Political Guide Candidates for the Repub lican nomination for United States senator (two-year term) are analyzed on page two today. This is the fourth in a series of political guides- designed to acesaint University students with candidates whose names will appear on the April prim ary ballot. the -Voice of 6000 Cornhutkert- Block, Bridle Tickets Tickets for the Block and Bridle Junior Ak-Sar-Ben show will not be available Thursday as previously an nounced. The tickets will go on sale Tuesday between 12:30 and 2:30 p.m. VOL. 51 No. 109 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Thursday, March 20, 1952 YWCA Submits Mock Primary Plans To Council Plans are betas formulated by The University band has al the YWCA to sponsor an all-uni-' ready made plans to travel to versity mock primary election on ? Z SfoA t' the Univprsitv ramnns. vwrA'lf Plans are approved for the stu- sented the plan for Student ;travel on the same migration train. Council approval at their meet-1 Approximate prices for the trip,1 ing Wednesday, jif a special rate is obtained, ac- According to Miss Krasne, the ing 10 iNooie.wm ue oeiween primary will be operated as $15 ard $20. The train would leave1 SONG, DIRECTOR closely as possible along national (Friday evening at approximately procedure and will take place al' P-m- ,Jtlla reacn oouiaer aiier a few days before the Nebraska ten or 11 nour ride Noble said. primary. Ballots will be printed as The N-club petition for future sample ballots of the Nebraska representation to the Council, sub-! primary. Imitted to a faculty sub-committee Student Council polling booths 'on student organizations, was will be used by the voters and turned down by the committee. In every student will be eligible to a letter w the Council, Miss Mary the band will' it happened at nu... A University man was study ing for a history test with his girl friend. She insisted on knowing the exact stipulations of the many acts passed by Congress. Finally, in a disgusted rage, he exclaimed, "If he asks about the Morrill land grant act in your exam, I'll take you danc ing." "No," he decided, "I'll go one better; I'll marry you in June!" The coed promptly accepted his wager. Question two In part three of the exam was "Identify the .Morrill Land Grant Act Indicat ing the role It plays in the farm problem." Mielpnz. committee secretary. stated the reasons for their deci-! sion were based on the facts that! "members-hips in the N-club is ,-,,irw, ,.,,, . limited to students of particular ,nGufQwlTsh'nf. to participate skills," and that the "N-club is a LnheM1952,Ivy D S'ng,; b departmental activity." e d. Ma J, must submit their 1. ; ,...i lent" bv Saturday, March 22. vote regardless of age, The YWCA has the consent of the election commissioner to spon sor such a primary on the cam pus. Tentative plans for the 1952 mi gration were laid before the Coun cil by migration committee mem ber Don Noble. Three universities mous approval of those present." we ueuiB coiiwawwi wr me xau Noble presented a petition from migration. The three under con-'th phai-macv Colleee for fu sideration are Oklahoma, Kansas enTatio'on A $v&.?&. The petition included the approval was given by the !yTlot the SOng? name of the director ho -aniA ana will do suDmiuea to a iacuny n t H -lnmni Jioin ani i Squad University Yell Filings Open Filings open Thursday for cheer leading positions on the Univer sity Yell Squad. Seven persons, including two freshmen women, three freshmen men and two alternate men, will be chosen at tryouts Wednesday at 7:15 p.m. m the Coliseum. Applications are to be made In the Union activities office before noon Monday. The only requirement is a 4.5 average. Practice sessions have been scheduled for Monday and Tues day at 3:30 p.m. at the Coliseum. At the drills, each candidate will be taught two yells. The Yell Squad advisory board will judge the candidates. Mem bers of the board are Jerry John son, Innocents president,' chair man; Gene Robinson, Corn Cob president; Mary Ann Kellogg, Tassel president; Potsy Clark, athletic director; Don Devries Yell King; Jake Geier, gymnastic coach; Donald Olson, director of debate, and Don Lentz, University band director. Men trying out are asked to report to Jake Geier Tues day at 5 p.m. In the Men's Physical Education building for acrobatic practice. Yell King of the 1952 squad will be chosen by the board Wednes day at 7 p.m. Candidates are Don . Devries, present Yell King; Ira Epstein and George Hancock. Dick Claussen is the only eligi ble person for the position of as sistant Yell King. Holdover members of the Yell Squad are Judy Wiebe and Jo Berry. The 1952 Yell Squad will be composed of 10 per sons four women and six men. hw IPiairao ro Tro5ohi,D"r By SHIRLEY MURPHY Staff Writer Forty flying fingers and four pianos will be the center of at tention Thursday night in the Coliseum. Seated on a raised stage in the south half of the Coliseum, the First Piano Quartet will present a program at 8 p.m. of originally arranged classics. The audience will be seated "in-the round" to obtain maximum acoustics. Tickets for the quartet may be purchased Thursday in the Union activities office until 5 p.m. and at the box-office after 7 p.m. Student price is 75 cents. Lower balcony tickets are $3; main floor, $2; balcony, $1.50; and upper balcony, $1. Quartet members are Adam Garner, Glauco D"Attili, Frank Mittler and Edward Edson. Edwin Fadiman is manager and pro ducer of the' quartet. The group started its American career as a radio feature orig inated by Fadiman. The First Piano Quartet is reputedly the first of its kind in the world. Quartet' members arrange classical music for their presenta tions between broadcasts and concerts. The only four piano composition known until the quartet originated was Bach's "Vivaldi Concerto" which was written for violins and later arranged by Bach for pianos. When arranging music for the quartet, the members say they try to combine three things: 1. To preserve the musical identity of the original composition;! rules governing the groups. 2. To make the four pianos sound like one instrument but of. Entries must contain the name greater scope, variety and tonal effect; 3. To cause every one of the four pianos to emerge as a musical Feaiwedl Concert Ivy Day Sing Entries Due March 22 Sponsors of the Sing, Kosmet Klu'b and Associated Women Students, announced the dead line for entries and released ana win ue suoimiieu 10 a irtuuiijr D t j nlnmni hpln and a T sub-committee on student organi-'f ppected alumnl helP a a $3 individuality. zations. Women'c urnnnc hnnifi cnhmitl "There is no hierarchy in our quartet; ail parts are equally lm- A small filing fee for candidates their entries to Pat Widedman, portant," says a quartet member, "and very often the same themes for class officer- and Student 626 North 19th street. Men's and passages rotate from one piano to another." v.v"v..i - groups snouia turn in meir en- was aiscussea uy uuncn mem-tries to Chuck Widmaier, bers. A motion to this effect was North 17th street. 410 carried and will be referred to committee to be written in the by-laws. It was felt that the fund pro vided for tht elections committee could not carry the added weight of purchasing two pictures of each candidate, without some kind of fee 'Street Scene' Tickets Tickets for "Street Scene" are now on sale at the Univer sity Theatre's box office at the Temple building from 12 noon to 4:45 p.m. each day. Tickets cost $1.25. Students with season tickets may also reserve seats at the box office. "Street Scene," a University Theatre production, will be presented Tuesday and Wed nesday evenings at the Ne braska theater. (paMwL By DICK RALSTON Staff Writer When an Englishman is told a joke, he laughs three times: first, to be polite; second, when the joke is explained; and third, When he catches on. When a German is told a 1oke he laughs twice: first to be polite; and second, when the joke is ex plained. He doesn't catch on. When a Frenchman is told a joke, he laughs once: he catches on immediately. When an American college stu dent is told a joke, he doesn't laugh at all: he's heard it before. Need I say more? I've gained back a little con fidence in the weatherman and I'll try to be a little more specific t o d a y. The weatherm a n (his views do not necessar ily reflect those of The Daily Ne b r a s k a n) gloomily pre dicts cloudy skies to d a y Colder with a high near 50 around noon. This afternoon or evening it will turn colder. If duplications occur, the first entry will keep its original choice. Order of presentation and meeting of the songleaders will be announced later. Lab Theater To Present Three Plays The University Laboratory the ater will present several one-act plays Thursday evening at the lempie building. At 7:30 p.m., "Anoli: The Blind," directed by Lynn Kunkel, will be given by three University actors. The tragedy revolves around the lives of three persons in a se cluded section of Queensland, Australia. Rosa, emotional mis tress of Anoli, is played by Char lotte Trumble. Her lover, Antonio, who wishes to free her from Anoli's unmerciful torture, is portrayed by Charles Rossow. Anoli, the blind man, who has a remark able second insight into events, is played by Don Sobolick. Producer of the nlav is Wavne josies. A second play. "Pvramus and Thisbe," will begin at 8 p.m. in the arena theater of the Temple ouuaing. The play is a portion of "Mid summer Night's Dream," by Wil liam tnakespeare. Director is Charles Bell. Included in the cast are Betty Swanson as Bottom, Mary Ann O'Brien as Quince, C. V. Ander son as Flute, Mary Jane Mapes as Snout, Jean Dahlke as Stra veling, Mary Hartman as Snug, Betsy Leiber as Hypollyta and Joan Hanson as the Duke of Athens. Betty Lester is production man ager. A third play, "Man in the Bow- n ...III i. Yesterday, a feature in The" "at' wm ue presemea Daily Nebraskan poked fun at stu Another member says, "We need no leader, nor conductor, nor have we ever had one. We've played so long together thai we understand each other musically without gestures." Garner is from Poland; D'Attili from Italy; Mittler from Austria; and Edson from the United States. i Garner completed his piano studies under Xavier Schar wenka, a pupil of Franz Liszt. He presented the first Berlin performance of George Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue." Garner came to the United States to score Eric Charrell's "White Horse Inn." D'Attili made his professional debut at the age of six before members of Rome's Press club. He came to the United States on a concert tour in 1929. In 1941 and 1942, D'Attili completed a course at Juilliard School of Music on a scholarship. Mittler began his career as a violinist and composer. He came to the United States to become a citizen. Mittler Was a teacher, coach, accompanist and arranger before he joined the quartet. Edson comes from Chicago. He is also a teacher, composer and arranger. Edson's pastime is playing the French horn. ' The quartet appearance is sponsored by Union fine arts and activities committees. Margaret McCoy is fine arts chairman. ( Ernie Bebb is promotions chairman. Committee members are Stan Sipple, Shirley Murphy and Hal Hasselbalch. Ticket sales chairman is Joy Wachal. Committee members are f 31 1 &k M. MUSICAL FOURSOME . . . Posing at their four pianos, are the members of the First Piano quartet Adam Garner, Glauco D'Atilli, Frank Mittler and Edward Edson. They will appear ln concert Thursday night at the Coliseum. Aggies' Esfes Carnival To Feature Seven Booths Seven carnival booths, featur ing politics, sports and games of chance, will highlight Ag collega Estes Carnival Friday night. Events begin at 7:30 p.m. in Ag college Activities building auditorium. Students are invited to attend the carnival any time during the evening, according to Clarice Fiala and Rolan An derson, co-chairmen. Estes Carnival is sponsored by "Political Poll" will be con ducted by Ag Men's club. A "Sports Roundup" will be given by Amikitas. Tickets will be sold for one cent each for the concessions, food stand and the movie by YM and YWCA. The winner of the concession booth will be awarded a travel ing trophy. If any organizat .. Art vivr vwrA ri i wins the troDhv three vears in a Bob LaShelle, Bill Waldo, Barbara Reinecke and Jack .Greer. Win!ceeds g0 to help finance student row, it will be awarded the trophy Martins is Coliseum chairman. I expenses to the YM-YW recionai as a permanent possession. Love An album of First Piano Quartet music will be presented to the three top ticket salesmen. Winners of the contest will be an nounced in Friday's Daily Nebraskan. dents who are late for 8 a.m. classes. This is no joke! It is a se rious matter and faculty members are extremely unfair in their au proach to the problem. In an at tempt to remedy the situation I have a petition demanding that 8 o'clocks be discontinued. So far the only signature is mine. Pennies Meet Pennies, the organization re cently formed by women living in the residence halls, met Mon day evening to elect officers. Carol French was elected as president and Helen Lomax as vice president. Carol Cornelius will serve as secretary-treasurer. Jr. Division Announces Six-Week Reading Class Do you waste time studying for tests just because you are a slow readei? Classes designed to improve reading and comprehension rales will begin Monday, March 24, in Room 205, Burnett hall. course to force the student to read faster and to improve speed and span of comprehen sion. They are the reading rate controller and the tachistiscope. Students interested in the course should report to either class ses cinn ni onll 1 Tn iuprci t v evtpnsinn Sponsored by Junior Division M fnr information. Anv student and Counseling Service, the non-!from the freshman to graduate creau course win De onereu ai t level is weicome to attend. p.m. Monday and Wednesday on at 11 a.m. Tuesday and Thursday.! krrv TDIAI It will continue for six weeks. ylwlv ending May 13. According to Walter R. McClan ahan, assistant guidance consul tant, students who took the course in the past increased their read ing rate with never a comprehen sion loss. Many increased 20 per cent in comprehension. "The average student reads 600 words per minute when complet ing the course," he said, "as com pared with a beginning, average college score of 250 words per minute. 1 Two machines are used in the conference at Estes Park. Colo. lnau ls holder oi the tropny at tne "Leap Year in Dogpatch" booth , preserit' , will be operated by Love hallvAA t cL k girls and "Wheels of Fortune" will; WtA 10 bhOW VtOVie be featured by Alpha Gamma "Where Peace Begins," a movie Rho. "Ring Your Candidate" is the depicting the Putney, Vt., experi theme of the Farm House booth jment in international living, will and "Estogram Services" will be be shown Thursday at 12:25 p.m. given by Loomis Hall. I in Room 315, Union. "Einstein's Kitchen" is the The film is sponsored by YWCA theme of the Home Economics i in connection with. "Invest Your club concession booth, and a Summer" week. 'eiteirsoBT), lEyfler Governor Addresses NU Students On Depression, U. S. Foreign Policy ie "Peterson for Senator"! stressed was the lack of a con Th "Peterson for Senator" stressed was the lack or a con- . ben. Hugh Butler, in his own campaign was started rolling on sistent and firm foreign policy, words, presented his first political the University campus Tuesday "There is danger we might losei address primarily for an audience night by a speech by Gov. Val all of Asia," Peterson said, which of college students at a Lincoln Peterson. would be "the biggest r :aster in The Nebraska governor is a the history of the United States." candidate for the Republican "I believe that the gravest dan nomination for U.S. senator. ger America has ever faced," Peterson presented three points Peterson continued "is Communist which, he said, were "disturbing" the American citizen toany. Point one was that a depres sion In the U.S. was Inevitable. The governor said this depres sion will not start before the 1952 elections, not before the current budget Is spent, nor while there ls still war in Korea, but it will come. "The greatest necessity in our country," the governor said, "is for financial responsibility in Washington." "We must all go without things," he added, "and the government is no exception." The second point presented by Peterson was "the failure of those In authority In Washing ton to recognize that when you hold public office, you hold public trust." imperialism." The governor said from the floor, the Communists are out to con quer the world, and ""everything we do must be based upon the assumption. Russia is out to de stroy Christianity, democracy and capitalism. "This means In our time that America will have to have a strong military establishment." The governor stated that America cannot live in this world by herself and cannot exist on an Isolationist basis. "It is our responsibility," he said, "to cooperate with all free nations fighting communism by economic and military aid. "We have offended the Mo hammedan world," the governor Nebraska's Senior Senator States Attitude Toward UMT, Statehood ator Butler's voting attendance in the senate, Butler replied that his 1950 voting record was 97 per cent. Senator Butler told his aud ience how requests for steel al locations from Nebraskans must be turned down while Winston Churchill receives a large guar antee of steel from the United States. On record against Universal Military Training but in favor of a stepped-up military train ing program in high schools and colleges Senator Butler said that he could not vote millions of U. S. dollars to be scattered all over the world. He empha sized that a plan to take care of foreign aid through voluntary church donations would be suf- hotel Tuesday night. Approximately 50 students and Butler-for-Senator workers lis tened to the Senator's opening remarks and then fired questions Nebraska's senior senator em phasized that he had never voted against a military appropriations bill, after certain ammendments were attached to the bills. In answer to a Hawaiian stu dent's inquiry about itatehood for his homeland and Alaska, Senator Butler replied that one tenth of one per cent of Alas kan property is privately owned. He continued that since a state, like Nebraska, gets tax money from which to run the government from levies on pri vate property, he feels that Alaska is not financially ready fer statehood. In answer to his stand against statehood for Hawaii, Senator said, "bv supporting the estab lishment of a state in Israel and j Butler said the island country by backing the English in the is ready to be a state in every He said that his purpose as Suez Canal issue. way with the exception of the fact U.S. sei ator would be to see thatl "One of our most difficult prob-jthat Harry Bridges dominates the we have "honesty in government lems," he continued, "is to gain one labor union with which Ha in Washington as we have had ln'once more the good feelings of the waiian industry is tied up. Nebraska." people who control the surface of When questioned about Gov. Val Jury Finds Crawford 'Not Guilty' By BEA BEUTEL Staff Writer At 4:28 p.m. Wednesday six women and six men jurors filed into the almost completely filled law school courtroom to return their verdict on the trial of Bryce Crawford, senior law student ac cused of stealing $300 from the executive office of the Law col lege. Jury Foreman Robert Toops handed the verdict to Balirf Dearden, who then gave It to Judge Ralph Wilson, recently retired from the district court bench. "We, the jury, find the defend ant not guilty," he read. Bryce Crawford sat silently gazing at the table before him until the end of the trial. He then com mented: "I feel that my counsel did an excellent job of proving my in nocence." Crawford was charged with the theft of $300 from the Law col lege office Tuesday, March 11, be tween 10:30 and 11:30 a.m., after a five day investigation by Rollin Bailey, of the county attorney's office, and Louis Pierce, George Stanley and John Gerlach.Mhree law students appointed' as county representatives. Pierce, appointed with Gerlach and. Stanley as a joint prosecut ing attorney, opened the trial with a short summary of his intention The third point the governor 'the world." 'Peterson's remarks regarding Sen-lsary. flclent. Senator Butler promised that flf0 !h,at J:wrd iU.,!,-11Z sovcral ''iinroasnnnhlo rpirn nt nns '""'"V cunvc and rules will be eliminated or amended "from federal-state public utility contracts." He closed, his formal remarks by telling his student audience, "We should not have gone into Korea. We should get out of Korea, perhaps with some face-saving move." The Senator was in favor of a blockade of the China coast and the use of air warfare, if neces- office. William Wenke, another law student and defense attorney, then told the Jury that Craw ford had remained In the Law college office only at the re quest of the secretary, and had no motive for stealing the money. The mock trial, conducted by the school's jurisprudence class is an experiment setup by Donald McArthur, a law student. P.M. Headlines By CHARLES GOMON Staff News Writer Stassen Leads In Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS With about 90 per cent of the votes counted in the Minnesota primary, native son Harold Stassen led write-in candidate Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower by only ',21,000 votes on the Re publican slate. On the Demo cratic side, Sen. Hubert Hum phrey had 88,48(3 votes to 17, 489 tor Son. Estes Kefauver. Eisenhower appears to have won an amazing 38 per cent of the Republican votes cast in Minnesota without his name appearing on the ballot. Stas- and who conducted a vigorous campaign got about 43 per cent. Sen. Robert A. Taft, also a write-in candidate, polled eight per cent of the Republi can votes. Write-in candidate Harry S. Truman with 3,121 votes, ran third behind write-in candi date Kefauver and Sen. Hum phrey whose name was on the ballot. The Eisenhower campaign in Minnesota got underway last Friday when the attorney general ol the state ruled that write-in votes would count in the primary. son, whose name did appear Pentagon Discusses Possible 'Ike' Successor WASHINGTON The penta gon cocked a weather eye to the standing of Gen. Eisen hower in recent presidential primaries and began to discuss the possibility of a successor in the event the general de cides to leave his NATO post. Successors being discussed include Gen. Mathew Ridg way, current U.N. supreme commander in the far east and Gen. Alfred M. Gruenther, Eisenhower's chief of staff in Europe. 'Port Of Entry Agreement Near' (2) Whether the communists will be allowed to work on airfields during the armistice. (3) Whether the USSR will participate as a neutral nation on the armistice supervision team. Gen. John Van Fleet, com mander of the Eighth army in Korea, stated to newsmen that his troip5j might not be able to prevent the communists from making a thrust through U.N. lines, but that any such break through would be quickly pinched off and contained. French Want Protection From Germany The French assembly is wor ried for fear the Germans might withdraw from the European army and re-establish the dreaded German army. Morris Refused Powers ernmcnt, asked to see both at torney general J. Howard Mc Grath and his personal income tax files. Nineteen other Jus tice department officials also received requests for their tax files. Morris mailed out his ques iionaires to some 595 govern ment officials in an effort to obtain detailed financial state ments cn each man. KOREA Sources nt the truce site in Panmunjom re port that agreement is near on the subject of the ports of entry to be used when and if an armistice is effected in Ko rea. Compromises were re ported being worked out be tween the delegations. Three thorny issues must still be settled before agree ment may be reached. These include: (1) Whether prisoners of war will be forced to return to thei' respective armies or can decide for themselves. i'akis xne French gov ernment asked the U.S. and Britain for assurances that the Germans will not bo permitted to commit aggression against France. WASHINGTON Newbold Morris, special corruption sleuth pppointed by President Trumm, will not get the power to subpoena witnesses or files from non-g overnmental sources. The senate judiciary committee rejected the presi dent's request that these pow ers be given to Morris. Meanwhile, a house judici ary sub-committee also inves tigating irregularities in gov-