Tuesday, November 4, 1952 Page 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN V- ! I EDITORIAL PAGE lection Night . 'Twas the night before ... a new president ideology. They will gather before TV sets and ra would be elected to lead the United States in or" dios in downtown Lincoln, in Lincoln homes, in out of Korea, in or out of government spending, dormitories, in residence houses. They will be up or down the road ahead, in or out of corrup- watching and waiting with anxiety for the an tion, and in or out of disaster, mis-management nouncement of that state that group of states and Dolitical conniving. that will mean the election of their chosen hero The nit ht before ... the night of the elec- to the White House. tion . . . will be watched throughout this na- The night before . . . there undoubtedly won't tlon and especially on university campuses with fear, with high hopes, with misgivings and with bets on Stevenson or Eisenhower. -The night before . . ..The Young Republicans of the University and the Students for Stevenson are still poles apart in botlj meeting place and in Preface - -fXPRESS MOUR OPINION be anything definite in from the precincts. No state will have enough of its votes tabulated to indicate how its electoral votes will be cast. Un doubtedly by the time a campaign-weary nation goes to bed this night, there will not yet be a new president. The night before ... the returns will be coming in declaring that we have a new presi dentagainst increased taxes, against corrup tlon in government, for world peace, for uphold ing the principles upon which this great nation is founded. The night before . . . the nation from Maine to California and including every state between, will have cast its votes and will be waiting for the nations' decision. The morning after . . . perhaps the country and its millions can get its feet on the' ground again, perhaps ran return to truth, to objectivity, to rationalism, to understanding and to thought fulness. The words of this campaign can teach this nation a great lesson. The morning after ... we shall heave a sigh of relief and hope the mud-slinging is gone and forgotten. R.R. Sound Off By MARJ MORAN Staff Writer ' It's that time of year again . . . when the proud shall be humbled and the humble shall be despondent. Yes, I just picked up my picture proofs for the 1953 CORNHUSKER. (Don't laugh till you see yours!" If, after seeing them, you still feel significant, it's time you went to view the mobile exhibit of the American Museum of Atomic Energy stationed till 9 p.m. Thursday at the Military and Naval Science building. The exhibit, designed to amaze and educate the layman, places emphasis on the peacetime uses of the atomic energy. There's one display that will rrnllv mnlrA vnnr hair ctnnri rtni end! It's a demonstration of an in the back warehouse where Girl's Diary Amazing Revelation Of Adolescent's Thoughts On War Barbara Dillman The refugees endured great hardships. They . n i. imu J : - n n Vminef fl i vl " nne nan; me umijr ui - a . ,, j ,.,i,iu ,. the best seller list since Its pub- JJ-ZrnJZ It is an amazing revelation smugu t - Anne is to replace ana was soon wum m vi uuiuwn bv the younier memoers 01 me party, every has been high on lication last summer. of the thoughts of an adolescent girl - . r ' 1 i I ! 1 . . ...n. InvnaA Intrt Vl I H 6 . . . ... , vnnrk on the door might have meant the des ing during the Nazi occupation of Holland. Her knocK on tne ouui harrieM, ,,.. ... n..m AAr truction of them all. Perhaps the woxst hardshi parems naa ongiucaiy jivcu in ut""'v' ...... Hitler came to power they fled from their home land to live in Amsterdam where Anne s became a successful businessman. When the Nazis took over Holland, the Franks began mak ing plans to "disappear." They smuggled food and personal be longings into hidden apartments On The Mall An editorial in Monday's issue of The Daily " Nebraskan explained the action taken Wednesday when the Student Council tabled a motion to turn the mall in front of the Coliseum into a concrete parking lot. This editorial also indicated some of the serious problems that the Council parking com mittee would face when it started working on this plan. We listed as the three primary problems: the ' mall area is used by military students as a prac tice drill field, engineering students use it for lab work in surveying and the concrete lot the mo " tion calls for would cost around $1 per square - foot. It must be granted that the conversion of the mall into parking area would furnish this cam pus with ample parking space. Beyond this, it would be valuable during the football and basket- ball seasons to take care of game traffic. This ; campus could definitely use more parking areas; The Nebraskan has urged this editorially for sev eral years. However, there just isn't any space available. Despite this shortage of space more ac curately, because of it the mall could not be used as a parking lot. We would ' like to be able to suggest an alternative but we cannot. We feel that we must argue against converting the mall because of the problems listed above. These problems are very real as interviews with the University personnel involved have proved. The Nebraskan contacted Maj. John L. Tanner, assistant professor of military science and tactics, who said that his department would have no place to go if they were removed from the mall. The mall is right in front of the building and is es pecially convenient for lab work. It does present problems because a little rain makes the grass less places too muddy for marching, but it defin itely is the best place the military department including Army, Navy and Air Force has to drill. One of the arguments for making the mall into a parking lot is that this action would benefit' so many students. However, it seems to The Ne braskan that a great many more students would be benefited by having the drill field remain where it is. Every freshman and sophomore student is required to take some form of ROTC and basic ROTC requires a great deal of drilling. A new parking lot would benefit only a small majority of students most of these would be Lincoln stu dents who always have the alternative of the bus lines. Another of the proolems listed above in volved the civil engineering classes who take surveying labs on the mall G. C. Ernst, civil engineering professor in charge of the survey ing courses told The Nebraskan about the same thing that the military department did: "We are not entirely satisfied with the mall, but is ab solutely the only place we have left." Ernst Jazz And Kant The mental versus the popular appeal of en tertainment will be put to test Wednesday night and it's this writer's bet that the cultural appeal ' whatever it might be of Kenton, Cole and Sarah rr Vaughn will come out much better than that of Immanuel Kant The Coliseum will undoubtedly be packed with thousands of fans of the modern classics performed and made famops by Stan Kenton's approach to the musical world, Nat King Cole's piano and vocal efforts and Sarah Vaughn's sul try singing activities. Beginning one-half an hour earlier, at the Un .. ion, will be the first meeting of the philosophy club, at which Dr. W. H. Werkmeister, chairman of the philosophy department, will speak on "Cat Zl egorical Imperatives of Immanuel Kant." To this writer's meager philosophy knowledge, Kant's - theories come under the title of ethical ideal- ism. - The Nebraskan is in no position to advocate attendance for Cole, Kenton and Vaughn or Kant. 7 The Jazz enthusiasts will avidly defend the cul tural benefits of their pleasure And the philo T sophers might find a deeper nd more signifi ""caht message In the theories which t'jey study.' This Instance is undoubtedly a case of to each his own. The Coliseum show will draw the real crowd. And Immanuel Kant Just might have the real significance 'to our lives and to the thoughts of future generations. R.R, Daily Thought He who is determined has half hia work one. Anonymous. electrostatic generator and the Mr. Frank hair-raising is done by the same 'Then after lorce wnicn propels suoatomic particles used for bombarding atoms. had his business. persecution of the Jews became intolerable the whole family surreptiously move into the apartment, where they stayed for two years without iiiHiir:i iitrvr,'iiiii ir'iiL hi mil l modern age was on display at the ever stepping outside. Naval Air Sta- t A Dillman SI said that if the University would give him a small section of land near the engineering buildings where his students could do their lab work, he would not give any argument to plans for converting the mall. If one were to assume that the motion were to go through, where would these two groups hold their labs? The first place that comes to most minds is the wide expanse to the north of the Coliseum now used as an athletic practice field. The Nebraskan contacted George "Potsy" Clark, director of Husker athletics, who said that the practice field is used almost constantly during the warm seasons. Although he sympathized with the need for more parking space, he did not see how the athletic field could be used for marching and surveying. Clark also said that in 1948 he offered to con struct concrete tennis courts on the mall which could be used either for tennis or parking. His plan was for half tennis and half parking in the afternoons and all tennis on the weekends. How ever, the Board of Regents vetoed the idea. This leaves the first two problems unsolved because The Nebraskan knows of no other prac tical place for these two organizations to con duct their activities. The problem of cost seems insoluble now, too. Authorities at the Division of Buildings and Grounds estimated that it would cost slightly more than $1 per square foot to surface the lot with concrete. However, the Council parking committee is exploiting the possibilities of as phalt, crushed rock, gravel, etc. In fact, the committee is doing an excellent job of research and might come up with suggestions that solve the whole thing. The Nebrsskan hopes so. We can only say that from our investigation, the plan doesn't seem practical. D.P. To Our Readers In past days, The Daily Nebraskan. and all of its news staff, has been seriously charged with letting its political conviction guide its news de cisions in regard to Democrat and Republican stor ies. In fact, some Democrats are so upset about what they consider unfair news judgement, that they plan to take their "evidence" to a high University official in hopes of getting "some modification of Nebraskan policy The members of the Nebraskan staff are jour nalists and, as such, are quite aware of the worthy tradition in their profession of keeping news col umns free of editorial conviction or bias. In this election year, a concentrated attempt to be fair and impartial in our news judgement has been ex erted. We have no fear of anything which the Democrats may care to accuse us of. We would like to have our readers answer the fallacious charge that Nebraskan news columns are par tial. We shall answer the Democrats in due course. This writer thinks the opinions of our readers would answer all such charges, also. R.R The F8F tion Sun day. Over 30,000 spectators (in cluding your awed column ist) watched an 0 u t s t a nding series of aerial maneuvers b y the local re serve air units and the nation ally famous iU "Blue Angels" Moran team of the U. S. Navy. "Angels" were piloting the Grumann Panther jeis. Syndicated columnist Marquis Childs still feels the importance of one man MacArthur. In a re cent column, Childs wonders aloud if maybe Mac might keep Ike out of the White House after all. It seems MacArthurs' name will appear on the ballot in five states and will be recorded as a write-in candidate In scleral others. In California alone, where a write-in vote for Mac- Arthur has been estimated as high as 75,000 to 125,000. a write-in campaign for MacAr thur might cost Ike the state's electoral votes. "It would be one of the ironies of history," Childs comments, "if at the end of the long Eisenhower MacArthur feud it should be the fringe vote for the hero of the Philippines and the American proconsul in Japan that Eisenhower from the White House." Amen Another family, Mr. and Mrs. Van Dean and their son Peter lived in the secret apart ment also. Later they were joined by a den tist, Mr. Dussel. Counting Mr. and Mrs. Frank, Anne and her sister Margot, there were eight people living together in the cramped quarters. truction of them an. remaps me wui narasnip of all was the constant irritation caused by the father same personalities bound together so closely with no chance for escape. In her diary, which Anne regarded as the only friend to which she could tell her secrets, she recorded the event in the lives of the refu. gees, the effect of the course of the war on them, and her personal thoughts and feelings. Anne started the diary which was a gift for her thirteenth birthday in June 1942, before the fam ily went into hiding. In August of 1944 the Gestopo found the hiding place and carried the people in it to concentration camps. Anne died in March of 1945 in the concentration camp at Bergen-Belsen. The diary was found in the secret apartment after Anne had been removed to the concentre tion camp. It is an interesting document not only for a picture of the terrible life led by the Jewish minority under the Nazis, but also for the won derfully sensitive observation of character more wonderful because they were written down In an intelligent and refreshing way by so young a per Stolen Goods Coeds Demand Blood Money Before Dating The girls are out for blood at jthe University of Colorado. Prompted by the existing blood drive, the coeds decided they will 'all make donations but will con Jsequently refuse to date any man 1 who docs not have a card prov ing he also gave blood. But I ask you, how long would I a bloodless date last at Kings on rally night? With only a fifth of the women students at Oxford par ticipating in the U's social life, the men were having trouble finding dance partners. But two coeds have offered thema. solution: Their dance date bureau Friendly Intro ductions Ltd. Charge for a first partner, $.58; second partner, $.70; third (and last), $2.80. A survey at Oklahoma A & M 1952 Election Predictions By DICK HANSEN Political Writer States likely to go: kept For Eisenhower: For Stevenson: El Vt. Kansas Colorado Idaho Nevada Orpcr rm ElVt.lTr.wa aine, 5 Massachusetts 16 JCalifornia iew n psnire ttnoae isiana iNew York Vermont J west Virginia a Connecticut 8 No. Carolina 14 At some point in this column, I usually comment on the football Pennsylvania 32 Kentucky game of the previous Satudday. New Jersey 16 Tennessee This week, after some considers- Delaware tion, this space has been devoted j Maryland to other topics. 'Nuff said? iSo. Carolina Do want to congratulate Charlie Louisiana Wright for his successful cam-Ohio paign for Ugliest Man on Campus. Jndiana Wonder how many times his wife Michigan will remind him of the title in Wisconsin future years? Anyway, it will be No. Dakota a good story for the grandchild-:So. Dakota ren. Nebraska 3 Georgia 9 Florida 8 Alabama 10 Mississippi 25 Arkansas 13 Missouri 20 Illinois 12 Minnesota 4 Oklahoma 4 New Mexico 6 Arizona 8 Utah 6 Texas 4 Montana 3 Fyoming 6 Virginia 10 Washington 32 43 Total Without: So. Carolina Louisiana California Total Without: 10 11 12 10 11 8 8 13 27 jNew York 11 8! Total 296 Total With: 8 So. Carolina 10 Louisiana 32 California 246 Total With: 45 New York 201 Total 235 8 10 32 285 45 Peg Bartunek among the male students re vealed that the Aggies prefer "homemakers to women who have been educated to be suc cessful men." As one sophomore student put it "Not enough women can cook." The longstanding "peace pact" between K U and K State was u n a n i -mously renew ed recently. A "gentle man's agree ment" was adopted be tween the two schools in 1929 to keep rivalry on a sports manship level. 4 1 - W f 12 ?v 9 5 Bartunek Heels And Hose Novelty Sweaters Display Ribbing, Stripes, Insets JIisl (Dailif TkbhcuJtan, FIFTY -FIRST YEAR Member Associated Collegiate Press Intercollegiate Press EDITORIAL STAFF Yk Daltr Atmkaa It mMMm tn th mrneuH ) Om Cstrer ttr Nctoraka at nuKMioa at MdetM aewt Mtf mmtom mmlf. Accardaw la Arttda II at Ik Sr-Law torcnlu ihm pabllca npm aa4 aaataMarat br Baari af PaMtcatton, " tka a Anal aalk af Ik Boar thai paMteatiom. anaer Its hnfadcHlaB kaH aa tna traai ctfitarial ctosmHiia aa Ika rail at Ika Board, ar aa Iba part at aw aw what af lb facalty at tbt I'alvcnitr. bal lac atbm at Ika Maff at Tfca Dally Ncbraufcaa art atraaaally ra taaaiibtt tat bal tkaf tw ar aa ar caaaa ta aa arlateA." Sabatrlattaa ram art tt-00 a taaartat. tM awIM at SX.On at tat callcaa ru, S4.00 anile. Kindt cop Sc. Pabitlaea' aaily rfartat Ika atkoal rear eieepl Hatardaya aa Haadart. tacalloas aa anaiiaatlaa award. Oat aaa aablitkad daring tk awalb af Aaaat br ma Larrertitr af Nebraaka aader tat aeeerrtoloa af tat Caaiatittae aa Htadew Pablkaliaai. Batent) at aecoad Claa Matter at faa Poet trifle la Liacola. Nebraika. aader Act of Caaareat. Merck S, 187a. aad at tptciai rait ol eostiae arerided for ta tiec Hoa MM, Act at Carter af Octeaar a. I ill 7. aatkortead Saataat aar 10. IK. KdMar Baa Rarmoad Aawtlat Kdlrar Dea Pleaar Maaaataa hdllata Gartoa, Kea Krstrom fcawt luliwn Ballr Hall. Hal Uaawlbalck. Dick Rabtoa. dan rUcofccaiaa. fal Bail ra Kditar Clraa Nairn Sail Haartl BdHar Caarlet Klatek raatara Mltaa fa faak A Kdilar Cbeca Beaa aacttw k-dtar . . . Jaa IMeffea Baaartart . ... Tan Weadward, Jaa HtrrUon, Fl Meant MarUra Tytea. Natalie Katt, Rarer Walt, Nrntr Gardiner, rat Lran, Cannla Deed, Jeba Vennet, Check Decker, Ed DeMar, Cal Kukt, Garr Hherman, Del Hardlnc, Darwla McAffee. Del Baedfrau, Caarlette Dafae, De Jackton, Ttiij Wrifkt, Mary Ana Uanttn, Grace Harrey, Jeer Dlnrmen, Marilya Hatton. Bath Kletaert, Jancr Garmaa, Bart Brown, Torn Becker, Howard Vann, Bob Serr, Garr Franden. BUSINESS STAFF Berraen Mtnaaei .... AreoM Siera Aatl Batraett Maaacen Btaa Slpttt, per Bersatea Doa Overboil CIraalatrea MaAaexr Ed Bare Jflfht Ktwt Editor , Dick Bait ton Have you ever stopped to realize that novelty ; sweaters are becoming classic? j And have you been watching the fashion ahead lines? They are featuring big news with the novelty cashmeres. This new fashion excitement signifies the casual detailed sweater style that lends itself to many coordinating ways .... ribbing, stripes, overblouse effects, low buttoned cardigans and self-accessories. Departing from the heavily ribbed novelty sweater and "those figure sweat ers we used to wear in high school," knitwear manufacturers this season have come up with soft and feminine fashions In knits. 0 Most of the new novelties fall in the striped category. Stripe variations range from all over stripes giving the ticking effect to V-shaped stripes with insets of white angora. One new sweater leatures stripes knit on an angle toward a black ribbed button panel. Speaking of the ribbed ef fect, some new sweaters have ribbed empire waistlines. An- Barnes other popular style is a ribbed fill-in that cre- However, the continued vandal ism, name calling and petty thiev ery showed the problem still un solved and the renewal of the pact is aimed at discouraging any more unfriendliness. The 1953 Ohio State yearbook will not onlv be seen but heard. I The book will include a 15- 330 minute phonograph record of some) 4 Total electoral votes 531 1 of the sounds most familiar to 4 'Needed to win 266! Ohio State students the march ing song, school songs and ex cerpts from speeches by campus leaders. With only a fifth of the women students at Oxford participating in the U's social life, the men were having trouble finding danca partners. But two coeds have offered them a solution: Their dance date bureau - Friendly Introductions Ltd. Charge for a first partner: 58 cents. Second partner: 70 cents. inira (and last): $2.80. Terry fy:': Barnes ates the illusion of two sweaters. This ver sion has the ribbed turtle-neck collar and ribbed cuffs and waistband. "College and career girls alike go all out for the navy in a big fashion way," says one cur rent fashion ad. What the ad offered was the middy sweater with a scalloped nautical collar in navy wool. Neckline news in new novelty sweaters has presented the big change. One cashmere, that registers in the group of sweaters that boasts of their own accessories, has a non-detachable fringed striped scarf. The reversible scalloped turtle neck and the dainty petal collars are also listed under current fashion significants. Other new comers are cashmere T-shirts and sleeveless sweaters with design details, at the armhole. Lamb's wool is the "choice top" for spring. It looks as though the "Sloppy Joe" is a long way from coming back, doesn't it? Letterip . . . Free Men's Right Dear Editor To Mr. Ronnie-Bell Rader: To say I was deeply touched by your soul-stirring revelations is putting it mildly. I immediately ran home, brewed a pot of coffee, and poured it over my head to soothe my aching nerves. Democrats and R e p u b licans alike agree that Joe McCarthy is hardly a saint among sinners. But since you feel so strongly in your antipathy, I suggest you establish immediate residence in Wisconsin (or the Sahara desert) and use your Roget's Thesaurus to Influ ence the voters of that state against "this self-annointed pope" who seems to put the Wisconsin Democratic vote at a premium. That is the right of "Free Men." Yours in irrelevancy, redund ancy, and damocracy, TOM BEAL BELIEVE IT OR NOT Student Predicts Outcome Of Nov. 4 Election By DICK HANSEN Political Writer - (Editor's Note: Dick Hansen's predictions on the electoral vote of the states appears above this column on the right side of the page.) It is safe to predict the follow ing results of the 1952 election: 1. On Nov. 4 the American people will elect a new presi dent. 2. No matter who is elected, ft is safe to predict that, due to the situation of the country the banks will be closed eight months after the election . . . (the banks are always closed on the Fourth of July.) It would be absurd for anyone to go any further with predic tions. It was easy for me to pre dict President Truman's retire ment, for in that instance I had only to consider the President's own outlook, background, etc., but in the election there are probably 50 million voters to consider and my crystal ball was slightly strained with such a job of mass psychoanalysis. Nevertheless, I am willing to go out on a limb to the extent of listing states which seem likely to go one way or the other. This estimate differs in some respects from those of fered by Newsweek, 7. S. News and World Report and Time magazines for I do not feel that Ike has much of a chance of cracking the solid south (South Carolina, Louisiana and Texas particularly) and on the other hand, cannot see New York which voted against Franklin Roosevelt in 1944 voting for Stevenson in 1952. The influence of the Wallaceites no doubt had considerable effect in the 1948 election, yet on the basis of bare figures I would say it is impossible to predict how iiiat ciuiuiriji win vuic tii xaoA ah New York City. The key states, as I see it, are California and Illinois. Illinois has gone Demo cratic since 1932 and it is also the home state of Governor Steven son and the locale of Chicago with its Kennelly machine, large labor vote and considerable Catholic vote. Considering these factors and the fact thai Stevenson had such terifiic crowd (22,500) when he spoke in Chicago it looks like Illinois will go for Adlai. The big puzzle is California: It also has gone Democratic in the last five elections, rejecting its favorite son, Warren, in 1948. The Governor is much more popular than Senator Nixson, but the can didacy of the General may out weigh Nixon's controversial following. Estes Kefauver has been cam paigning strenuously in California on behalf of the Democratic ticket. He is immensely popular there and could be a-big factor in swinging tne state. But no one is willing to re far enough out on a limb and predict how California will vote. NUBB TUESDAY Kosmet Klub Actives, 7:30 p.m. AWS Workers and Alternates 5 p.m., Ellen Smith. Community Tours 3-5 p.m., as semble In ining Room. Ellen Smith. The Battle for Ballots, 4 p.m. ining Room, Ellen Smith. Goals and Values on Campus, 4 p.m., ining Room, Ellen Smith. Block andBridle. 4:45 p.m. Corn Cobs, 5 fc-m.