j eg fa P oi a w 7 C S; Page 2 josf ii Us By DON PIEPER Editor This is being written Tuesday afternoon and I'm knocking on wood while I'm writing, the end despite the AWS offer to refund their money. I would like to point to some obvious con clusions about this year's Follies. First, the Kos A VI. -1 ill La..,- lutnaa n n s4 fat nuAirA tn I am going to congratulate the Associated met ruuo wm nave , Women Students' Board and the male population Fall Show. The calibre of some of the women s nf . TTnivrsitv and I hot that the men de- was-and this is just between us-far above it MHv tw wprp nn riot, at Copd some of the men's acts this fall Follies-even though the weather was perfect for his t0 a Kosmet memlf )his them. I don't know what will happen tonight rebutal was that women just had more to offer t u- .ui on the stage. True but KK will still have to UUh 4 tun ouiq iua k siuucuM mu wuuuuc vun- diwt OimowIvm in (nnrHanv with their ase and snaPe up mentality. Secondly, even two nights are not enough for the Follies. If the show is held in the Nebraska Theater and that is the only place with proper But, perhaps, the basic responsibility for the rnnin mU!mJrrtmm who wants to see orderly Follies belongs with the AWS Board for the can,t get tickets, There Just lsn.t enough the precedent-breaking decision to open up the show to males and Lincolnites. Last, year's per formance by the males drew more publicity than the coed show. And this publicity just added fuel for the perpetual critics of the University. For the benefit of the freshmen who didn't hear about what happened, last year several hun dred University men swarmed through Lincoln streets and crashed through the doors of the Ne braska Theater. Some of them used brute force and some came dressed as coeds. Several Lin coln policemen were injured in the melee. room. The theater was crowded before with only women students but with the general public in vited too, the crowds are really large. The two night idea was just an experiment this year. The faculty committee on student affairs allowed the AWS to try it to see how the public reacted. The reaction was overwhelming, All Tuesday afternoo-i, the phone at the the ater was ringing and callers wanted to know where tickets would be available. When they were told that tickets were gone, practically everyone suggested that the show be held three nights. One It turned out that this was just a warming man said that many of the customers in his store up exercise for the underwear raids later in the had told him how good the Follies were. He spring. told the girl on the phone that it was a shame This is all ancient history. The most impor- everyone who wanted to see the show couldn't tant fact now is that this year things worked out come, just fine. The men were happy and they saw a ' "A" good show. The demand was so great that the So, a memo to the administration: think over house was oversold Monday and all Tuesday tick- this problem. The women have shown that they ets were gone Monday. A great many persons can come through with a really popular show, were forced to stand during the first perform- Let's give all the students and Lincolnites a' ance and I noticed that most of them stayed till chance to see it. NEBRASKAN EDITORIALS Morons-Top Drivers Looking back to the days of the two passen- the American's driver's ego. But a second glance ger Pope-Hartford and later the ever-famous at the U.S. accident rate seems certain to restore Model T, the average U.S. driver seldom got be- the national confidence. Only a race of gen hind an automobile wheel feeling slightly like a iuses, if the Baker theory is accepted, eould have man grabbing the reigns of a race horse or han- pushed it so high. dling the throttle of a locomotive. And ever So now it is up to the "so-called" geniuses to since, he has gone right on believing that only curD the ever-increasing rate of traffic fatalities his intelligence, mechanical ability and cool mind nrf acriHpnts. For University students the matter have enabled him to remain the master of the of accidents hit too close to home when one stu-1 B'dentattlfSSd fMMe?targ automobile. dent was reported killed and two students criti- vja Berlin, robbed of their pos- rtowever, tne so-called expert driver might be cally injured all in the course of one life-taKing Interested in the conclusion reached by the North- weekend, western University's Traffic Institution which had news for him. The Daily Nebraskan has begun a safety cru- 4r sade in an effort to help students realize the rolei High-grade morons (with a mental age of be- they can play in preventing traffic accidents and tween 10 and 12 years) make the best automobile deaths. On Page 4 of this issue, a safety pledge drivers, the Institute's Research Director James appears in which the signer agrees to "drive and Stannard Baker said. And, if the moron's eye- walk safely and think in terms of safety through sight is a little below par, all the better keeps out 1953 . . . further advance the cause of safety his mind on the job. "The operation of a motor by talking to family and friends and by taking car is too dumb a job to command the attention part in safety activities of my club, school, em of those who are particularly bright," Baker ex- ployee group and other organizations." plained. People with sharp eyes he said, are more The Nebraskan asks those students who take likely to be distracted by scenes other than the pledge to return it to The Nebraskan office driving. at their earliest convenience. These will then be sent to the Omaha World-Herald, which is con However, once the low-mentality motorist is ducting an extensive safety crusade program. laugni io onve properly, ce will not deviate from ms paiiern oi learning, institute reports say. Also, THE DAILY NEBRASKAN I From The Glass Box WORLD REPORT TODAY'S HEADLINES ...The Korean issue is the first item on the agenda of the forthcoming session of the United Nations U. S. Ambassador Lodge has re- rerved hopes of some sort of un derstanding being reached be tween East and West. Former Sen. Robert M. LaFol fette Jr. of Wisconsin shot and killed "himself at his Washington home. Secretary of Interior McKay recommends to Congress legisla tion giving to the states the con troversial tidelands. Methodist Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam attacks methods being used by Congressional committees as being a threat to the church. Second Berlin Airlift Carries Human Cargo (EDITOR 8 NOTEt Tk follawlM It tentorial Iron (k Cbrlstiu Bctaaca Monitor.) Another airlift of enormous im portance is going on between West Berlin and West Germany. In 1948, airborne cargoes of food, fuel, and other supplies carried into Berlin broke the attempted Russian blockade of that city and proved the western allies were not help less to sustain the outpost. Today French, British, and American planes are flying human cargoes out of Berlin .which represent one of the most tragic aspects of the "cold war." Within one 24-hour period last week more than 2,000 refugees from the Communist scourge in East Germany were admitted to West Berlin through the city's of ficial refugee center. Toward the end of last year the rate was run ning around 600 a day. About two weeks ago it passed 1,000 a day. Already Berlin contains an esti mated 150,000 "unrecognised" refugees besides those who have convinced the authorities they fled tne boviet zone for adequate rea sons. The "recognized" refugees are flown out of West Germany as Wednesday, February 25, 1953 ITWQ ON THE AISLE 'eople, Truckers ttof KOffa lef fes Hal Hasselbalch It happens every time the legis-braska's surfaced roads covered lature convenes. Nebraskans cry, with a thick eno.igh layer tnat for more and Detter roads but they can taice xne neavyw.. wv. balk at paying for them. It doesn't take an economics major to know that one has to pay for everything he gets, one way or another. I State Engineer Harold Aitken kaows that. He tried to tell legis lators that Monday in a hearing of the revenue committee. Aitken said, "the people of Nebraska will have no one to blame but them selves if they don't have high ways, iney win pay ior motor i vehicle transportation in car costs and possibly traffic deaths." The most idealistic collegian can understand that money for state roads must come from a tax. It stands to reason that those who use the roads the most should pay the most to use them. Two kinds of taxes have been devised to see that users pay the gasoline tax and the ton-mile tax. Nebraska has used the gas tax for some time, but it seems that the newly-proposed ton-mile system is the more equitable. The people don't want any more gas tax. They said so with a ref erendum, in 1950. Neighboring states have been chuckling at Nebraska for not l!hf anA nnt hrosk UO. The ITUCk ers say they are and it's not the trucks that is causing the damage but construction faults. Solution of the problem in- toftiniral calculations. This writer hopes the lawmakers will accept the finding oi me engineer and overlook the twisted statistics of the lobbies when they decide the ton-miie question. DUQUESNE 'Brotherhood Must Replace Tolerance' (From the Duquesne Duke) Sex Angle Backfired In 'Niagara' By NORRIS HEINEMAN Guest Columnist Mv fiood friend Bob Spearman, regular author of this column, graciously assented to my opin ions of 20th Century's "Niagara," screened at the Stuart last week. So he asked me to De a guest critic. He was particularly interested in my observation that "Niagara" was a Hollywood milestone. This is why; It marked the limit Hollywood his reached in exploiting the sex angle to combat the pinch of tele vision. Moviedom's master minds decided some time ago, accord ing to most reports, that their only chance for survival lay in a sex revival (not that such was ever noticeably absent). But their honeymoon is over- . . UKT t at M mm a an 9t appropriately m Filmed in Monroe Technicolor, ToWanre is an uelv word. The this movie bent over pacKwaras dictionary gives two definitions too JdJipLtt L !l" for tolerance. It is "the allow-played, painted artificial sex ap ance of that which is not wholly peal backfired. The audience was approved; or recognition of the to be overwhelmed, agog. But it ff right of private opinion and, dif- laughed. And it was no comedy. Mi In one of the nrsi scenes, man lvn poured into a robins egg Its blue dress suit swivel-nipped past the camera reminiscent of Bob Reynolds in a broken field. Too much was too much. So far I haven't said anything about the plot. I think there was one, but it has slipped my mind. Distilled sex wasn't the only technique revived in this picture. Hollywood scraped the barrel aeain and brought up the dusty old "Pearl White" routine, e.g fast as possible, ye a backlog of amples showing that it is the nearly 8,000 persons now are wait-trucks which are responsible for ing for this transportation. the state road conditions. But West Germany also has its refugee problem, hundreds of On the other side, truckers have thousands of displaced persons their statistics to show that the Tom East Prussia, Pomerania, trucks don t damage the highways Silesia, and the Sudetenland who any more than passenger cars. l i , i- - 1 , rm i;fi l . 1 . . 1 1 : 1 are uuij giauuauy ueuig ausoroea into employment. To these now ferences." . 1- I - . : . 4 .Km mere is no oojecuuu ( second meaning oi tne wora. na ugliness lies in the first definition quoted. Too manv nersons believe they adopting the ton-mile tax a long'are tolerant when they allow a time ago. I Negro, a Jew, or any member of Why all the delay then? Several; a minority, a right which they strong lobbies have been at work feei he does not merit. To these on the question for a long time, people, the equality mentioned in The same lobbies, by the way, the Constitution is not one of the that were behind the gas tax ref-j rights before the law. Rather, it erendum. Trucking interests; ; interoretted to mean a privi- think they pay their share with iege which they will allow a man J"" fc)Und to tracks, while license fees and RC permit fees. to exercise without active inter- "ei." m . forward. Heroine Backers ot tne ton-miie system ference. V" o nA .mi-villain Jo- This false tolerance is almost jsepn Gotten seemed doomed to as GlStasieiUl. to mosi niemucis of the minority groups as open enmity. have pamphlets, tables and ex- The legislators and the public have a hard time trying to find where the truth lies. However, it is reasonable that a ceavy ODject on a given suriace ... ftf . Aetinite relationship ex ride their boat down the powerful current and over the beautiful but treacherous falls. But at tne last To avoid a ereat deal of mis-, the heroine eaueht a twie understanding, perhaps we should j growing out of a rock, and cs- suusuiuie a utruci wuiu leaped. erance." A cooa replacement would be "Brotherhood." Brotherhood is a concrete word. Unlike tolerance it does not call I was further convinced tnat "Niagara" was a milestone, a turning point, last weekend wnen 1 cauiT i UnlliTwiwI haA rtfi to mind a vague concept, an ab- ""i V""' - ' "Vk, sessions, driven from their lands, 'has more destructive power than arriving with only a suitcase, if a lighter object on the same sur- that. race. The question is: Are we Stolen Goods VJho h ike Ideal rof? aper rroniaes mswar Peg Bartunek Whoever thought there could be an ideal professor? According to a 48-state survey reported in the Texas A Be M col lege paper, the ideal prof is: 1. One who can laugh with his to mind a vague roncepi. n u- - .-. . . go eas,er 0 the stract idea .Brotherhood reminds,"" Jlj ided to go eason the us of a definite relationship ex-i" "Vf . h realized that isting in almost every person's ffurftv!Tm ore than Marilvn experience It includes JSVSSl JfLJtood movie-and a box office hit. ity, individual differences and ba sic likenesses. As Edward Markham coun No. Marilyn Monroe fans, I'm not waving the old puritanical flag seled. "We have committed the! of white. This is just the way Golden Rule to memory; let us, things looked irom my Daicony now commit it to life. seat. 5. What was Edgar Allan Poe'si grade point when he left West Point? i 6. Review briefly (one para- j graph) the history of the world.! No doubt guesses are marked against you. i ' Upperclassmen at Michigan class; a guy who has a sense of And so. if the genius race is responsible for the, humor and uses it in the class- the moronic driver will not be moonirur about in- hieh rafo of fatalities, mavtw a ?-w loftv ceniuses i room- ternational relations or who will win the series, should realize that the power of concentration goes!.. 2 A Yf11"preJpd 1?ctl?er Wu State are. not alli:Wed to graduate Zot thi:piT 0,31 th hand with KOOd driving- m b-H!heough,y understands ha "piW?S handicaps as extraordinary visions or high IQs hopes the students will realize the role they cart 3. A friendly, enthusiastic per- they can write legibly" This em- aoutua dc warnea aooui tnera when being li- play in the prevention of future heartaches over . "J itcreitea ' Darrassmg graduation require- unnecessary deaths. Please sign the pledge, ndiideastrary to his own may be' down by the college LTwmter censed. 11 seems at first glance Lke a mean blow to live up to it so that others may also live. S.G. Time Plus Money Plus Push just as sound. Currently 413 students are en- 4. One who does not use the rolled in a non -credit course re curve system of grading, but rather rates each individual on effort as well as achievement, 5. A young man. A turnabout is being staged at Cambridge University (England). The females are intruding upon the privacy of the males. quired of students considered de ficient in their writing ability. Six years, $100,000 and efforts of Chancellor of Dr. Fuenning and the Chancellor was Dr. I. E. G. Gustavson added tip last week to a fulltime William Brill contracted this month, psychiatrist for the University. Every year since 1847 Dr. Samuel I. Fuenning. When Dr. Brill assumes Jus duties March 10. director of the Student Health Center, has recom- he will begin building a program strong in the Six girl students vowed to bathe mended to the University that it hire a psychia- fields of clinical, educational and research psy-at each of the university men's Irist But every year the answer was the same: chiatry. No longer will the University have to f!11 J S?afyJ5! iff innr.. . .M.ki. . ..... coeds are reported to have been Jrr e- depend upon services of the assistant supennten- successful in two of the colleges. By last spring the problem of paying a full- dent of the state hospital who has worked in In each bathroom the intruders time psychiatrist was defined as one of "hirin the University health deDartment onlv on Friday Ihave left their club's insignia the right man at the right price." The right price afternoons and Saturday mornings. ObviOUSly WaS Still the Stvmvin? factor THa tn on alsnnato . , , 5 . . . ; . . , , . . A smoldering fire in the jour- , : t took a long time-but it is far from the last step DaliOTl building at the University . r , uvwt, fim, gram up me I'.airwaj xo weii-acveiopea nuam neaun oi OKianoma orougnt aoout mis . mmm f 'f suddenly solved the money problem. Obtained facilities on the campus. j telephone conversation: AT (Till LrK S thmmrit h TTf.,-;- r , . ... ... . Journalism shoo urerintendent: w JtfUJ,uiua, vie gui was iime, money ana administration support ap- ' v..iiJ! i- mad iiM. w v- w t.u i ' j ZAn Journalism building is on j tiinmm viuuicii in mem- pear necrawary ior lunuer uvanceran in vne , fjre! Give me ihe fire depart' ory of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Woods health center. Time has long since passed. The merit!" Of Lincoln. administration, according to Dr. Fuennin. seems . Operator: "Sorry, the university a single silk stocking. Gnadalajara SBZBmer School An accredited bilingual sum mer school sponsored by Uni versity of Guadalajara in co operation with Stanford Uni versity faculty members will be held in Guadalajara, Mexi co, June 28-Aug. 8, 1953. Of ferings include art, folklore, history, language, and litera ture courses. (225 covers six weeks tuition, board and room. Write Prof. Juan B. Rael, Box K, Stanford University, Calif. IMPORTANT I0TICE Due to the great interest in the Hughes Cooperative Plan for Matter of Science Degrees, time limit for filinsr applications has been extended. Eligible are June, 1953, college graduates and members of the armed services being honorably discharged prior to September, 1953, holding degrees in electrical engi neering, PHYSICS, MECHANICAL ENGINEER ING. Those chosen will obtain Master of Science Degrees while employed in industry and performing important military work. Write immediately for application form to: COMMITTEE FOR GRADUATE STUDY HUGHES RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT LABORATORIES Culver City, Lot Angeles County, California O Stop Thursday 10 fe t JO, Daily 9:30 to 5:30 in proDiem or a psychiatrist appeared an- in favor of the extended program, twered. But only through the efforts and interest Again, the obstacle Is lack of funds.- -K.K. ' Yesteryear If Jl By DICK RALSTOX Staff Writer If she could only see them now! , storm, and met its first rebuff recently at the Uni versity of Oklahoma, where Miss E. McDaniels, Dean of Women, issued an order which forbade Miss Amanda Heppner, Dean of Women, in women students to appear on the campus in men's 1S33 offered the opinion that "Nebraska women attire. wm ftot go masculine." 1t will not be necessary, in my opinion, to From the news columns of the Nebraskan of place any such order upon Nebraska women,' 3: continued Miss Heppner. Those who originate 1 do cot feel that Nebraska women will these fads are usually from the Hollywood movie fall for the fad of wearing men's trousers and colony and do so merely for publicity.' coats for street wear said Miss Heppner ,1 do "Many women students at the University found feeL however, that such attire is perfectly per- the fad highly objectionable upon the ground that misMbk for sports wear.' if a woman attires herself in men's clothing, fem- Tbe Popular fad of girls wearing man's cloth- ininity is lost sight of." feg has taken many colleges and universities by The fairer sex! The Daily Nebraskan F1FTY-FTRST YEAR Member: Associated CeUerttte Press iBtereoUectafe Press Advertising ' Reweserrtatrve: National Advert ising Service, Inc. 2f Madisea Ave, New Yerk IT, New Yerk tuerm "f m mwamtnum til m&tmsf m m4 wte M ArArto I) it tk B-r-ljtm mm I,.. . on mimtmtMHw fe K rt ml Hil iwim, "it to r.- r'n ( tm HtM imatliMn mmim m haU- r-m wxit bt ttm tmm tUtmkt mrt tm i r A ft mm mvmttm m txtuUr at em i , M mm wtw mm mmH mt Tim tM V t mm pi i tr mmmuWim tm mml mm m$ m m m i. .trnrtin mt r I mmW. Si- MM or ft tor mm - iKvtML 1mm mmn . iWh4w toar t . m tf --" mm Khmi rear wm twnm mat otpbJ m mmm at pmtMm4 mrnirnt Aacaat trt mm mt .. tfmmcm mmum mm mir'n mt mm Cmmmwm mm m i.mmm mt mom hm mmtm Pal t Hntkm. m4at mt mt Cmmmrtm. Mm S. , , M . 4 rax mt ia "' far m mutimi !(. A -. 1, mt C-o--r . 1IT. mnarrt4 ttmtrmmm la, I. mm inmnm aal 1M ........ , , , . . , , mm tttmimm Z4 IHMm, Jaa Harta MarKra Trtaa. tmm Wasawartl mmrnrH fcaltar ........,.... .mm Pmm Mmn mm Eafea HaawrS m fiat taW ,,. tm '-afar mm Ummm . , Cmmta kr,morr.fm Kay mkr, ltar Wall. MarMfa mutmtt, T fadtaaa. Marr aa Mmmmrn, alalia Katt, WHH hwk, C'yatM Mm4mm. Uw Hmnrr, Mmmm mt, ra Hmbberttr, Mardra huMvm, rraa jHwnrk, Marra Hrw, Vmmrw ttmwm, tnM Kaa- tmorU, Urn rmtM, Hnr tNurnt. Kternr ntnkttrtr, Iteta lu rr, turn ktafua, Ramcf, tmm Alttacaireaa, trmmrW hraaaaa, mm turn waii. HiXIMt MTATW mm,Mir ImU Mm '! Ktmarm Maaajrrt '. tmm BarwaM, inaa mU- ,! fh V-w York Times (from I i-SSS; T1; memory), discuss and evaluate. doesn't have a fire chief; I'll give you the plumber." j Superintendent (to man an-; swering phone in plumbing of-1 the journalism building. What do you want to do about it7" j Plumber: "You'll have to make out an order before we can come over." ' 1 The damage to the building was! slight, but what about the blood pressure of the superintendent? j 9 1 The faculty at Wheaton College,' I1L in a close vote turned down; a student council proposal which i would permit unlimited class cuts.' Sunnorter of tne clan said that; tnlimit4 nit would five StU-: dents a healthier attitude toward f classes and cited statistics indi- f cating good attendance records at g schools having unlimited cuts. But the oooosition declared that u inc yian wn wjw." than anything else." The following questions taken directly from the files of the Uni versity of Idaho were handed out to help harrassed students cram ming for exams: 1. How many aliens became V.l A. 88,393 B. 8894 C. 8895 D. 88,398 8. A recent president of the United States was: A. Richard Nixon B. John Steinbeck C. Marilyn Monroe D. All of the above 3. True or false? (?) j . r.rUM-rm lh makeUD. Writ-!! iing, advertising, features and edl-': torials from the Jan. 27, 1847, is-j l J..,.; . if S '?sJ- faff L mere x HAS A TWIN SISTER! uper-Orfon , . by Blairmoor in enchanting Silky-Soft Sweaters look bHter in litis sweaier! It's Blair mw'i JiLPLR ORLON new yant (from DuPont'i serylic fiber "Orion") so sifkyft, m very like eaahmere that when you pine Ihem side by side, you'll think you're seeing tiouble. Vhat's more, it's suda-toving, and mofh-lBlhin( , . , need no blocking when araclied. Worth a Queen's rantom . . . but yourg at a price that saye "Uurryl" Shet 34 to 40 White and Paiieh 8: 05 Slipover Cardigan SPORTSWEAR . . . Second Floor (TliLLER C PATflE "AT THE CROSSROADS Of UHCOLN" y5 &vs f-'f'ar ,,........ 49