PBK Dinner J.Phl B.et? Kapp dinner neethyr will be held Tuesday at 6:15 p.m. In the Union. Dr. -i . Georl professor of bac teriology, will speak on the sub ject "Researching Abroad." the VOL. 52 No. 31 Voice of a Of of Midwestern University 'Outward Bound' Ticket reservations for the University Theatre production, "Outward Bound," are avail able In the theatre box office 12:30 to 5 p.m. John Toich, director of the play, urges stu dents to get their reserved tick ets as aoon as possible. FARMER'S FAIR BOARD in Ag Juniors idced Mondav J Six Ag college juniors were neWtAri hv the onniAit mam. ?S? TLtl?e Fe'a F Bard Monday night according to ion uutiru manager. The new members of the board are Beth Rohwer, Mari- j Buwn opiiKer, uaie uison, Jim Weber and Dale Van Vleeck. Miss Rohwer is majoring In home economics journalism and is a member of the Home Eco nomics club. Builder' hoard LINCOLN, NEBRASKA and Chi Omega sorority Miss Larson is majoring in home economics and is a member of the Home Economics club, Ag Union, and Alpha Chi Omega sorority. miss bpiiker Is a member of xxjve nan and the Home Econom ics club. She is majoring in home economics. , Olson who Is majoring in dairy husbandry is a member of the Ag .ec jooara, varsny Dairy club, uu Aipna uamma itno iratemity. A major in general agricul ture, Weber is a member of Corn Cobs, Builder's board. Block and Bridle club and Farmhouse fraternity. Dale VanVleeck is majoring In general agriculture and is a mem ber of the Union Board, Block nd Bridle club and Ag Men's club. The junior members are car ried over and made the senior member on the board for the fol lowing year the manager said. This group of 12 individuals are directly responsible for the '53 Farmer's Fair which will be held some time In April. The senior members of the board are Don Leising, manager, Marilyn Bamesburger, JoAnn Meyer, Joyce Kuehl, Bill Waldo and Art Becker; The facultv adviser committee lor the board is headed by Prof. manes Adams. NU Linemen Listed For AP Honors Jerry Minnick and Dennis junanuel, defensive stalwarts on the Nebraska team, were nomin ated for the Associated Press All- America football team Monday by me Rocky Mountain regional uoura, -- The board, comnnsed nt rhot Nelson, sports editor of the Rocky luuuuiain news; jonn Mooney, sports editor of the Salt Lake City Tribune, and John Steele, sports caster for Radio station KOWB in Laramie, nominated Emanuel and Minnick along with Jim Stander, 224-pound Colorado defensive tackle, Don Peterson, Utah Full back, and Del Ray Campbell, Utah State's junior fullback. Minnick was nominated last Week for his outstanding play against Penn State. Young GOP To Convene Downtown Thursday Meet ing Last Before Election Republican Headquarters in downtown Lincoln, on 10th street between O and P, will be the meeting place for the Young Re publicans Thursday at 7:30 p.m.. Dan Tolman. president, an nounced today. The meeting will be the last be fore elections Nov. 4. Plans 'will be completed at the meeting for the car pool which will function on election day. Students and Lincoln Re publicans will pool cars to transport any Lincolnites who lack transportation to the polls. Committees will be working this week on pre-election cam paigning such as calling all Lincoln Republicans to urge them to vote and scheduling the transportation for the car pool. 'The night before elections the Young Republicans have planned a Paul Revere Ride. This Ride will entail the distribution of campaign literature throughout Lincoln in a house to house last campaign effort. The winner of the "youngest voter" contest will also be an nounced at the meeting. Committee chairmen will con tact the members of their com mittees for specific duties and in formation regarding the plans for the coming week. P.M. Headlines By SALLY ADAMS Staff Writer Lewis Orders Miners To Work WASHINGTON John L. Lewis ordered striking tnft nl mln, ers to go back to work Mondav. The chief of the United Minn Wnrlr- ers saia work should be resumed pending government reconsider- auon oi me $i.au a day pay raise which the industry approved. The ya&a oiauiuzauon poara naa trimmed tne raise to $1.50. The in dustry and the union have jointly appealed the WSB decision. resident Truman had appealed directly to Lewis to get the miners back to work. Sunday night Truman called Lewis and Harry M. Moses, president of the bituminous Coal Producers Association, to ,yuws uuM i-uiuerence. jiso mciuaea in tne meeting were Econ omic Stabilizer Roger L. Putnam; David Cole, director of the Federal mediation service; ana Presidential Assistant John R. Steelman, Tru man's specialist en labor problems. Truman's statement following the meeting indicated possible re versal of the wage board's position that miners should be granted only a $1.50 a day pay increase. He said Putnam "assured the nartles that serinns nnrf consideration would be given" to the joint industry-union request for a review of the waee board's rulinc. In addition, he sniri Mn tat the operators "are prepared to start paying immediately the $1.50 of me wage increase now allowable ana to set aside available for pay ment to the miners when and if approved" the remaining 40 cents per day, retroactive to Oct. 1. Stevenson Attacks McCarthy Speech EN ROUTE WITH STEVENSON IN NEW F.NfiT.Awnr! Adlai Stevenson declared Sen. Joseph McCarthy would make "the liiuoi judgiuuceni oi an smears or an times." Mccarthv mnrfe a na tion-wide broadcast on Communism Mondav niirtit. TTa" ---o-- v-rv-utvu itiai. Eisenhower was "getting on the wrong bus" when he said he would u w in an euon to ena tne war tnere. Ana he insisted the war would be settled in Moscow not Korea. Sunday Stevenson expressed concern over the "concentration of leuerai auinoruy over our lives. Allies Accused Of War Crimes VEREEN. GERMANY Ex-Gen. Hermann lied soldiers of war crimes and demanded the release of all "so-called German war criminals." He spoke at the first postwar reunion of Hit ler s SS (elite guard). Ramcke, a paratroop general and one of the most popular German wartime leaders, told the SS men they had been fighting for their fatherland as well as any other German soldiers miu mat wereiore, an aeiamation oi tneir Honor must stop." au tnose Ainea oincers and soldiers whb bombed German cities are also war criminals," Ramcke said. "If our soldiers are con victed as war criminals then it was also a war crime when the Allies bombed unprotected German cities and when the Allies now invent Tuesday, October 28, 1952 forty mm Cds F"3 O Honorary Commandant To Be Presented Dec. 6 Forty-eight Universitv women have been aDDroved as candidates for Honorary Com mandant by the Of f ice of Student Affairs Win Cady, Military Ball publicity chairman, announced. m All candidates filed individually for the position, and were selected after eligibility had been determined. Requirements for eligibility are a 5.5 weighted average and graduation in June. Candidates, their college and affiliations are: Beth Alden, Teachers; Mary Ann Kellogg, Teachers; Janet Kokjer, Teachers; Lois Ann Miller, Teachers; Jan elle Mohr, Teachers; Nancy Farnsworth, Arts and Sciences and Barbara Hershberger, Teach ers, all members oi Alpha Phi. Marilyn Bamesburger, Agricul ture; Artie Wescott, Agriculture, Bloodmobile Hits Lincoln To Collect 70-Pint Goal AUF Donations Phi Kappa Psi has donated 100 per cent to the All University Fund, it was reported by the AUF board. ... . .. , . . . .. . .. , The Mobile Blood Bank will be in Lincoln on Tuesday at the Scottish Rite Temple. Shirley Murphy, Blood Donor Recruiting Chairman, announced. The goal for the Lincoln area has been set at 70 pints of blood. This goal will be reached if all those who pledged to give a do nation are able to keep their ap pointments, she added. Miss Murphy sid that the need is very great and urged all those who had filled out a donation card, and had been contacted by the Red Cross Office to fullfill their appointments. Harold Hill, Lancaster County Red Cross chairman said that his office had received special -award pins for all persons who had do Speech Instructor Wins Scholarship Lucile E. Crypreansen, assistant professor of speech and speech correction at the University, has been awarded a $1,350 Elks Na tional Foundation scholarship to finance graduate work in speech pathology and special education at Syracuse University, N. Y. Lincoln Elks Lodge No. 80 ex plained that these scholarships are awarded to qualified graduate students in the field of speech pathology and special education. The awards are in connection with the Cerebral Palsy program of the Elks National Foundation The scholarship was awarded to Miss Cypreasen on the basis of letters and documents submitted by her to the National Foundation during September. OPERATION EXTRACTION Writer Gets Wisdom Teeth Pulled; Tells Impressions Of Student Dentists By PAT PECK Feature Editor This is the story of two teeth and a quotation. I don't remember the author of the quotation or just what he aid, but it was something to the effect that in order to make writ ing live you must have lived the writing. The teeth belonged to me, and In order to give you the illusion of pulling teeth as you read this, I had them pulled. In reality the stcry Is about the group of students who spend the last two years of their col lege careen on the third floor of Andrews Hall In the domain of the Dental College and their work. Occasionally there is an over flow of men in white Jackets at the coffee machine on first floor, but for the most part they stay within the boundaries of third. When they come downstairs they take off their white jackets and lose their identity as dentists. They also lose their titles, for upstairs they are referred to as "Doctor." My first acquaintance with the Dental College tame with a sore "wisdom tooth," "third molar" or "lower right eight," whichever you prefer. Having been given to understand that perhaps the Dental Clinic could help, I allowed ten minutes be tween classes and presented my self at the information , desk. Emergencies, that Is anyone who doesn't have an appointment, are handled between 1 and 3 p.m. The lady in a white uni form behind the desk picked up a microphone and said sweetly, "Doctor Soandso, patient." After a brief pause Doctor So andso put in an appearance. He used the usual right-this-way technique, led me into a room equipped with 60 dentist chairs and parked "patient" in one of the usual type. He looked at the of fending tooth and said "hum," while another student dentist took notes on a clipboard. Two X-rays later he announced that two teeth would be pulled in a dumdnstra tion the following Thursday morn ing, "upper right eight" and "low er right eight," that is. Having' four teeth of that type, all equally useless, I asked why class isn't ready for the other side yet," I was informed. Students who are about to be graduated to take over dental eare of the general public In Ne braska do work in dental sur gery and the more ordinary as pects of dentistry in the clinic. Before any actual work is done, the patient Is asked to sign a statement which says in effect that he is willing to undergo any risk that may be involved and will not take legal action against the clinic if anything goes wrong. The clinic is a non-profit unit. The charge made is not for ser vices, but only pays for the ma terials used. A good deal of pa tronage comes from University students, perhaps because wear and tear on the budget is less and the location is convenient. The "family" dentist in the old home town may have clapped a bib across the front of the pa tient s shirt, administered an an esthetic and pulled the tooth, but at the dental clinic the session takes on the earmarks of a major operation. The patient gets the same bib that the home town dentist puts on, plus a sterile towel, put on with sterile forceps. In addition (Continued on Page 4) nated one gallon of blood to the itea uross. The pins have the usual drop of blood design, but have a gold star in the center of the drop. Miss Murphy said that there nave Deen no members of the "gallon club" as yet, but a special event is planned for the first Uni versity student to join the elite circle. t. UVSAA. - By LILA WANEK The hostess was talking to one or her guests as the two sat on the lawn listening to a chimps recital. "Beautiful, aren't thev?" re marked the hostess. "Pardon?" inquired the guest. "I say, they're beautiful, aren t they?" I'm sorry. " roared the cuest. "but I can't hear a word for those damned chimes." 1 Nancy I think there's e o mpany downstairs. Sally How do you know? Nancy I Just heard Mama laugh at one of Papa's jokes. K ver again! So long as I live, I'll never ask marry me." "Why? Did she say no?" "No. She said yes." "Your methods of cultivation are hopelessly out of date," said the youthful agricultural college graduate to the old farmer. "Why, I'd be astonished if you got even ten pounds of apples from that tree." So would I," replied the fanner. "It's a pear tree." Mock Voters To Ballot Oct. 31 In Three Places The All-University Mock elec tion, sponsored by the YMCA and YWCA, will be Friday, Oct. 31, Neala O'Dell and Mary Stromer, co-chairmen of the election have announced. Voting time is 8 a.m. to 5 p.m at the City Union, Ag Union, and Ag, Giy Union Plan Dance On Halloween Ag and City Unions are jointly holding their annual Haloween dance, complete with jack o'lan terns and black cats, from 'J p.m, to 12 p.m. Saturday in the Union Ballroom. Informality is the keynote of the dance, according to Delores Carag, co-sponsor of the Union social dance committee. Girls may wear jeans to the dance if they wish. Music for the dance will be fur nished by Jimmy Phillips and his combo. Intermission entertainment will be furnished by Union tal ent show winner, Marilyn Lehr and the Aggie's trumpet trio. Joint planners of this dance are Jack Nelson, co-sponsor of the dance committee and secretary, Marilyn Lane. Tickets for the Haloween dance are 44 cents and may be purchased at the door. Ag Box Social Set For Sunday Night The date of the Ag Box Social, Ferguson Hall and 15 minutes after the pep rally at City Union. I.D. cards are necessary to vote. Anyone wishing to vote in ab sentia should get their ballot in the YWCA office at Ellen Smith Hall from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wed nesday. Approximately 1100 voted last spring in the mock election. Neala O'Dell commented that a much larger vote is expected Friday Election procedure will be con ducted as nearly as possible like those oi the national elections. No registration is required be cause the University is considered a city under 7,000 population. February Set For Teacher's Examinations The National Teacher Examina tions, prepared and administered by Educational Testing Service, will be given at 200 centers throughout the United States on Saturday, Feb. 14, 1953. At the one-day testing session a candidate may take the Common Examinations, which include tests in professional information, gen eral culture, i.ngiisn expression and non-verbal reasoning; and one or two of eight Optional Ex aminations designed to demon' strate mastery of subject matter to be taught. The college which a candidate is attending or the sys tem in which he is seeking em' ployment will indicate whether he should take the national Teacher Examinations and which of the Optional Examinations to select. Application forms and a Bui whose proceeds will go to the letin of Information describing Windy woman to AUF Ag campus goal, is Sunday in the Recreation Room of the Ag Union. This is the first event spon sored by the All University Fund limited to religious houses and students on Ag campus. In keeping with the old-fash ioned box social tradition, all girls who attend will bring dec orated boxes of food for two. The boys will bid for the boxes which will contain the name of the girl who brought it. registration procedure and con taining sample test questions may be obtained from college officials, school superintendents or directly from the National Teacher Ex aminations, Educational Testing Service, P.O. Box 592, Princeton, N. J. Completed a p p 1 i c a -tions, accompanied by proper ex amination fees, will be accepted by the ETS office during Novem ber, December and in January, so long as they are received before Jan. 16, 1953. and Cecelia Pinkerton, Teachers, members of Chi Omega. Susanne Bryant, Teachers; Adele Coryell, Teachers; Julie Johnson, Arts and Sciences; Dody Newman, Teachers; Joy Nixon, Teachers, and Janls Schmidtmann, Teachers of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Priscilla Jones, Teachers; Kath eryn Grabill, Teachers; Nancy Norman, Teachers; Judith Palma teer, Teachers; and Lorraine Westphal, Teachers, candidates of Pi Beta Phi. Ruth Raymond, Arts and Sci ences; Nancy Klein, Teachers; Virginia Koehler, Teachers; Dam eris Riddell, Teachers, and Sydna Fuchs, Arts and Sciences; can didates of Delta Gamma. Joanne Kieldgaard. Arts and Sciences; Ramona Laun, Agricul ture, and Amy Palmer, Teachers, are tne .appa ueita candidates. Joan Krueger, Arts and Sci ences; Joan Hanson, Teachers; and Joann Finney, Teachers, are Gamma Phi Beta can didates. Anita Lawson, Teachers; Mary Ann Nelson, Teachers; Nanci De Bord, Arts and Sciences; Gretchen Hein,. Teachers,, and .Darlene Stephenson, Teachers; are the Alpha Omicron Pi candidates. Betsey Lieber, Teachers, is the Alpha Xi Delta candidate, and Ruthann Lavine, Teachers, is the candidate of Sigma Delta Tau. Jean Loudon, Teachers and Jeanne Vierk, Agriculture, are the Alpha Chi Omega candidates. Darlene McQuistan, Teachers; Sally Murphy, Teachers; Pa tricia Rogers; Shirley Schon berg, Teachers, Marilyn Howsel, Business Administration and Lucille Hilger, Teachers, Delta Delta Delta. 'Big Show To Play 4 Supplementary Acts At NU Nov. 5 Tickets are still available for the "Big Show." The show, which contains such headliners as Stan Kenton and company, Nat "King" Cole and Sarah Vaughn, and is supple mented by other seasoned per formers Stump Stumpy, George Kirby, Teddy Hale, The Conga roos is purported to be one of the biggest attractions of the year. Seats are still available for $3, $2, $1.50, and $1. Tickets can be obtained at the Union box office, Walt's Music Store, Haun's Music Co., or by sending a mail order to Box 1, Union, University of Nebraska. The show, to be seen at the University Coliseum, is sponsored by the Union. HERSHEY ANNOUNCES Applications Due Saturday For Draft Deferment Test Deadline for submitting appll cations for the Dec. 4 selective Service College Qualification Test is midnight Saturday. Applications postmarked after that time cannot be accepted the National Headquarters Se lective Service System in Wash ington, D. C. announced. Students are to mail their com pleted applications to the Educa tional Testing Service at Prince ton, New Jersey. To be eligible to apply for the college deferment test a student must intend to request deferment as a student, be satisfactorily pursuing a full-time course of in struction, and must not have pre viously taken the Selective Serv ice College Qualification Test. Atomic Energy Exhibit Will Open Sunday In H Science Building An atomic energy exhibit pre-1 pared by the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission and the Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Studies will open its Nebraska tour in Lincoln Sunday. The exhibit is designed to further understanding the de velopment and possibilities of atomic energy. Several Nebraska newspapers have joined with the University Extension Division and local school systems to sponsor a state tour of the dis play. The showing in Lincoln is being financed by the Lincoln Journal and the' Lincoln Star. The ex hibit, which requires about 7,500 square feet of floor space, will be set up in the Military and Naval Science building and will be open through Thursday Nov. 6. Other , Nebraska cities on the shows itinerary are Norfolk, Scottsbluff, North Platte, Hastings, and Beatrice. The exhibit, sponsored by the National University Extension Association, contains more than 30 sections devoted to various phases of atomic energy. - , , il i iv in agriculture. This division will explain and radioistopes. With the use of radioisotopes, agricultural scien- actually produce I tists are now able to follow the path of fertilizer from the soil into the plant. Another display will show how electricity may someday be gener i :. f f -HflANlUM RODS " WS-vf rs .f Included in the exhibit is an atomic furnace in which uranium atoms are split every few seconds. Another section of the exhibit they couldn't all be pulled. "The is devoted to atomic energy uses r ? " ' n " j i - -T I 'wf -4 V -i ;' T li I . ATOMIC POWER PLANT . . . This arrangement of pipes and tanks Is a simplified illustration of the way an atomic pile might be used to produce . Courtesy Sunday Journal nd Star electricity In the future. The exhibit will be shown in Lincoln Nov. 2 through Nov. 6. ated by nuclear furnaces. The effects of atomic bombs will be featured in another section, The Oak Ridge Institute of Nu clear Studies is a unique organiza' tion in American education, ac cording to a news-letter from the American Museum of Atomic En ergy in Oak Ridge, Tenn. The Institute, composed of 30 southern universities, is an arm of the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission. Chartered as a non-profit educational corpora tion in Oct., 1946, the Institute has a contract with the AEC to conduct higher education pro grams throvrh use of the re search facilities at Oak Ridge. The traveling atomic energy ex hibition appearing In Nebraska is one of these programs. Among the first programs to be established by the Institute, the letter says, was a radioisotope pro gram designed to teach research scientists how to use the man made "tracer atoms" which today constitute the principal peacetime benefit of atomic energy. The Institute now is under taking a study to determine the value of radioactive materials in the treatment of cancer, the letter continues. , The exhibition in Lincoln is free General Hershey emphasized that increasing manpower de mands make it important that each draft-eligible student who has not taken the test do so as soon as possible and that stu dents who.se academic year will end In January 1953 should take the December 4, 1952 test so they will have a test score in their cover sheets before the end of their academic year, t which time their boards will open and reconsider their cases to determine whether they should be deferred students. Students eligible for deferment as an undergraduate student are those having a score of 70 on the test or specified rank in class. These ranks are set at the upper half of the male freshman class, upper two thirds of the male sophomore class, or . upper three fourths of the male junior class. Students accepted for admis sion or attending a graduate school prior to July 1, 1951 satisfy the eligibility require ments if their work is satisfac tory. Graduate students ad mitted or attending after July 1, 1951 just have been in the upper half of their classes during their senior year or make a score of 75 or better on the test. General Hershey also stated that the standards may be raised at any time necessary for man power demands. Union To Sponsor Bridge Instruction Students who would like to learn or improve their game of bridge have the opportunity to do so. Free lessons are being offered each Wednesday at 5 p.m. in the Union. Classes are so divided to give everyone individual atten tion according to their knowledge or bridge. public. Jim Porter, assistant professor of architecture, is the instructor oi cnarge ana open to thelfor the classes. Anyone Interested may attend.