Friday. March 6, 1953 Just Between Us,.. By DON PIEPER in Omaha. There, we are really slipping. The Editor . Council of Hospitals and Medical Education of the Today, on the back page, your Nebraskan is American Medical Association has is highly cri.tl publishing some material about the College of cal of Nebraska's medical training program. Its Dentistry. main criticism is that we simply do not have the We cannot say that the University has the best facilities necessary, to provide a thorough training College of Dentistry in the country because dent in a practice of medicine which has become ex colleges are not rated that way. We can say that tremely complex and is growing more complex. we have a fine, progressive school which does a The College of Medicine needs money. There good job with the equipment at hand. Of course, js a bill before the Nebraska Legislature right now a few million dollars could be put to goodand which is designed to help bring more money immediate use but there is nothing on the third Let's get behind it and help it pass. It would be floor of Andrews Hall that we should be ashamed a g0od idea for students to write to legislators of. The Nebraskan congratulates Dean Bert L. Hooper for the work he has done to make the our Dent College nationally known. Dean Hooper ad mits that he could and he feels that the need is such that he should make changes in the present set up. But he is faced with the old bugaboo: the dollar sign. about the bill. It would also be a good idea for students to ask their parents to write legislators. Nebraska needs better medical training. Dean James P. Tollman of the College of Medi cine is doing a very good job with what he has on hand but he certainly needs to have more on his hands. Tk. llfMirtir ortSMA wnc writtAn fin mv rp- The primary reason for today's pYay about Dent Quest by Dean Tollman to show you the problem College is the condition of the College of Medicine from one who faces it every day. From The Dean By JAMES F. TOLLMAN Dean, College of Medicine Amazing things have been happening in Ne braska in the last decade. Adances and improve- typical hospital from 103 days in 1941 to 7 15 days last year. These new ideas are being incorporated into medical teaching. The more intensive training necessary can only be carried out by having ade ments have been made in many lines. These quate hospital and outpatient facilities and suffi changes throw some of our lagging services into cient numbers of patients. The medical student sharp relief. must. learn the practical applied phases of medi- This has been intensified by the foresight of erne by superved study of pauents. He develops neighboring states in modernizing their training facilities. Requests to the Legislature for support for the University are not, however, a matter of "keeping up with the Joneses" but of keeping up with ourselves. Nebraska, since 1940, has been skill and judgment by study of many patients, The need then, is a greater number of patients, in the hospital and clinic, and more instructors time so our young men and women, being trained in medicine, in nursing and in laboratory and x-rav techniques have the best possible back- developing ground for beginning their professional work. rapidly, both agriculturally and industrially. We Tne Building Fund Levy request (LB 211) is have seen the production of corn revolutionized designed to provide this hospital and outpatient by wide scale use of hybrid corn, based on re- material for teaching use. But we cannot stop search carried out at our own University, and tneret Progress in medicine continues, and others, over many years. The gross value of the training must continue. A more active postgrad products of our factories Has increased times uate program has been started and nsust be en- in the past decade. Comparable changes have occurred in medi cine. Penicillin and similar antibiotics have saved many people from long illnesses or death from infections. Use of blood and blood deriva tives have restored many persons to health faster. These, many other improvements and much new knowledge have reduced the average stay in a NEBRASKAN EDITORIALS larged. This will help those practicing in the state to keep informed of developments as they arise The problem of the medical college is typical of each college in the University. Nebraskahs, in any field of work, must be well educated and well informed if we are to maintain our progress. With good health, we in Nebraska can do any thing. VJhat Can You Do On Sundays? What can you do on Sundays legally? Right now, University rules say: "Dances, card parties and organization ban quets may not be held on Sundays." This rule is undergoing investigation as to situation. It isn't really a problem yet, but it is becoming a very interesting question. Last spring several organizations began hold ing Sunday afternoon picnics and the faculty wondered about the legality of having these as possible change by the faculty sub-committee on official functions. This winter, one sorority de- student social affairs and you have been invited cided to hold a Sunday evening "Fireside Party." The legality of this was very much in question because of the rules stated above. What the whole question boils down to is this: Do you, as students at a progressive Univer sity, believe that you should be allowed to have inter-group picnics, hayrack rides, fireside parties and the like on Sunday afternoons? It looks to A mystery to frequenters of the Union Crib Is The Nebraskan as if it is a little 19th-century to cronic trouble in the juke box. Another episode restrict individuals from holding card parties on to help. Letters have been sent to all organized houses (including barb organizations with or without bouses) asking for student opinion on the Sunday Dead Tube Mystery was enacted Wednesday and Thursday. At an undetermined hour Wednesday music in the Crib ceased confusion reigned as an un explained ailment affected internal mechanism in the vital machine. Proper authorities (an ingredient in any mys tery story) were not notified. Cribbers went without music. Detective "Mac," Union head custodian other wise known as G. C. McKeen, entered the picture Thursday. The situation was explained and ma chinery began to rolL Mac explored the entire Union in his search for the trouble. Upstairs to downstairs, fourth floor to the basement he traveled to isolate the difficulty. The explanation, as in most mysteries, was simple and bloodcurdling. An amplifier tube was dead. Sunday. It is almost prudish. Supporters of the rule say that the University is trying to avoid having all-University dances and annual house parties on Sunday. The Ne braskan agrees that it would not be a good idea to have such events on Sundays. But we believe that, as stated, the rule is not fair. We think that it is restriction enough to make Sunday a 10:33 p.m. night. No one will have parties of much power if those parties will have to be over by 10 p.m. The Nebraskan sincerely believes that Uni versity students do notvwant all-out parties on Sundays anyway. But we do think that students would like to be able to schedule informal card parties; or hod juke-box dances in the basement We think that it is healthy to have students on University-approved picnics on warm Sunday afternoons. WORLD REPORT TODAY' HEADLINES . . . The Moscow radio announced at 4 a.m. Moscow time (7 p.m. CST) Thursday that Joseph Stalin is dead . . . The 73 year old Russian Prime Minister sue combed to the brain hemorhage with which he was stricken for several days at 9.50 p.m. Mos cow time ... Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky briefed his top u. N, aids and then prepared to return to Russia Radio Moscow hinted strongly Thursday night that Georgi Mal enkov would be Stalin's successor . . . In a broadcast praising the Soviet Unions past, present, and future, the three Russian leaders mentioned were Lenin, Stalin, and MalenRov Soviet satellites apparently were getting ready to put down any at tempted revolt against the Soviet Union . . . Belgrade Radio re ported "extreme measures" were being taken in adjacent Albania to maintain order. O Chianq-Russ Break Only For Record (EDITOR'S NOTEt Thii article was writtea b Frederic Sterbeu for the Cleveland Pren.) Chiang Kai-shek's denuncia- tion of the treaty of 1945 with Soviet Rsusia is for the record. Big hopes are behind it, and these are not Chiang's alone. But such hopes may be realized only in the fullness of time, quite a bit of time. Chiang is In Taipei, the chief city of Formosa. But he speaks regally as the master of China, issuing edicts concerning the af fairs of the peoples in his re mote provinces. Spiritually, Chi- Capital," or Peking, "Northern Capital." speaking in the name of the millions of his peoples, Manchuria and Outer Mongolia, subjects of the denounced treaty, are outside China proper, al though they are as much a part of China as Ukraine is a part of Russia. Chiang speaks to hold the Chinese Empire together. He speaks as one with a lively ex pectation of asserting in fact the rights he now asserts only in principle. He visions the de struction of the yoke under which China has passed. While he remains sovereign in Formosa, a small Dlot of land but oneHn which hi? rule has actual existence, the torch of freedom, of Chinese independence, of Koumintang and the socialist evo lution of Sun Yta-sen, remains alight. While it remains alight there is hope for China. Hope, but how realized? Chiang's army (about 350,000 well -trained men) can harass the mainland and in the process keep alive the mainland's awareness of Chinese nationalism under Kuom intang. It might hold some nar row neck of land, similar to Korea, where the area limits the number of troops that can be de ployed. But if he attempts to burst into the mainland, to march to triumph as he did in 1927, Chiang will find himself in the face of formidable forces. Mao Tse-tung's reputed 5,000,000 troops may have many question able elements, but there are among them SERMON ETTE Should VJe Look for Results? By RT REV. MSGR. G. J. SCHUSTER rest content in the belief that even God does not Today it is easy to let our religious fervor and anv more from - faith cool, because we are living in a world in Yqu may fee tninking tnat ufe was much which religion plays an .unimportant part in the easjer or 20 years ago, that there were fewer average man's life. Morals are at a low ebb and temptations 25 years ago or that religion held a the things of God are relegated to the background, much higher place of honor in our country 50 years . . . , .. . aeo You may think that spiritually we are just Unless we have within us a powerful motivat- jo t ing force to guide us, sooner or later we shall ouf country wander into a bog of indifference, perhaps even yery much unless yQU roll up your spirituai sieeves despair. I and bring back something of the spirit of religion Tf which seems almost lost to us. Nor will it be If this power is nothing more than the per- brought back by telling every one else what he sonal benefits which we hope to obtain from our ought to do to effect its return. It rests with you efforts, we shall sink deeper and deeper into des- to bring it back, and you will be unable to do so pair when they do not materialize. If it is nothing unless you have within you a power that is more more than a desire to acquire material possessions than human. of one kind or other, when depressions come, or You will not do so unless you have a motivat- ill fortune dogs our steps, we shall become cynical jng force within you based on a sincere convic- and bitter, crying out that there is no justice in tion that Almighty God wills certain things to be this world and that in spite of all our hard work one usjng you as His instrument. Without this and sincere efforts, success has eluded us. conviction, we shall get nowhere. If, on the other hand, the motivating power within us is to do things to the best of our ability, Never mind the results of your efforts. Leave because that is what God wants us to do, then, them to God. All He wants you to do is your having done the best we could for His sake, we shall not be unduly concerned over the results. We shall feel that we can safely leave them in His hands, for out of apparent failure He can adn the very special blessings that He will place bring triumph. Having done our best, we shall upon them. best. So long as you honestly and perseveringly strive to do that much for Him, He will see that the results are commensurate with your efforts ... On The Social Side Three Engagements, Nine Pinnings Announced Engagements OCHSNER-AMACK Shirley Ochsner announced her engagement to Dick Amack at the Chi O house Monday night. Shir ley, a sophomore in Teachers, is Pinnmnc i announced her pinning to Ken innings Clements, AGR. Charlene is a MILLEN-WEBER 'freshman in Business Administra- One of the Chi O candy pass- tion. Ken is a junior in Ag. Both ings Monday night was that of;are from Ord. Elaine Millen, who announced her pinning to Jim Weber. Elaine is a sophomore In Ag from AlDion. from Sutton. Dick, from Red fe 5 Cloud, graduated from the Uni versity in January. NELSON-NABER Phyllis Nelson, AOPi, has an nounced her engagement to Al Naber. Phyllis is a Teachers fresh man from Lincoln. Al is a 1952 graduate of the University and a member of Pi Kap. He is from York and is now employed in Lincoln. The couple will be mar ried in June. He is a member of Farm House MILLER-SHERWOOD Candy and cigars were the or LEWIS-DUNBAR The Sigma Chi formal Friday from Funk! "l!"??0" for.the an: uuuiii-cmciii, n in i wa jjuncar ana Sigrid Lewis are pinned. Both are from McCook. Don is a junior: occasion was me pinning Martha Lee Miiler and Bob Sher wood. Martha Lee, a Teachers junior, is from Lincoln. Bob is a senior in Business Administration from Orleans. BLESSING-CLEMENTS Charlene Blessing, AOPi, has Your Church By PAT PECK Staff Writer METHODIST STUDENT HOUSE Sunday 5:30 p.m., Wesley Fire side. "The Meaning of Church Architecture," C. W. Harre, speaker. Tuesday 7:30 pm.. Sigma Theta Epsilon. Wednesday 6:30 a.m.. Pre- service breakfast. 7:15 a.m. Lenten service. Bishop H. Bascom Watts, speaker. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION Friday 6 p.m.. visitation to nursing homes. 8 p.m., taffy pull. Sunday 9:15 a.m.. Bible study: 5 p.m., Joint Ag and City LSA, speaker. Dr. Warren Ouanbeck from Luther Seminary. St. Paul rv,,.,i stood the tests of loyalty to com munism against heavy odds. ... Yet the hopes that Chiang nur tures are by no means unwar ranted. No conqueror of China pers. Monday 12 Lutheran faculty luncheon, speaker, Dr. Quanbeck. 6 p.m., Grad Alum supper meeting. Tuesday 7:15 p.m., Lenten ves- has ever been as thorough-going as the Communists in stamping out opposition. Graveyards are filled with the victims of the purges. There are more dead in four years of Communist cleanup' 5 Thursday 7:15 a.m.. Matins, BAPTIST AND COTNER STUDENT HOUSES Sunday Church school and JL c ; ,1 ; t ..1 a - 1 der of the day at the Theta and ' " a - ana Phi Psi houses Monday night. The . the pinning ofi1T1" "mvs-siubus Marilyn Matthews passed candy at the Kappa Delta house Monday to announce her pinning to Gus Shires, AGR. Marilyn is a junior in Ag. She is from Logan, Iowa. Gus, an Ag senior, is from Elliott, Iowa. ODUM-HOLLORAN Gamma Phis and Sigma Chis got together Monday night to do some harmonizing, in honor of the pinning of Nancy Odum and Bill Holloran. She is a sophomore in Teachers. Bill is a Business Ad ministration sophomore. They are both from Schuyler. PAYNE-GRAHAM The Pi Phis were treated to candy Monday night. The occasion was the formal pinning of Bunny Payne and Tom Graham, Delta Sig. Bunny, a Teachers freshman, is from Hooper. Tom is a senior in Business Administration from Lincoln. . Party Calendar FRIDAY Alpha Omicron Pi Rose BalL Kappa Delta formal. Sigma Alpha Epsilon house party. SATURDAY Kappa Kappa Gamma formal. Tau Kappa Epsilon formal. Zeta .Beta Tau Comic Strip Brown Palace house party. Capers party. foreign student forum. Topic: Iran. Movie. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (Missouri Synod) Sunday 9:30 a.m., Bible study; 10:45 a.m., worship; 5:30 p.m., each Sunday, Gamma Delta meets, beginning with cost, supper. Wednesday 7:30 p.m., Lenten meditation; 7:30-9 p.m., choir re hearsal. PRESBY HOUSE Friday 4:30-5:30 p.m., Inter national coffee houi, foreign stu dents especially invited, everyone welcome. Sunday 5:30-7:30 p.m., supper forum. Topic discussion leading into search week; 7:30 p.m.. ST. THOMAS AQUINAS CHAPEL Sunday Masses, 8 a.m., 9 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 11:30 a.m. Communion breakfast at Continental follow- - n n T . 1 T7" j ,1 jus f a.m. nidu, raiuer ivuwaru Tuchek, speaker; 5 p.m., supper. Tuesday 7:30 p.m., Study Club. Wednesday 8:15 p.m.. Newman Club will be the euests of Cos- than in many previous years of warfare. Oppression is old business in China. It is hard to find any period of history in which the people were not victims of op- mornini'w hip in cfty cWchesPitan Club in Room 31 5 p., at theaotist iLise. sup-j per; 6 p.m., Communion service, Mr. Gary and Mr. Howells. Wednesday 5:15 p.m., Lenten service at Cotner House; 9 p.m., people were nui victims vi "P-if. . pression. And it is hard to xindjMrong Vietnam Army any in which the oppressor sue ceeded in beating the people into the responsive mass that he demanded. ... China probably is the most in dividualistic society in all the world, despite the traditional im portance of familyl It is ungov The genial Mr. McKeen, tracer of dead ampli- to change the existing lawi to meet your require fier tubes, had triumphed again. Cribbers have ments. The University is giving you a chance, use When you discuss that letter in house meet ings, remember that you are being given a chance ernable, impenetrable, impervi ous. It never has digested its conquerors, as it has so often music S. H. it wisely. D. P. Yesteryear M iW . By DICK RALSTON Staff Writer What Is the wisest form of investment? The only answer is a 1933 Cornhusker . . . Cheaper than ever before! $4.50 . . . Your last chance . . . A oooth in S. S. ... A salesman everywhere. Such was the advertising for the Cornhusker at this time 20 years ago. . The Nebraskan also are distributed in the spring, we'll bet our copy book that isn't sold is just so much loss. It Is therefore Impossible for them to print extra copies beyond the number actually sold, students should not expect them to do so. "A for the value of the book, that is an in dividual matter of decision. But when the books been said to have done, because the conquerors never have gotten inside the people. The Communists are trying to get inside by education reaches every individual. De spite organization, drive and as sisination, I think they won't get inside. Freedom by failure of masters to master it a slow process. It still is too early for the Com munists to discover the futility of their effort. In another decade the power of impenetrability may be evident printed a little free advertising for the Corn husker in its editorial columns: "The Nebraskan likes to poke fun at the Corn husker for its ever receding deadlines. But this time the deadline cannot be extended. When the Cornhusker sales close sometime in the near fu ture, they will really close. "Always there are a few students who wail loudly around the Cornhusker office in the spring whea the books are distributed, trying to get a copy somehow or other. The Cornhusker has to figure closely in order to make expenses. Every of the Cornhusker against somebody else's desire for one, that the value of the book will jump about 80 per cent in the minds of a lot of students who don't have them. "This is not a sales talk for the Cornhusker, but it is a reminder to those Who are dubious about the Cornhusker deadline, that five bucks Is going to be worth just as much In two months as it ig now. And so far as the Cornhusker is con cerned five bucks is worth a copy of the book now, and it won't be worth that two months from now or in fact any time after this week." The Daily Nebraskan FIFTY-FIRST YEAR Member: Associated Collegiate Press Intercollegiate Pre Adrertisinr Representative: National Adverrisinr Service, Inc. 429 Madison Ave- Nmr Turk IT M T..v riM- wj t . - w . ' ' "f - iiminij pt mm aaaaa m at la. I E4ttrlal Turn at at BiliiaaU m ramuaa af irtknm' mm mm - I u i i mmw. raanoi m iirm u a law r-Lmrmm amlaa MM awinMeatlaai t mmt aatatHMntf a afca Vtmr4 t r-aMkattaaa, -II to Urn mxctm mnUa ml W that psftfleatioaa aaoar tarW- nMmm ate mm fraa tmm ataral wiia mm mm mmt ml tmm at mm 0 part af a annaaar mt ta mtmttr af tmm ImnKnto, bai mm tin af Mm tan af Tba fail? Ba mrwtium mrm pamiumw aahwiinttiia nw mm) ft a aaauatar. . Milli t ar 9 ar aat Mtaaa rw, 4 annllna. fttncaa nmmy fa. f blUfcof aaii v hmturmmr, Saator. Maaaar. vaeatlaa umt aranaattaa m . Haa mwmm aiilia Carina; Aaraat aaeh r T tha lamraitr mt hrmrmmk a4rr tfce aaecrrialoa af tha Vmnwrito few aa xmrmt rabMnattaaa. Eatcrr4 aa aecanf rlaaa BUM at the rmt Of?w ta Laanaut, Nehnuka. maa mH af (wrrw. Murk 2. an at aaartal taia af awaaaa mm i Mud far la BaeWna lift. An af L i aai'f af Oor 117. mwnmrtmt SiMiaftai la, IMS. fc.tmKUb ! f-SHmt Daa tat ttaarai Mltar Amt Svart KiUmr Paatar Ktutaf . . . Kaa Rntfw hall; Hall Jaa KaJtan . . V D-Mar. Marital Tnaa. Tmm W ...Olana hrt, Umar4 I'm Caflat rmrU Urnrnm, RErUKTEM Kar Kaakr. Racar Watt, Marilra Mitchell. Daa Jjekaaa. Maty - " u, nuue vaaca, lyauua rwmieraaa, ' i . - Uraee Hmner. Mania Mtekeleea. fkrllla Barahbarcer. M&rUia ISCUm, p.m. Hattoa, trash Aeamek. Martiya Brae. Maacy (Mom, Itrk Ka4 leeeh, 41m J'arUh, Heary Baam, Elaine gmtthbarter, Beth Hah aw. Daa Khaftaa. Hoe Katner. Derle AMacnwede. rraoel Bveheaa, aa4 Daa HlUtrmrlr. OlSllHUSft STAFF Batiaew Maaaaar ... .. a mo 14 Hum AhI Bantam Maaaaatt ttf BemhM. ttiaa Strait t iraxanoe naaceer , Bam Meat er Btfitw Cbark Been COLORADO Professor Labeled As 'American Spy College professors nowadays never know which enemy is going to strike next. The University of Colorado, which at various times has been charged with employ ing former Communists and Com munist sympathizers, now finds it has an anti-Communist "Ameri can spy" on its faculty. Fred Warner Neal, assistant professor of political science and former state department offilcal, has been named an American spy by tne Chechoslovakian govern ment in connection with the re cent purges in that country. Neal denies it. He says he does- n t even look like a spy, calls himself "a friendly sociable col lege professor." NUBB Friday Yell Squad practice session, Col Laboratory theater plays, 7:30 p.m. in Temple. Palladian Society meeting, 8:30 pjn., Temple, Room 301. Sunday Spring Concert by University Orchestra, 4 p.m., Union Ballroom. Would Strengthen NATO EDITOR'S XOTEl The felle!m edi torial aananf la the Febraarr Zth eal tlea af the Xrw l ark Tiam.1 Marshal Juin of France, com mander of the NATO forces in central Europe, left Saigon yester day for Korea, where he will dis cuss with General Clark a co ordinated Far Eastern strategy with special emphasis, perhaps, on measures to be taken in the event of Chinese Communist aggression in Tonkin. His three-day visit to the battlefields of Indo-China was that!P.art of 8 ,ar Far Eastern fact- unaing trip, and he will spend several more weeks in the country before returning to France. This illustrates once more the interac tion between the European and the Asian problems and the need to put them into their true rela tionship. The NATO organization made an official note of this con nection when it agreed that the struggle in Vietnam had an inti mate bearing upon European ar mament problems. What France can do in Europe depends in part upon what France is obliged to do in Indo-China. There is, nevertheless, an im mediate domestic that is, Vietna mese aspect to the question of building up Vietnamese defense forces. Vietnam will not have at tained th exportable attributes of a sovereign state so long as it is largely dependent upon ex ternal forces for its defense. The already largely autonomous Viet nam Government cannot hope to gain the wide popular support that it requires unless there are more concrete symbols of its autonomy. ' A strong Vietnamese army would be a potent symbol, and this has been recognized by Marshal Juin, who stated during his stay in Indo-China that the only solution to the war there is just such a Vietnamese Army. The French and Vietnamese have been pushing ahead with a sound program of officer training in two military academies in Viet nam. This is an essential part of the program and these facilities no doubt were studied closely by Marshal Juin. There is no lack of manpower in Vietnam and no lacli of sound capacity for good sol diery. What is required is imagin Green's trip around the world. Daily weekday Lenten masses, 6:45 a.m., 7:15 a.m. Friday 4 p.m., 7:30 p.m., Sta tions of the Cross and Benediction. Ienten evening devotions, Wed nesday and Sunday, 7:30 p.m., sermon and Benediction. Rosary, daily at 5 p.m. March 15-20. Retreat Father Godfrey Poage, C. P., speaker. WHO WILL BE mm 111 f jj r rL! r i I V III Irtllil 1 II III 9 KSMVf OF PRIZES- ASK CAMPUS REP BILL PUTTERS DORM C" 2-7651 r Entire Student Body Agrees New Arrow Radnor Is "Hit!" New Rounded-Point Collar. Small-Knot Tie, Smart Campus Style Note ': 7 '---fV.. X ! 1 j " !" 1 ! ' '! The rounded-point collar is rapidly winning new convert among well-dressed collegians. Most popular of these new shirts is Arrow Radnor. ARROW SHIRTS ation and a considerable degree I SHIRTS TIES UNDER WEAK HANDKERCHIEFS, SPORTS SKIRTS