The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 20, 1954, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Page 2
THE NEBRASKAN
Tuesday, April 20, 1954 3
EDITORIAL PAGE
Liquor Md 74 Busy Men
Recent activity by the State Liquor Com
mission enforcement officers has caused a
ripple of comment from University students
those who had first-hand experience with
the men and those who sympathized with
their friends who had had the first-hand
encounter.
Several theories as to why the agents
were active on the campus have been ad
vanced. One of the more logical has fallen
en more than a few receptive ears. Ac
cording to this prominent theory, the State
Liquor Commission has been unhappy with
the enforcement program pursued by the
Lincoln Police Department concerning drink
ing andor possession of alcoholic beverages
by minors.
A check with the Lincoln Police and with
Tal Coonrad, chairman of the State Liquor
Commission, turned up these facts. First,
the State Liquor Commission did have a
group of enforcement officers on the Uni
versity campus during the recent State High
School Basketball Tournament. Second, the
officerse did make a number of arrests on
the campus, primarily in the parking lot
of the Union. Third, the action was not un
usual in any respect, for several reasons.
The State Liquor Commission sends several
enforcement officers to particular areas at
non-regular intervals throughout the year.
The action on the University campus is part
of the standard operating procedure for the
Commission.
Lincoln police also noted that they did
not think drinking on the University cam
pus was on the upswing, noting that in any
"community" as the University, where there
is a great number of minors, a greater
chance for violation exists.
In view of these facts, The Nebraskan
was inclined to believe the whole matter
Total Welfare
Warfare between the Communists and
the free world is being waged with desper
ation on different types of battlefronts over
the entire face of the earth. The weapons
are those of physical war in Indo-China,
as they were in Korea. These weapons are
easily understandable they can be coped
with in a practical manner.
A different type of weapon is being used
on battlefronts as important as the physical
field and hill. The weapon is propaganda,
and Communists excell in its use. This
method of warfare is difficult to understand
and, as with Communism itself, one must
understand it to fight it.
The American people are traditionally
prone to resolve problems into one big prob
lem and attempt to solve that problem once
and for all. This is the primary reason we
allow ourselves to be outdone in the prop
aganda field.
This country, however, is gradually real
izing the importance of the printed and
spoken word in a new type of total war
fare. University students throughout the world
ire a primary target and objective of the
weapon of Communist propaganda in the
war for minds.
An organized group of students is at
tempting to combat the deluge of Commu
nist propaganda which is poured upon uni
versity students in southeast Asia, South
America and underdeveloped parts of the
world. This group is the National . Student
Association and the director of the associ
ation's international headquarters is an
American student.
The organization splintered from the
International Union of Students in 1949,
when that group became Communist-controlled.
This fact alone indicates that free
tudents will not be spoon-fed opinion. That
they work with their own truthful propa
ganda to show the value of democracy and
its way of life to groups within many coun
tries is a healthy indication that this seg
ment of the world population and its Amer
ican members recognizes the need for ac
tive combat, using the more subtle type of
weapon necessary in an age of total 'war
fare.' 8. H. ,
Broken Eggs
The Easter bunny brought m&re than
the usual surprises during the week re
served for we students for rest, quiet and
chance to "get away from it all." Unfor
tunately, the restful bunny dropped a bas
ketful of eggs, and the crash reverberated
across the nation.
One of the err was decorated with a
magical sounding name or Oppenhelmer, the
well known "father of the atomic bomb."
Another err had Dien Bien Phu written on
Its aide and American men are In danger
of getting splattered.
Smaller eggs represented a Nebraska
Senator named Griswold and the plight he
left for the Republican party, a penitentiary
murder and the murder of a Nebraska pa
trolman. It's nice to be back, and "get away from
it all" in studies and activities. K. N.
was nothing more than a "tempest in a
teapot," severe enough for those "in the tea
pot," but actually of very little importance.
However, "the ;chalrman of the State
Commission changed this view during an
interview held before the spring vacation.
One of the reasons the recent action by
the Liquor Commission came as such a sur
prise to many University students is that
many have never heard of the Commission.
The organization, hough it is expected to
fulfill a wide range of tasks, is sadly under
staffed. Coonrad noted that there are only
14 enforcement officers for the entire state
of Nebraska. These 14 men are assigned
specific areas for which they are held re
sponsible. For those who would doubt the
Commission is greatly undermanned, one
man is responsible for Omaha, a city hav
ing over 600 places licensed to sell alcohol,
several large distributing centers and sev
eral breweries. This man receives assist
ance from the Omaha police department,
but that city agency is also busy with its
own specific responsibilities. Also, though
the individual assigned to the Omaha area
may receive help from other officers of the
Commission, each of these men is respon
sible for his own area.
The evils of such a situation are readily
apparent. In some areas, enforcement might
be quite lax because Commission officers
are not able to cover their "beats" as com
pletely as is necessary. Also the public is
ready to rise in righteous indignation when
an arrest is made, complaining, "The Com
mission is inconsistent sometimes it en
forces, sometimes it doesn't," when the Com
mission is guilty of nothing more than not
having enough men to do the job assigned
to it by law.
Coonrad cited another case where an
officer of the Commission had spotted a car
of teenagers drinking beer. "When the offi
cer curbed the car," he noted, "the young
sters turned out to be boys, several of them
over six feet tall." "When all of them had
gotten out of the car," Coonrad continued,
"there were five of them. They told the
officer to 'beat it,' and were prepared to
back up what they said."
"Though the officer was armed and
pretty rugged himself, he left," Coonrad
said. "If that officer would have argued or
attempted to arrest the boys using his gun,
someone would have gotten hurt and the
publicity would have been all bad, no mat
ter how it turned out."
Coonrad noted that this type of thing
could be solved with radio equipped cars,
and said that there was a possibility that
radio cars would become part of the Com
mission's equipment.
However, The Nebraskan feels that, the
State Liquor Commission is trying to do an
impossible job when the number of persons
in the department is considered, The law
setting the "legal age" at 21 is of dubious
quality and might well be wrong. In any
case, a State agency has been charged with
the responsibility of enforcing the law
whether it is right or wrong, popular or
unpopular is not of basic importance.
The State Liquor Commission should be
staffed to do Its job. The advantages of
consistent, complete enforcement would be
well worth the added expense. T. W.
Margin Notes
'Buy At Home'
In Advertising 147, professors emphasize
the. power f advertising. And a good ex
ample of the influence of the printed word
is a recent incident in Lahore, Pakistan.
A "Patronize Pakistan Products" cam
paign resulted in a marital deadlock. Abdul
Majid, a bridegroom, refused to allow his
unseen bride to bring in, as part of her
dowry, any product of foreign make.
This caused a four-hour delay in the
wedding, until it was decided to re-dress
the bride in clothes made in Pakistan and
remove her foreign make-up and jewelry.
It seems that in the process he sacrificed
half his dowry.
What price patriotism!
Who Knows?
How many famous persons of fame would
you know by their real names?
Would you recognize Rocco Marchegiano,
John Joseph and William Harrison as Rocky
Marciano, Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey
respectively?
' Walker Smith, Barnet Rasofsky, Fran
cisco Guiledo and Anthony Zaleski are bet
ter known as Ray Robinson, Barney Ross,
Pancho Villa and Tony Zale.
Then there are Norman Rothwell and
Ralph Geordano who fought in the feather
weight and welterweight classes as "Terri
ble Terry McGovern and Young Corbet III.
They say a rose by any other name
would smell as sweet, but we wonder if a
fighter could win a world title under his
real name?
FIFTY -THIRD Yt.AU
Member: Associated Collegiate Frets
Advertising representative: National Advertising Service, lae.
420 Madison Ave., New fork 17, New Terk
EDITORIAL STAFF
rtm Hebenetcaa M oofcltebed T the todente of tbe
(talvamlfr m Nebraeka ee aa eapreeeton of etutfenta'
J entelnoa only. According la artjAle II ol tbe
tovvntni Undent puMlrattaae ud admiiUetered
If ta Hrd of Piibileatlone, "II t tit defiant policy
f the Umt tihlietlont pntfer lt )urleletloa eaaU
ri fnw tram editorial onion hie aa Hm part of Mm
oard, t m the pan o Miy mrnlw of the faculty oi
f talvsniry, tmt the BMimberi of Mm etatt of Tar
Israeli am eeraoaallo rpeaeHle for what Ike? oat
f at mum to bo print."
PpSwifljirtoB rate art It a icmmtor, I 60 BMIloo, hi
S3 tot the colli wo year, matlrd. Stafle copy Is flvr
oonto. robllaarS oa Tfecday, WcCneMlay and rrlda
fairing tbo Mbool year, except vacation and examination
ywrtwie. One teaue puhllehed during the aiontb rl A bo
ok erfc year by toe Unlverelty f Kebraelia under ttt
mmrrUUm at the. Onenmltteo of Btuaeat fuhilrsskme.
IMotOo! M oocond cleee matter al tha foot Office to
S.neea, Nebraeka, ander Act of Congeeae, March S,
t-', aad at epertai rate of ooetefe provided for la
fMfFtiaa lie. AM of (JoafTaM at sjc.U . 1011, authorise
fcty. I. Uu.
Editor K&Uj Ball
Editorial Fare Editor..... Teal Woodward
Managing tailor Jeo Harrleoa
Newe Editor. Kay Nock
Copy Cdlton Jancy Carman, Dick tellman,
Marianne Haneen, liraee Harvry
Kdltor Mara rtereon
porta Kdltor Uary fraadeea
REPORTERS
Beverly 'Deepe, Harriet Rtwrg, I.nrlfraee ftwltxer, Jack
r'randeen, VYIIIIemette Deeeh, Barbara Kleke, Marcla
Mlckeleen, Sam eVnarn, Rarbara Clark, Granny Warren,
Harold RonHlui, Knth Klelnrrt, Burton Mann, Lowell
Veatal. Ralph Mrkel, Bruce Mlnteer, John Terrill, Ellle
Rail, Herman Anderton, ,Cark Glbba, Bruce Brufmann,
sandia Curran. ,
BUSINESS STAf
BuDlneea ManagHr Ataa Blpple
Au'l Bimlneee Managers Cbt Slnfer. Ooraa Jaenhe.
Brett Chlleo
OrrniaMnn Manager Ron Innee
Might Metre , Dick I'eUmaa
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
by Dick Bibler
The Student Forum
k Second Glance
"How's about delivering your speech at the level of the college
Freshman, Senator?, then perhaps some of the professors would
enjoy It"
Aggie News, Views
Emphasis Is On Rodeo
For Ag College Events
BY DALE REYNOLDS
In an effort to insure against
any great loss, the Farmer's Fair
Board and Rodeo Club have ex
panded this year's Farmer's Fair
Rodeo to include two afternoons
of rodeo entertainment.
Previously, the rodeo was held
only one day, but this year it is
scheduled for Friday and Satur
day afternoon, April 30 and
May 1.
The rodeo is being held two
days because previous year's ex
perience has shown that it al
most always rains on rodeo day,
and two days will give a better
chance for a good rodeo. Also,
if the rodeo is held on Friday
afternoon, the Fair Board thinks
there will" be a greater chance
for high school seniors to come
down for it on a sneak day.
This seems to be a good idea,
because they are strengthening
the strongest part of Farmers
Fair the Rodeo. Other fea
tures, which are lesser attrac
tions than the rodeo, include a
barbecue, parade, midway and
cotton and denim dance.
These all seem to be profitable
parts of Farmer's Fair and help
contribute to a successful Farm
er's Fair week, with the excep
tion of one the midway, which
appears to take more time and
work than it is worth. Ag college
organizations are usually busy
building floats for the parade,
and devote little time to the mid
way. It does not ordinarily add
enough to the fair for the work
involved.
But all in all, this year's Farm
er's Fair sounds as if it will be
one of the' best.
e
The big Ag college events
seem to be crowding in at about
the same time of the year. Sat
urday night the Block and Bridle
club will hold its 20th annual
Livetock and Horse Show. Ag
College students are now getting
their livestock in shape and are
training them for the fitting and
showmanship contests.
There will be seven horse
classes in the show, including a
new Palomino Pleasure class,
which should add very much to
the show. Other classes are:
three gaited, five gaited, fine
harness, jumper, parade and a
coed western stye horse riding
contest.
The Block and Bridle Show
ussed to be named Jr. Ak-Sar-Ben,
and was changed just last
year so that it would not be con
fused with the Omaha show.
But I doubt that it will make
much difference in the publicity
or attendance.
After all, what's in a name?
Of course, it makes a differ
ence in other situations, ac
cording to the latest comment .
of the week, wondering if Zsa
Zsa Gabor's fame would have
reached its present height If
she had been christened
Maude.
e
Switching to economics, Dr.
Edwin G. Nourse, who formerly
presided over the Predents
Council of Economic . irs,
said Monday in a. semini is
cussion that the farm prob. i is
the correct adjustment of gov
ernment responsibility and pri
vate enterprise responsibility.
Dr. Nourse said that in order
to take care of the farm sur
pus, a flexible plan should be
put into effect to adjust the sup
ply of agricultural products
down to the demand. It appears
that he is in favor of the flexible
price support program which
President Eisenhower is advo
cating. But it seems to me that it is
the wrong approach to the prob
lem and that demand should be
adjusted up to the level of pro
duction, and not give the prob
lem right back to the farmers,
and cut their wages.
By PAUL LAASE
Congressional storm warnings
were hoisted high last week
after Vice President Nixon an
nounced that, in his opinion, if
the French, couldn't do the job
in Indo-China, then the U. S.
would probably have to send
troops and "clean house." Im
mediately; of course, indignant
objections were raised. Amid
the cries from both sides it ap
pears that neither Nixon nor his
critice took time to analyze the
situation.
What began as a war of in
dependence by the native pop
ulation was quickly taken over
by the Communists in an effort
to put more territory behind the
"bamboo curtain." A good snare
of the native population today,
however, has rejected the Com
munists and are fighting- with
the French Union forces. Many
of them apparently realize thate
imperialistic oppression as prac-
ticed by the Communists is even
worse than the degree of free
dom offered by the French un
der the new French Union.
It has been seven years since
the war began and the price paid'
by the French has been high,
both in men and money. Imagine
the Korean war lasting another
four years and you can see what
the French have been through
already, with the end not yet in
sight.
This is not just a battle for Indo-China,
but rather the whole
of southeast Asia. Indo-China
is just the first and most vital
link in 'the chain of defense for
this strategic area. Burma, Thai
land and Malaya would be di
rectly threatened should Indo
China fall, with India and In
donesia in a less secure posi
tion. Today we find a small
scale guerilla fight in Burma,
Malaya, Indonesia and to a lesser
degree, Thailand. Once we lose
Indo-China, the Communists
would be able to exploit these
small-scale conflicts in the same
manner as they did in Indo-
China. A small revolt would
grow larger and larger until
finally the country Is lost to the
Communists. Who is to say ex
actly where the point of Com
munist inerven-tion is to bt
find?
a e
Of course we can ignore th
entire situation. We ignored
Kaiser Wilhelm from 1914 until
1917. We ignored another man
named Hitler in 1933, in 1936
when he occupied the Rhineiand,
in 1938 when he took Austria
and the Sudaten, in 1939 at Mu
nich and when he invaded Po
land and France. We sat by and
watched Mussolini take Ethiopia
in 1935. Tojo marched the Japa
nese army into Manchuria in
1931 and into China in 1937
while we sat and watched. Shall
we watch and wait again?
' It is no longer a few native
rebels fighting against tho
French in Indo-China. All tho
supplies aifd equipment used by
the Communists come across th
Chinese border. Chinese "vol
unteers" drive the supply trucks
through the jungle. Anti-aircraft
units around Bien Dien Phu,
currently shooting down clearly
marked hospital planes, ar
manned by Chinese. We havo
even had reports of Chinese of
ficers leading some of the Com
munist troop units. The Viet
Minh troops of GeneraL-Ho re
ceived their training in China.
New native units were recently
moved back across the frontier
into Indo-China after undergo
ing training.
Apparently the Chinese Com
munists haven't learned their
lesson. The Russians seemingly
are smart enough not to openly
intervene again after Korea
but not so the Chinese. As things
stand now it appears that the.
French cannot hold Indo-China
alone. The free world cannot
afford to lose mineral-rich
southeast Asia.
It Is better for us, here In tho
United States, to give aid to the
French now even troops if nec
essary than to try and recon
quer the area at some later da to
as we have done In the past. In
the long ran it would be far
the wiser coarse.
From The Cornell Sun
Congress Faces Problem
To Lead Or Not To Lead
Copped Copy
Females Help 'Sandhogs;'
Professor Fools Class
By BRUCE BRUGMANN
Sandhogs (tunnel diggers) have
come into their own on the Pa
ccific University campus. Last
February the boys in one Mc
Cormic hall started a rather am
bitious project, namely tunneling
under their dorm over to Herrick
hall, a girls dorm, of course.
The school paper ran an article
on the underground work, and
shortly thereafter a very alert
administration put a quick halt
to the digging. Things didn't stop
there, however, lor a fun-loving
group of Herrickites got the lay
and angle of the proposed tunnel
and took up where the boys left
off, only from the other end.
When reviewing the events a
columnist in another college news
paper, the Wyoming Brand's fe
male columnist noted that if it
weren't so tar from the men's
dorms to the lady's she "might
present this means as a possible
solution to the problem of keep
ing Wyoming Hall full."
e e
At Kansas State, a professor
gave his ciass an interesting lec
ture on protozoa. He explained at
the beginning of the period that
it had recently been learned the
protozoa could taik. While the
class sat tense with excitment,
the protestor proceded to play
recordings of the discourse of the
microscopic forms. After the class
was over, and the students were
putting away their many pages of
notes, the prof added "April
Fool." t
O 0
From the Pittsburg State Teach
ers College Collegio:
Garageman: "What can I do
for you, lady"
Lady: "They say I have a
short circuit. Could you lengthen
it while I wait?"
' 00
A Minnesota University student
thought he found the perfect pet,
but officials wouldn't let him keep
it. The pet, three and one-half
foot boa constrictor, had full lib
erty of the room when the student
was in, though it had to stay in
the bottom dresser drawer at all
other times.
The snake never made any
noise and the only care it needed
was a mouse a week for food, ob
tained from the university hos
pital lab. Nevertheless the "pet"
had to be returned to its former
owner, the student's brother.
, e
A Melbourne university student
decided to write his thesis on
a provocative subject so he chose
"Psychoanalytical Synthesis of
the Application of Ecological
Transcendentalism to the Motiva
tion and Behavior Patterns of
Adolescent Female s," which,
stated In brief, is "How Girls
Grow Up."
In recent weeks, the already
overcrowded melodrama of our
lives has been further weighed
down with a controversial Boston
lawyer Sam Sears. Having over
stayed his welcome on the na
tional scene, Mr. Sears resigned
from his new-found post yester
day. Sears' resignation comes as a
' relief to those who have wearied
of the smokescreen continuously
thrown up in Washington to hide
the real issues of the day. The
Army-McCarthy dispute is much
more than a "who is lying?"
dispute; Senator McCarran
chooses to describe it as the key
to "who in the United States
Army promoted and discharged
Peress?"
00
Only the demagogues of both
parties can leave it at this, for it
is not this at all. It is more; It is
the time for McCarthy's open
hearing. .
Long ago a man so often ac
cused should ,have either dis
pelled the charges against him
personally, or have been made to
do so, especially if he Is a United
State Senator, once an exceed
ingly reputable position.
Instead, he has gone on spray
ing his charges hither and yon.
In his latest address, the junior
senator from Wisconsin exhumed
the old "blood trade" speech for
another go-round, and last night,
in taking over the spot proffered
by Edward R. Murrow, he was
to present a 25-minute film prov
ing Murrow a liar rather than de
fending himself.
It is an old tactic, this, of using
a good offense as the best defense.
And this is how Sam Sears fitted
into the picture. Whether or not
McCarthy and Cohn used their
influence to obtain favors for the
storied G. David Schine has been
beclouded as the main issue, the
Sears controversy made it pos
sible. When this is combined with the
recalcitrance of the members of
Lelterip
Cooper Raps Rowen-Elliott Letter;
"Chaperonean' Travels With Students
Dear Editor:
One cannot escape the conclu
sion that Elliott and Rowen's
"Letterip" is merely a very ver
bose attempt to justify shying
away from a debate with Mr.
Pepper. Mr. Friedman's own
silence is welcome, but conspic
uous. The City Campus Relig
ious Council is cheating the stud
ents out of a chance to hear a
vital issue discussed'
Most of the quotation from
Dr. Hedley'i book was super
fluous. Mr. Pepper made It
aule clear In his first reply to
Mr. Friedman that he Is com
petely in favor of dissemina
tion of knowledge. The CCRC's
interest In knowledge remains
to be demonstrated.
There is an obvious self-contradiction
in asserting, as Eliott
and Rowen do, that there is no
common ground of argument or
some argument and some agree
ment, or complete arguement
and no agreement; agreement
and argument cannot both be ab
sent simultaneously. The CCRC
will have to offer a 'better ex
cuse than that for its failure to
accept its responsibility to the
student body. Janet Cooper
Dear Editor:
In an argument over the truth,
Religion has a tremendous ad
vantage, in that it claims a God
who can demonstrate His pres
. ence and make known His will
easily. This advantage, however,
turns into a disadvantage when
their God never shows himself.
The very fact that these people
have to try to prove God's exist
ence is evidence of his absence.
Howard McKay
Dear Editor:
During the Mortar Board's
Foreign Students Tour, each per
on had a name tag, on which we
also wrote the name of our re
spective c3'.;ntry. As we were
getting acquainted with one an
other, one of the foreign students
from a high school in Lincoln
came up to Mr. George Round,
one of our chaperones, and after
looking carefuly at his name
tag, asked graciously: "Which
country are you from Chape
rone? . .. " And Mr. Round ex
pained seriously that he was a
Chaperonean, from the island of
Chaperone, and that this island
was a submerged land in the
Gulf of Mexico.
As a foreign student having
participated In the Mortar
Board tour, and having noticed
that we did enjoy the above
mentioned little incident, I
thought It might be well to let
you know about it. Just in
a passing, I want to say again
that the student who mistook
a Chaperone for a Chaperon
aen Is not from the Univer
sity, but la a high school stud
ent. Lichu Chen
the investigating subcommittee
to handle the issue, with excep
tion of Mundt and McClellan, it
is easy to see how political bar
gaining could be carried on be
hind the scenes while Sam Sean
cavorted mround the scene insist,
ing that he had never taken a
public or private stand on Mc
Carthy. He had, however, tried to rais
a fund in the senator's behalf,
and had defended McCarthy in a
public debate at the recommen
dation of Jean Kerr (now Jean
Kerr McCarthy). There should
have been no debate as to
whether or not Sears wag quali
fied; he was biased, as the facts
proved. The senators were try
ing to find out whether or not he
was merely biased, or a biased
liar.
Thus we are able to view Sam
uel Sears as a sign of the times.
And although, he has passed out
of the picture, the furor aroused
by his presence should not bo
abated, but maintained as a safe
guard against the future employ
ment of the demagogic tactic of
confusing Issues with personality
as the device.
It behooves the investigators to
go on looking until they com up
with a counsel who can truly fit
the assigned role. The chances
are that they will be unable to
come up with this rare, impartial
individual which they seek. Th
better course of action, then,
would be to retain Sears as Mc
Carthy's counsel and Welch for
the Army, turning the proceed
ings over to a panel of three or
four members of each party in
the Senate who are not subject
to election contests for the next
five years or so.
Given this qualification, they
might be relied upon to coma
to some decision relatively un
colored from the immediate
political standpoint. These men
would serve as a sort of jury and,
for further encouragement to the
proceedings, throw in Vice Presi
dent Nixon to maintain order and
keep the questioning moving on
both sides.
But just once, it would be
heartening to see our elected rep
resentatives face up to an issue,
rather than cloud it with side
questions in their accepted, rela
tively perfected fashion.
The Administration had several
chances to put such sideshows at
this on a "put-up-or-shut-np"
basis, but early Indicated Its de
sire to administrate, not to lead.
It Is now up to Congress, wholly
or In part, to demonstrate the
responsibility for which it wit
elected.
University
Bulletin Board
TUESDAY
Journalism Convocation, 4 p.m.,
Love Library Auditorium.
Dr. George Sarton,' informal lec
ture, "Leonardo da Vinci, Inno
vator and Man of Science," 1:30
p.m., faculty Lounge, Union.
Young Democrats election, 7:30
p.m., Parlor B, Union.
Audobon Screen Tour, 8 p.m..
Love Library Auditorium.
YWCA Picnic, Peter Pan Park.
WEDNESDAY
Orchesls and Pre-Orchesis can
didates practice session, 7 p.m.,1
Grant Memorial Gymnasium.
Departmental Recital, 4 p.m.,
Social Science Auditorium.
Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, seminar,
"Council of Economic Advisors
and Joint Committee on the Eco
nomic Report," 10 a.m., Room4
816, Union.
Dr. George Sarton, "Ptolemy
(Second Century after Christ'."
8 p.m., Love Library Auditorium.