The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 26, 1952, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Friday, September 26, 1952
Page 2
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
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j
3
i
s I
IFC Decision
An executive committee of this University's
Inter-Fraternity council will meet this afternoon
'to pass final. Judgment on those fraternities
charged with breaking or committing infractions
'"Xt IFC rules during the fall rush week.
Cy. Johnson, Glenn Eoscnqulst, Bob Hase
brooek, Arnle Stern, C. B. Schultz, C. J. Frank
furter and Harry Weaver will sit in Judgment
on the cases of the 14 fraternities charged with
the same offense and the two organizations fo
cused of committing other Infractions.
The IFC set up what might be considered a
police committee this year to keep close check on
all fraternities during rush week. The police com
mittee, to the Dally Nebraskan's knowledge, car
ried out their task with sincerity.
Fourteen fraternities have been charged with
giving the names of their pledges to a city news
paper in advance of the release date set by IFC.
Your
Church
BAPTIST STUDENT HOUSE
Sunday, Sept. 28, Morning-
church school and morning wor
ship in city Baptist churches, 5
p.m., Fellowship supper. 6 p.m.,
visual program: "Adventure In
Our Town." Tuesday 8 p.m.,
community Bible service. Speaker,
Dr. Harold Bosley, at St. Paul
Church. 7:30 p.m., choir rehear
sal, First Baptist. Thursday 7:30
p.m., choir ichearsal, Second
Baptist.
charged with such offenses as keeping rushees in
their houses longer than the rules permit and also
seeing rushees during the "closed period," from
Tuesday evening until Friday morning when open
house began.
Those fraternities being so judged by the IFC
posing penalties Jot law-breaktag might bring a
marked improvement in the conduct of the 1953
rush week -and a few less problems for IFC.
R. R.
Fraternity Rush Week
As Seen By A Rushee
(Editor's Note I Tht following atery waa written aapeolally
for The Dally Nebraikan by atndenl who want thronrn fra
ternity ruih week thlt fall and pled red a fraternity. Th re
mark In tha fnllAwlnr atnrv AIAMII the vonnr mh'i evn
attitude toward mall week eiperleneea and point out. a far LUTHERAN STUDENT SERVICE
Alvin M. Petersen, pastor. Fri
dayCity LSA Council retreat,
Milford. Sunday 9:15 a.m. Bible
study, 1200 N. 37th Street and
535 North 16th Street. Rides to
church. 3:30 p.m. joint Ae and
City LSA picnic at Roberts Park.
Meet at student houses for rides
at 3 p.m. Tuesday 7:15 p.m. ves
pers at 535 North 16th Street.
Wednesday 7 p.m. "Introduction
to New Testament," Religion 135
begins at 535 North 16th Street.
Thursday 7:15 p.m. choir prac
tice, 535 North 16th Street.
ai The Nebraikan la eonearned, aome of thoia Tlolatlone of
Inter-Fraternity Council ralee, carried on y many fraternltlri,
which hare not coma to the official attention of the IFC.
For obtIom reasons, the writer'! nam la being withheld by
Tht Nebraikan.)
The nature of rush week is certainly just what
the name implies. Anyone who doesnt believe it
should watch it sometime. I feel that I should
know, because I went through it. I felt pretty
excited last summer when the rush literature and
Heels And Hose
College Girl fJo Longer Exists
In Afetv York Fashion World
The other two fraternities on the IFC carpet are rush cardg gtarted rolling ln By the time j
came down to take entrance exams and take part
in the rest of the activities of New Student Week
I had eight rush cards
When I arrived In Lincoln and reported to the
Student Union I happened to run into several fel
lows I knew that had been in the University for
several years. They Invited me to their fraternity
were charged with violations by the police com- for some meals, and of course, ! went. Far
mittee. All evidence gathered by the committee be it from me t0 turn down a froe meal. Nearly
was turned into the executive body. Officers and every evening there was someone in my hotel
members of the fraternities in question appeared room talking iiaternity to me. This got pretty
at hearings to give their side of the rush week ac- tiresome after several evenings, and I was driven
tivities. The executive committee postponed their to hiding out in movie theaters. '
Friday afternoon, Sept. 12, I attended open
decision until this afternoon.
The Inter-Fraternity council has the evidence.
And, aside from this evidence, its members also
know exactly what went on during rush Meek.
.Those offenses with which the IFC has to work
are not, according to current opinion, the most
serlons infractions made by the fraternities dur
ing rush week.
house at several houses. Rush week had opened
officially and I was really in for it now. I
learned full well the meaning of the term "hot
box." The open house on Friday lasted two
hours and I got around to three fraternities.
Friday night I had no visitors so I went to a
movie and went to bed early.
At 1:30 a.m. I had a telephone call from
a
Thus comes a pseudo-moral problem to the fraternity member asking me to pledge. The next
executive committee. They sit in judgment morning I went to the Student Union to file dates
knowing what violations took place, knowing that for the day. I had eight rush cards, and there
their own organizations committed some of them were only six dates altogether, so my only choice
and yet having to pass upon those that "got was to foreet about two fraternities. I met a
caught."
The executive committee is right now in a
ticklish position. Whether or not to enforce their
own rules, whether or not to junk the "petty"
evidence petty in the face of known violations
that they have gathered, and whether or not
their consciences will permit them to find guilty
and to penalize those fraternities that are charged.
It is quite obvious, at least to this writer,
that a rush week fraternity or sorority cannot
be satisfactorily conducted without rules. The
Inter-Fraternity Council is the organization
legally equipped to rule and judge on rush
week. The rush week violations public or
private occurred this fall, as they have before,
because no one fraternity was willing t 'tllow
the rules "because nobody else is" and -eby
lessen their own chances of obtaining the per
sons they desire for membership in their organ
izations. This past rush week, pointed up the fact that
no fraternity seems willing to take the lead to
make the first move toward following IFC rules.
Construction individual action was minimized be
cause of "what the other guys are doing."
member of a fraternity which I had decided to
forget about in the downstairs hall of the Student
Union, and I told him frankly that I was not
coming to his house. At this time I went upstairs
and filed dates for the day. At the first two dates
for the day I was offered pledge pins, but no one
tried to force anything on me.
That evening at a certain fraternity
some fellows invited me upstairs to a room. I was
told that I was not being hotboxed, but I was in
that room for two hours, and every kind of pres
sure was used to try to make me accept their
pledge pin. I spent that evening at a dance with
some fraternity men, all at their expense. Sunday
noon when I went to the Student Union to file
dates for the day, I met a friend of mine who was
a member of one of the fraternities which I had
decided not to visit He told me that he would
be plenty mad if I didn't drop over to his house,
so I agreed to go over' between the dinner and the
evening date. When I went to this house I was
hotboxed again. They asked me such questions
as "Well don't you think we have a good house?"
and "What is it, specifically that you don't like
PRESBY HOUSE
The Presbyterian-Congregation
al Student House will hold its
weekly supper forum Sunday,
5:30 p.m. Dr. C. Vin White, min
ister of First Presbyterian Church
will speak on the Revised Edition
of the Old Testament.
METHODIST STUDENT HOUSE
Richard W. Nutt, pastor. Friday
5 p.m. picnic. Meet at the Stu
dent House. Sunday Kappa Phi
Rose Sunday. 5 p.m., Wesley
Fireside. Panel discussion, "Ques
tlons Without Answers." Tuesday
6:30 p.m. Kappa Phi Big-Little
Sister Banquet. Wednesday 7:30
p.m. Sigma Theta Epsilon Rush
Party.
FIRST COVENANT CHURCH
The Covenant Club meets at
First Evangelical Covenant
Church, 20th and G. Sunday
9:45 a.m., students' Bible class. 11
a.m., worship. Sermon, "Where
Are You?" 5 p.m., student fellow
ship with supper. 7 p.m., Bible
study, "Saints And Sinners Prior
To The World-Wide Flood Ca
tastrophe." Wednesday 7:45 p.m.
Bible study.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN
CHAPEL
(Missouri Synod) Chapel and
Center under construction at 15th
and Q. A. J. Norden, pastor. Sun
day 10:45 a.m. worship, room
315, Union. Anthem by choir. 6:30
D.m. Gamma Delta, room 313.
house,Union. Prof. John Klotz, Ph. D.,
"A Vanishing Youth Market" Is an initial cause
for the sales revolution now hitting the New York
retailing field.
Similar changes, "so profound
as to be in the nature of revo
lution," may be the reason for the
sad plight of retail business, in
the opinion of Mary Lewis, vice
president of J. R. McMullen Co.,
Inc. Listed second to the "Van
ishing Youth Market," Miss
Lewis cites the "impact of tele
vision" and the "conquest of
space" as factors effecting the
lag in New York sales.
(New York Federal Reserve figures have not
shown a single sales increase since the week
ended April 5.)
Early marriages have all but eliminated the
youth market in New York and surrounding terri
tory, according to Miss Lewis. In a recent letter
to Women's Wear Daily, she writes:
"The so called college girl used to wield a
mighty influence. She inspired fashions for
other college girls, and other girls not in college
I . .JO". I;
' S
lilliS
Iplllll
Barnes
Terry Barnes
(and older women who didn't let age stop them).
She bought clothes freely. She, or her counter
part among the thousands of girls between II
and 23. were the easiest customers in the world.
They were young, they had good figures, they
, loved clothes, they wanted lots o( changes.
"But when the college girl moved to the .col
lege campus his or hers with her husband, it
seems she lost her fashion identity. Today the
magazines that used to devote whole issues to her
ideas adopt a more ambiguous label. The college
girl fashion wise no longer exists. Today the
girl between 18 and 23 is almost certainly mar-
ried. Marriages at 18, 19 and 20 are the rule, not
. the exception. :
" By now many readers are probably prepared
to dispute this fashion expert's explanation for
New York stores private depression. But we
must remember that in the fashion world New
York is six months to a year ahead of us Mid
westerners. If New York fashion promoters decide the col
lege girl no longer sets the mode, we may see a
revolution in magazine college issues and in city
college shops.
Just Around
Football, Track Meet, Pinnings
Enliven M Weekend Routine
Jan Steffen
A comfortable living room
equipped with several decks of
cards, a couple cases of cokes and
a good radio will be the setting
Greer.
Women; and Maynard Zlomke,
now working in Ancnorage,
Alaska, and Pat Ball, Residence
for a number of social gatherings Halls for Women.
Concordia Teachers College, River
Forest, 111., speaks on, "Genes,
Genesis and Evolution." Question
period and refreshments follow
ing. Wednesday 7 p.m. choir re
hearsal, band room, Temple Bldg
Strictly
Kushner
The Daily Nebraskan feels that the IFC execu
tive committee despite their seeming "petty" evi
dence and despite their conscience quarrels at
this moment has the opportunity to raise the
standards of the fraternity system through en
forcement of its own rules.
Taking the evidence they possess and im-
Today I'd like to clear up
a few matters concerning the
title of this column. In the
barrel of mail I get each day
mnnv rimntees tell me nf
about us?" What kind of a reply can you give totheir pUzzlement. Most of this
questions line mui'e.
Since I have pledged another fraternity, the
numbers of this one I attended between dates
do not speak to me on the campus, even if I try
to stop them and talk.
Since Rush Week, I have reviewed the rules
on the back of the rush cards and I find that I
have committed several offenses which could pre
vent me from pledgeship in a fraternity for one
semester.
$50 For Polio
On New Year's Day big men run so little men cynical about the enthusiasm students might have
may walk. They run in San Francisco at the an
nual Shrine East-West all-star football game to
earn money to go to the Shriners' polio hospital
where little men regain the use of their legs.
A variation of this theme has been used here
at the University of Nebraska by Tau Kappa
Zpsilon fraternity. It wasn't an original varia
tion but certainly a worthy one. The TKE's
contributed the money they ordinarily would
have spent on their Homecoming display to
polio relief. At the University of Kansas where
the local polio situation was also very bad the
sororities and several fraternities, gave up
Homecoming decorations and gave the money to
polio. The Nebraskan carried stories and an
editorial on this idea.
It was our feeling when we wrote the editor
ial about Homecoming versus polio, that the tra
dition wrapped up in house displays is important
and money could be collected without taking this
tradition away. However, The Nebraskan wishes
to congratulate the attitude of the TKE's. They
toward helDine in this critical period. But the
TKE's renewed our faith and The Nebraskan Is
sure that students will take time out of their busy
schedules to contribute a few hours to help the
helpless.
To return to the idea of giving up Home
coming displays for the polio fund, it must be
admitted that many problems still must be faced.
The All University Fund will open its annual
campaign very shortly. Therefore, the paper
cannot run a simultaneous fund drive for fear
that both might suffer. The Nebraskan does
not suggest that Homecoming displays be trans
ferred to polio money. The Nebraskan is not
going to sponsor a fund drive for polio money.
But, The Nebraskan will accept and forward any
money which students want to give toward this
worthy charity, including money originally in
tended for displays.
The Nebraskan believes in what AUF is trying
to accomplish and feels that more people would be
is due, they say, to my title,
"Strictly Kushner."
To explain, let me say that
"Strictly" is a qnite significant
a d jeciive
as students congregate to listen to
the Oregon - Nebraska football
game Saturday.
Another athletic-social event
planned for the week end is In
a slightly different form. Ad
mitting that they are rushlnj
the season, the Tri Delts have
challenged the ATO's to a
track meet Sunday afternoon at
2:30 p.m. in Pioneer Park.
Members of Pi Kappa Phi seem
to have gone overboard on en
gagements. Those recently an
nounced are Lee Nelson and
Peggy Stine, Omaha: Wallace
Louch and Ruth Morrow, Teka
mah; Jerry Reinhard : and Jean
Nelson, and George Prochaska
and Jo Peck, Alpha Phi.
Other couples who have an
nounced bethrols are Clyde
Moore, DU, and Mary Alice Mc-
Cutchan, Baltimore, Md.; Darren
Nelson, Farm House, and Dorothy
Heuermann, Ag College graduate;
Roger Bell, Waver ly, and Ruth
Residence Halls for of dating and partying last week:.
Those who attended the Sig Alph
get-together at Arbor Manor were
Ruth Kleinert, with Jack Davis;
Marlene Rees, with Ted Forke;
Darlene Stephenson, with Hi
Prucka; and Shirley Nash, with
Rod Roberts.
Dates to Ralph Flanagan In
cluded eight APOi's. They were
Marilyn Mueller, with Barney
Sprague; Peggy Winchester and
Freddie Rauch; Mary Ann Nel
son and George Turner; Doris
Gillett and Kay Gauer; Carol
Gillett and Ron Hnrst; Mary
Clearman and Bill Johnson;
Marty Schuster and Jack
Lemon; and Nancy Sanders and
Don Lang, Phi Gam from
Michigan State.
AOPi's at Kings were Bickv
Nedrow, with Dale Hahtf; Mary
Fuelberth, with David Johnson:
tseveriy crown, with Bud Jef-
Pins are still being exchanged
by droves, It seems. Among
Monday night pinnings were
those of Neal Pohlman, Acacia,
and Rose Hrouda, girls dorm;
Doug Hanson, Delt. and Joan
Nilsson, Omaha; Dick Lynch,
DU, and Joyce Fogert, Kear
ney; John Carr, Phi Delt, and
Marilyn Stanley, Theta; D wight
Frltts, Phi Psl, and Bobbie
Dunn, Alpha Phi; and Bill
Walton, Pi Kap, and Gladys
Humon. Don Yoder, Acacia,
and Ruth Hites have also an
nounced their pinning.
. ilr, and Mrs. Frank Major, who
were married this summer, are
living in Lincoln and attending
the University. He is a member!
of Sigma Theta
odist fraternity. Mrs. Major, the
former Miss Marilyn Jo Martin,
Lincoln, is a member of Kappa
Phi, Methodist sorority.
The AOPi's had a big weekend
C1I1UC1 !.., 1 T, u ...... T" ,
Epsilon, Meth-pc,7"'nt"m aaiu iVlc"" W1UI D
Ag Builders Open Membership Drive
Alain Feature Gock
State: "The Wild Heart," 1:00,
3:47, 6:52, 9:55. "Lilli Marleine,"
2:22, 5:27, 8:32.
Varsity: "Big Jim McLain,- 124,
3:27, 5:30, 7:33, 9:36.
which
been in
family
years.
has
my
for
For
over 100 years
the name
Strictly has
proudly been
borne on the
K u s h n e r
crest.
My great
grand father,
Patrick Strictly
Kushner
said that they "wished to have the privilege of hurt if that drive failed than would be helped by
contributing ..."
Besides congratulating them on giving up pos
sible Homecoming glory, The Nebraskan would
like to say that the TKE's idea that contributing
is a privilege is refreshing.
Another campus organization has responded
to The Nebraskan's editorial. We said then
that we felt that if money could not be gathered,
perhaps workers could be recruited to help under-staffed
hospitals. In fact, The Nebraikan
called Lincoln General Hospital, talked with the
Director of Nurses and found that the need there
was "very great" Thursday, the Red Cross
' College Unit met and decided to follow through
"with The Nebraskan's suggestion that students
l,form a committee to serve at the hospital as pa
tient helpers. These students will write letters,
run errands and do whatever a patient needs
that busy nurses cannot take time to do.
While we are congratulating the TKE's, we
an emphasis on contributions to a polio fund. We
will accept your money. We will accept your
time. We thank you from the bottom of our
hearts. And we know that the little kids lying in
iron lungs thank you too. D. P.
J Jul (Daily. ThbMAkwv
FIFTY-FIRST YEAR
Member
Associated Collegiate Press
Intercollegiate Press
Tat DiRr Ncfcmkaa if aenlifked e otaaeau of Ik. I nlvfr
MT af Sefcnufc aa cxarautoa of aatatesl' aewr aad aainioa aalr.
A (cardial I Art Let II of th By-Law atneralac atadeat nbltra
Mobs aad adaMfttreo' by tb Board of PabUcallsa. "II la the a
rlarra policy of Of Board that oabUcatfoaa. aaacr Hi larborttlM
hall be frca fro editorial eworaklo m dM part of Iba Board, or
oa tb part of aay awnrxr of tb facatty of lb I'alrtnilr, bat lb
MailxTa of lb ataff of Tb Daily Kcbrukaa ar omoaaily r
voasihl for what tbey aay or do ar raaa la b artnttd."
babtcripfloa rain ar (1.06 a araantcr. I2.M auliad or SS.00
for tb collcaa year. S4.M atallaa. Bind roay Sc. PaMtlbrd
4iir oanaa ma araooi year upr Mnmun aaa aaaaari. vacaiioat ..1..1
aad cnmlnatloa acried. Oa baa aabllihtd deriaa tb awatb of,8."001
Aaaast by rn I'arrentty of nbraka aodcr lb aaaarrbkra af fb
Commillr aa Srodcat Pabliealioa. Entered Bemad f'iaa. Matlar
at lb Pott Ofltc ka Lincoln, Nebraska, aader Act af Conartsj,
inarea 3, l7ll, aaa at aaeciai ral of aottat ararMed for bj Hoc
Kushner, was originally given that
middle name on a farm outside
Dublin in 1810. He was an earnest
ancestor being, among other
things, the first bookie for the
Irish Sweepstakes. In the Irish
tongue, "Strictly" means "Mc
Schnook."
Then, in 1855, my great uncle,
Jose Strictly Kushner. was the
second of the Kushner clan to re
ceive the mystic middle name,
Uncle Jose, born in a villa out
side Barcelona, became a famous
matador. He was the first Span
iard to successfully toss the bull
in Barcelona. In his native Span
ish, "Strictly" means "El Schmo."
The third Kushner to be so
magnlcally named was my
uncle, Pierre Strictly Kushner,
dashing, swashbuckling swords
man and originator of the
French pastry or tart. He was
horn in a small village outside
Paris and there worked up a
small but lucraMve business. In
French, "Strictly" means "Le
Slob."
Finally, In 1932. I was born
Marshall Strictly Kushner. It only
takes simple deduction to see
what "Strictly" means in English,
aaa
Enough of this climbing the
family tree. Next week we'll have
all the data on the Nixon-Spark
man battle. Who knows, we might
go after Adlai and Ike after that,
aaa
quick glance into the crystal
ball and it looks as ft Nebraska
wins the second game of the sea
son. Glassford and crew journey
to Portland to battle Oregon.
With eves open: NEBRASKA
21, OREGON 13. '
Ag Builders fall membership
drive will start Sept. 28 and end
Sept. 30, Jim Weber, membership
chairman, has announced.
Five committee are seeking new
workers, he said. The committees
are tours and sales which meets
at 4 p.m. Tuesday, publicity which
meets at 4:15 Monday, parties and
conventions, and membership.
Students may sign for the com
mittee of their choice in the Ag
union from 8 a.m. to until 5 p.m.
each. day. Committee meeting
times will be posted" at the booth.
Weber stated that each com
mittee will have added work to
perform during the coming year.
He urges new students and well
as upperclassmen to sign for one
of the five committees.
Practice Typ. Paper
100 Sheets
40c
Goldenrod Stationery Store
215 North 14th Street
NOW
JOHN WAYNE
Big Jim McLain
AS III
with
Nancy Olson James Arness
STATE
TODAY
JENIFFEB JONES
"THE WILD HEART"
Alao
Lllli Marleine
KOREAN VETS
Will
all veterans
under Public
attending
Law 550
Vuld like to add our heaviest thanks to the Red iT iVVsT t""tr " i,cU" m7' mamU"
EDITORIAL. STAFF
Hark Rayawad
(Korean Veterans' Bill) present
the following formt at the Uni
versltv Veterans' Office. Room
106, Mechanical Arts Hall. Upon
receipt of these forms your i.n
rollment Certification will be sub
Admlnis-
Cross. Soon the RCCU will issue a call in the
n- - ... Editor . . .
news columns for volunteers to help In the hos- Edhor Do piar mHted to the Veterans'
,u.1. T u. rr.. v - tt :i . Maaaahii fcdllari Sa Gortoa. Kea Rntroa .
fiwia .uciuic uic abu nduua cusuuu lltueriiuy now tailor Sally Hall, Hal Hanelbalrk. , uuuuii.
responded i,it fM, The Nebraskan was dljbUy ,m Km, '.T..".""
Daily Thought
; To really understand a man we must
judge him in misfortune. Napoleon.
1. Form 7-1993 (This will be
forwarded to the veteran from
the Veterans' Administration upon
AmI Sporif Kdttar Caarie If lawk
Keatnre Editor Fat Ptok
n
Bocfetr icr jaa stafiea receipt of his application to attend
BUSINESS STAFF
ttaitaeai Maaaaer
a" t oniaciB ai
the University.)
A mo I el Htera . ... i . .
sua iipvta. Pete Braial neceipi ior payment oi regis-
, ioa 'erho' tration fees.
Clrrolatloa Manacer R4 Bard - . . .,
Mem Mewi editor ....Pat Peek 3. Student s copy of registration.
1
i Bjam tmi tf al 1
JJx
Date-Bait. Our Velveteen
Charmer by Kahn
Elegant from collar to hemline is thi
velyeteen two-piecer. Winged collar and
curved, arching peplum put the emphasis
en fashion. In scarlet or sapphire blue
and in sizes 9 to 13. Ours alone.
'35
Fashions
MAGEE'S Third Floor
0
0
1 a"M"Taoia -w mifr fjf
i ,
'A
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