duane Lake; as- "city facilities. mers.
sistant director, Roger Larson; Bob
LaShelie, Nancy Wier and Charles
Widmaier represented the Univer
sity. .
Through workshops and discus
sions representatives exchanged
suggestions for union improve-
Wives 0 Ag Faculty Planning
Sunday 'Pot Luck With Profs'
one Hank
"Beetle" Mul
len. 1 1 seems
. 41
An aide to Selective Service di-
rector, Lewis B. Hershcy. an-, s Vg.IP.a ... , n '
medals to contestants placing jnounced Thurrday that there will 1 fu b J."
second and third. The contest, be a definite decrease in the num-l nru .Vf
from here on out.
The news is contrary to a
statment Hershey gave to the
house armed services commit
tee earlier in the day. At that
time Hershey forecast an in
crease in quotas, but the aide's
announcement said that the
General's figures were based on
old information and the picture
has changed since then.
In a written statement to the
It's sassiety time again! Schneider and Ross Hecht; Betsy
The first news of the day is 'Ljeb,er and, Bob Russell; Emmie
news of engagements. Marilyn Jo Mecke and Fred Peterson; Dot
Martin has announced her en- Lowe and Don Larson.
Ditto' oeiure we iurgei n congratula
tions are in orucr ior Lan jnuss
who received the pin of Charles
Barbur from Doane during final
week. Other additions to the con
gratulation list include Kathleen
Wilson and Bob Hallock, George
Reichenbach and Pat Laughlin on
their engagements.
Party News
gagement to Frank Major.
with Marilyn
Jungclaus from
Grand Island
and John
Woodin.
Elizabeth
Taylor may be
Gordon
that Hank made a long distance
call to Hollywood to ask Miss
Taylor to come to the dance. He
got as far as her secretary, but
she said that she would see that
Miss Taylor got the message and
would either write or wire an
answer.
Some AOPi's and Kappa Sigs
Friday
Inter-Fraternity ball Corn
husker hotel.
DU Orchid Formal Lincoln
hotel.
Palladian program.
Saturday
Alpha Phi formal Cotner Ter
race. Alpha Tau Omega house party.
Alpha Gamma Rho house party.
Theta Xi house party.
Kappa Alpha Theta formal
Lincoln hotel.
committee, Hershey said that the are making an evening of it this
armed forces will call upon Selec- Friday at King's . . . with Ralph
tive Service for 430,000 men dur- Flanagan. Some of the couples
ing the seven months ending June are: Myrna Walston and John
30. Gibbons; Polly Stratton and Gus
Wolf; Scampy Quigly and John
Bailey; and Nanci DeBord and
A sharp drop in the rate of
casualties in Knrpp anH an in.
RpVPn mpmhprC rf thp Atf fap-'thp nrt limb- rlitinnpi nelrnA tr : 1.' , ;i
monts nvoomnnt on a(iiti. 1 . " . "w. ... . . ! . "" , Ul CdSe III eilllblllieniS lUdae 11 DOS-
p u uuy ana ineir wives win De nostsaeave tneir names at the Ag Union sible for the decrease in the draft
Each group explained systems that and hostesses for the first "Pot1 office by Friday, so that the wives Quotas
nn Aio-rnn in inpir nnma nroani. t i titiau ai -t- n : a -n , , - i
b""T I juuck wun me r-rois session io.wiu Know now many to plan tor,
canuna auu lugeuier uiuy wumcuiue neid Sunaay evening from 5
A Selective Service spokesman.
however, telephoned news serv
ices that the figure was out-dated Don Browning.
and based on "the situation as it other weekend dates include:
existed in November." iMarlene. Oeden and Dirk Hntnh.
ins; Ruth Green and L. G. Law
fence; Lois Larson and Jerry
In Nebraska, Brig. Gen. Guy N.
out plans ior unions still in the to 7 p.m. in theAg Union. Ipers if they decide to do so at the nouncement as "welcome news.''
paper stage. The faculty members are: Mr. j last minute, but they may have to He added that an increase in
According V . LiShelle, the Uni- ana Mrs. h. A, -Uison, . . Mr. ana wait in line until the rest arei quotas would be hard to meet
versity maintains one of the out-'Mrs. Clarence Miller, Dean and served. I under the present classification
standing .student unions in the re-'Mrs. W. V. Lambert, Mr. and Mrs.j Faculty wives are planning to method.
gion inducing iNeorasKa, Kansas ihabuu, ivh. uu mu, nuw r-ui ijucr. wiui uie x-rois , xne states January call was
and Missouri.
Book Notes
'Winds Of Mcrning' Offers
Reader Quartet Of Pleasure
Mary Worrall
The Union has a Arnold Barager, Mr. and Mrs,
Robert Fossland and Mr. and Mrs.
M. A. Alexander.
"Pot Luck With the Profs" is
an informal free supper furnished
and prepared by wives of a group
of Ag faculty members. The
wives originated the idea of the
pot luck suppers to acquaint stu
dents and faculty members.
The supper is informal, and
school clothes may be worn. v
Ag students planning to attend
every Sunday evening until Eas
ter time.
NU BULLETIN
BOARD
H. L. Davis' latest novel, "Winds is colored by a murder, Indian
of Morning' (William Morrow squabbles, a love affair and a -
and Co., New York, 1952) of f ers 5 W young companion QrOnt Established
i.i ; whnsp tnip rharartpr nnns Ihrniirih ! liJlMMlljllVM
a qurtiiei oi pleasures ior tne -------- r-r
of
reader whose afternoon is slow,
or who wants
a good fireside
companion for
an evening.
Old Hend
ricks, a horse
herder, ard
Ames Clarke,
young sheriff's
assistant, make
a pair of lov
a b 1 e opposites
who create,
Cultivate, and -Courtesy Lincoln Star.
cure the in- Worrall
trigue in the story. Their job of,
herding horses to the Columbia:
only in the last few pages.
Pleasure number one is the
way the author spins the old
yarns with a new twist. Old
Hendricks . views the Great
Northwest as a veteran, and his
story-telling fascinates the
green young deputy and the
reader. Along with the story
telling comes the second pleas
ure of a live background unfa
miliar to our generation but
created with such cleverness
that one feels he can picture the
wildlife and setting in imagina
tive technicolor.
For Student Nurse
A student in the University
School of Nursing in Omaha will
be awarded an annual scholar
ship worth $160. The grant has
been established by the Opti-Mrs.
Club of Lincoln with the Univer
sity of Nebraska Foundation.
Applicants must be doing satis
factory work in all studies, show
need of financial assistance and
show promise for future success
in the profession. Student Assist
ance committee of the College of
Medicine in Omaha will make the
award.
Thp Dnti-Mrs Tlnh with Mrs
For once, a novel has appeared Paul E. Haberlan as president is
Historical Society
To Finish Bldg.ln'53
river back-country m tne iy2U s minus the heavy stress on sex. an auxiliary of the Lincoln Opti-
Amos- ionaness tor uaiantne, a mist club,
young girl whose father's name
I implies trouble, is merely ex- Qon Nelson Elected Head cents.
.pressed, not over-empnasizea. xne, . , , , , ,
spicy humor of the old herder and;Of AIEE Wednesday
Friday
Bible studies, 5 p.m., Room 223,
Burnett.
YWCA Rendezvous, 3-5:30 p.m.,
Ellen Smith hall.
World Affairs Conference opens,
7:45 p.m., Love library auditor
ium, forum on "The Dilemma of
American Power."
Wesley Players, 7:30 p.m., Meth
odist student house. Organization
and planning of second semester
program. Open to all students.
Texas Star Square Dance, 9
p.m., 'Union ballroom. Free danc
ing to the calling of Tom Graham
and the music of his Texas Stars.
Date or stag.
IFC ball, 9-12 p.m., Cornhusker
ballroom, Eddy Haddad orches
tra. IFC Sweetheart to be pre
sented. Saturday
Bridge Tournament. 1-5 p.m.,
Union.
Johnson; Beth Blaizer and her
fiance Don Innis; Marlene Bell
and Bob Chinnock.
One of the big dances of the
weekend will be the annual Inter-Fraternity
ball. Some of dates
will be: Jayne Wade and her
steady Bill Anderson; Lorene
Graver and Kent Kelley; Joyce
898 The can for February is 661 Tanner Will Show Slides
diiu mclilll, 1UO.
Hershey's original testimony
indicated that the Selective
Service quotas for the April-May-June
period would be
more than 90,000 men a month.
Dn Pathology To Nu-Meds
Dr. Tanner, prominent local
physician, will speak to Nu-Meds
and I show Kodachrome slides on
That would have meant, on the i thp snhiprt nf nnorai nQthina
basis of past Nebraska figures,! u- i.i.. n u ,
A lie l.,VUtG Will UC llCll VV CU"
nesday at 7:30 p.m. in Love Li
brary auditorium.
that more than 1,000 men would
be called from this state in each
of the three months.
TONIGHT!
IT)
Dancing 9 T il 1
Doors Open 8 P.M.
No Charge for Booths
Advance Sale Haun
Music Store $1.25 plus tax
At the Door $1.67 plus tax
Union dance after basket ball
game, Union ballroom. Jean Moy-
er and his orchestra. Admission
FORBISH SETS NEW IC4A RECORD
ENTERS SUBSCRIPTION TO TIM ON
BOOKSTORE MACHINE IN 31.7 SECONDS
a few choice native jokes keep T
tho wn-iAw .o:nnnj at i I uoa J.
i the reader satisfied. Number four
'pleasure, a well-woven murder
Nebraska State Historical So
ciety's new building will be com
pleted late in 1952 or early in
1953.
So announced James E. Law- missing "sex-full" mood.
rence, editor of The Lincoln Star:
and Historical Society president,!
at a Rotary club meeting Tuesday.!, Dayis, whose "Honey In The
norn won me I'uinzer frize a
Nelson was elected
president of the student branch
of the American Institute of Elec-
.. i . . i , i ui nni.iii.aii iniiinuic KiL met"
fhp ys H P mS bfUsytn trical Engineers and the Institute
the side, also makes up for the nf Rariio KnPinp-s ar a inint
meeting Wednesday night.
Other officers are James Wel
don, vice-president; Curtis E
Sorensen. treasurer: Rex D.
The structure which is being ""rLril Wiese. A EE secretary: and Lewis
constructed on the University ore awards with' Dickerson, IRE secretary,
campus facing 15th street willjf md .'winds of Moratal ' -plan" for E-Week were dis"
provide the Society with quarters!? ook Winds of Morning ! cussed at the meeting,
including 45.000 sauare feet of goes.a ep beyond most new 1
floor space. The present facilities i" Z ..owl"8 new Partners Mav Still Sian
of the Society are 19,000 square '?hm,Psef thue RoarinK Twen-farmers may iWI 3gn
feet. j ties, ' lt has character. For UnOH 3rcoe Meef
Rpst.plWc f h. Vloolr "Wll -"'"3-
amranKO ovn QitiaH thof iVy " ' 1
W . J LULL A1U1UI.U 111 U L
museum will be on the first floor,
witn tne otuces ana library on
the second and storage space in
the basement. 1
Pnrtirinants fnr thp ViriHorp trnr.
Fiction: The Caine Mutiny, by j nament have until Saturday noon
Herman VVouk.
Non-Fiction: The Sea Around
Us, by Rachel L. Carson.
Make Wav For Dorms . . .
h:l Ijfl Iff"
to sign up in the activities office
'as partners.
This tournament will be held
Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. in
Parlor X. of the Union, with Jim
Porter as instructor.
This will be a practice tourna
ment in preparation for the Big
Seven and Intercollegiate tourna
ments. Semi-finals will be held
Feb. 9 from 1 to 5 p.m. with
final play-offs the following
week.
Sunday
Movie at ' Ag Union will be
shown at 3 p.m. instead of 4. The
name of the film is- "Cry of the
City."
Mortar Board scholarship tea.
3-5 p.m., Ellen Smith hall.
Tuesday
Husker Handbook filings close,
5 p.m., Public Relations office.
Wednesday
Nu-Med, 7:30 p.m., Love library
auditorium. Dr. Tanner will lec
ture on general pathology.
NU Movie
A University movie showing
the state's seed certification pro
gram will be shown around the
world.
The bureau of audio-visual in
struction has received word from
the US department of state that
the film will be released soon
with foreign language commen
taries to all nations getting as
sistance from the US.
This is ' the second University
film selected for world-wide dis
tribution.
HOUSE ON WHEELS . . . This house, located on the vomer of
I5,h anil S streets, is in the process of being moved to make way
for tha new men's dormitories which may be built as early as
ifco fall of 1952. Norris House and one private residence hall will
fc moved this summer, (Daily Nebraskan Photo.)
UMT Opposition
The national Council of
Churches of Christ, the world's
largest religious organization, de
clared its opposition to Univer
sal Military Training.
The 29 Protestant and Eastern
Orthodox churches who belong to
the council have a combined
membership of more than 31 mil
lion persons.
Daniel Defoe, author of "Robin
son Crusoe," was a strong Pro
testant and a fearless advocate of
the country in the interests of the
people. Because of his views and
various phamphlets attacking the
Government of his day, he had to
suffer imprisonment. On one oc
casion he was made to stand in
the public pillory but the citizens
of London admired him so much
that when he was in the pillory
they brought offerings of flowers
to Him and had to be kept sway
by soldiers.
-yTlSj
PART 08 ALL OF YOUR GI IOAN
BENEFIT BEFORE APRIL 20, W50,
YOU NOW MAY BE ENTITLED
ID AN ADDITIONAL GUARANTY
FOR GI HOME LOANS UNDER
A
Hemes I '
For full itifnrmntinn rnntart ynr nenrrat
VETERANS ADMINISTRATION offir
Ned Forbish, crack pinballer, juke box
and slot machine maestro set a new flat
track record in the bookstore last Thursday,
as he negotiated the four steps required
to enter a subscription to TIME on the
bookstore's automatic vending machine
without getting winded.
In his record breaking performance,
Forbish used his famous 1923 "two-bit
piece" which previously had enabled him
to hit seven successive jackpots at Las
Vegas last summer.
Off the mark poorly, Forbish gave little
indication that his subscription order would
set a new IC4A standard. At the first turn,
depositing the required four quarters,
Forbish was clocked in 13.5, slow time
due to a reluctance to part with the dough.
Pacing himself nicely, Forbish finished step
2 in good timefilling in his name and
address on the order form with the pencil
provided at 30 seconds on the nose.
Going into the third step, in ordering
TIME, Forbish sprinted. His clocking for
pressing the delivery button was a neat
0.5. From then on Forbish breezed to his
record by knocking off difficult step 4
grabbing his receiptin the amazing time
of 1.2 seconds.
Besides the accolades that came to him
as the new bookstore record-holder, For
bish received 4 months of TIME for only
$1.00, the lowest rate ever offered any
college student anywhere.
We invite you to take a crack at the
new vending machine and to try TIME at
this special student rate 4 months for
only $1.00.
REGENT'S BOOK STORE
AND
NEBRASKA BOOK STORE