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The Lincoln Star from Lincoln, Nebraska • Page 1

Publication:
The Lincoln Stari
Location:
Lincoln, Nebraska
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

NEBRASKA: Fair and warmer Wednesday; Thursday partly cloudy; highs Wednesday 80-85. THE LINCOLN STAR Polire 3-6844 Telephone 2-1331 Fire 2-2222 HOME EDITION Inquiry Imperils C. S. 'Cr SHERMAN He named the Corahuskers. 'Cy' Sherman Dies; Dean Of American Sports Writers Retired Lineotn Star Sports Editor; Diewspaper Career Covered CO Years Cy Sherman, retired sports editor of The Lincoln Star, died early Tuesday evening at a local hospital after a long illness.

His 80th birthday was Mar. 10. liis condition at the hospital had been unchanged for several weeks and his death came suddenly at shortly after 7 p. m. A brother, John, from Pasa-1 dena, in Lincoln at i tion of the University of Nebras- the time of his death.

I ka takes pleasure in presenting Known as the dean of Ameri- to Mr. Charles can sportswriters, Charles Sum-! Sumner Sherman veteran U.N. Slugs Close To Parallel After Same Success in a si, Broufiht To A Unit (From Press Duspatchcs) TOKYO (Wednesday) South Korean troops in we-tern Korea rammed patrols to within five miles of the 38th parallel today and other United Nations troop.s in the cast repulsed every attack by the out-gunned corn-i munisls. A front report Wednesday saidj that KOK (Hepublic of Korea )i forces patrols to within miles of the parallel in the ity of Koruiigpo against light to moderate enemy resistance Kor- angpo is 29 miles northwest oi Seoul and only a few miles the arbitrary boundary between! North and South Korea. The ea.stcrn sector cf the front was the only place where th communists were showing any determined effort and there the south Koreans and Americans fought the red.s to a stand.sti!I.

and the tremendous artillery power of the Nations forces stopped cold every attempted attack by the communists in that area. Red Losses Mount The U. N. troops contained the reds in the area where the enemy had puihed back South Korean forces without having to make any major readjustments of their deten.sive troops. Americans and South Koreans who have been in the Soksari area for several days wore moved locally to bolster allied positions I and blunted all communist ef-; forts to push back the U.

N. lines. Eighth army headquarters estimated 50,000 and 60,000 i communist casualties were in-; flicted between May 16, the out- TONS OF TNT GO OFF-The earth belched skyward 2,000 feet in an angry, black mass Tuesday in an explosion of 320.000 pounds of TNT near Dugway, Utah. Army engineers conducted the most powerful non-atomic explosion in history to gain about defenses against bombings. This volcanic-ltke action was photographed more than three miles from where the blast took place on the desert in western Utah.

lAP Wite- photo Tuesday Russ May Be Incited To War, Solons Told fiiticral, Tcstififiuit At UuvArthur ncuriuti, flints Peace In Karca Withaut If Current lied llrivv Om.ir warned senators Tuevd.n the inquiry into Ucn. Dougias Mac ouster mav incite Huvsia to war, but he also hinted peace fume to Korea if the allies smash the big red fiffensixe uiulcr war. Ihe lire-star general conceded the possihititr the war might just peter without a negotiated peace or that the might to peace terms with or without Kussia's ajiprovaf. Southwest Getting Back To Normal tit; Hands ('lased: Hail I incs (Ppcn Southw was rapidly getting fioi'Ued and wa.vned out bnd.ges back into ISa.soliall Western League Colorado Springs 9, ianeoin 6 Omaha 8 Pueblo 1 hcven innings). Siou.x; Cl tv 4, Denver 2 Wichita 2, Des MoinC'- 1 Omaha 8 6 Pueblo 1-2 (IJ innings).

National League Brooklyn 17, Pitt.sburgh 8 Boston 7, St. Louis 2. New York at Chicago, postponed, rain. Philadelphia at Cincinnati, postponed, rain. Cleveland 6 Philadelphia 2 Chicago 9, Washington 8 II If tier Sherman w'as the man who named University of Nebraska athletes the Cornhuskers.

He was i membership, the founder of the modern West- Advanced A ern league of and the sports writer of The Lincoln Star now honorary life American League New York 6 St. Louis I. set of the second red offensive, i Boston 6 Detroit 3. I and Tuesday. Off the northeast Korean coa.st, the U.S.

bat- i tieship New Jersey and the U.S. destroyer Brbakley Bass I swapped punches with red shore guns. Both American vessels were hit once. Ruffner Confident Vice Adm. C.

Turner Joy, commander of the U.S. naval forces in the Far East, said the duel Sunday and Monday off Wonsan One-Side Restrictions On Parking Recommended In an t'flort to tacihtate a more lapid flow of Iraflic, the Lincoln Ti'iiffic commission has recommended to the cily eoiincil iVii oi parking restrictions on one of sections of nvosv Holdrege and South The recommendation is a part brought Unicam Kills Measure For Road Money Kiive ihi moxed view-- to the si-i at; arme-tt and foreign relation.s committees on trie I5th of hearings iMo the dismrcal Gi-n. MiwAi Brardoy said c-f liie I think It r. security aoN to to our or to liu.s.-io tentions, all of of our capabilitii Russia Is Being Informed Sen Cain (R-Washj suggested opi'rafmg eondition as aic Bus- the weatherman promis'd an- nations will other dav of lam weather. roM.st le a point foiecast for iiort ot war with Ru.s.sia.*’ f'ut skie- and warmer weather a.skcd if this might not the entne tate.

fallowing tnicoiiiage to start a ehdly night with vome fr''si but destructive a.ercs- thc and cential pait of th. in othe t-in Korea. iun I ntr and to in- tiiuLudits, ail Lincoln Athletics headquarters, AccLi 7 if uNniH-' hi. tho Associatecl Prcss national poll of top ten college football teams the poll bears his name. Newnpaperman 60 Years resulted in three Americans wounded fatally and nine P.

Poll Idea I wounded, five slightly. He said In 1936. Cy advanced the idea damaged seri- Recess For Summer Is Requested Would Delay Tax Bill Vntil Fall Bradley replied: think that in and what you say is probably very true, that we are uniiecessarily .1 inciting Russia to caHed it be- amdcr comes necessary because of the nature of these bearings Nen out 1 we have had to do on by since it is demanded by four to inches of rainfall over peof nnd i.s inherent in our the weekend. form of '-nment, here it i.s Railroad service was re-estab- it cause lished Tue.sd.iv Big Springs, much trouble in the but the hiyhway situation was Bradley hceiared the far from normal. U.N.

objective not to drive the Highway 138, between Big Chinese -'nd Korean red Sprit- -s and Julesburg, was out oi North Ko-Gill closed, ars were other roads although the long range in the area. litif-al aim still is a free and uni- I Water Over Highway Bed Korea, Also reported troublesome in He added: far as the idiots were 183 and 83. military, immediate military ob, No 183 was open south of Alma, jective, is concerned, I think fs Beiiubhean river returned we would consider it a victory Hoping to omplete their work although some water with something less than from Srvrnfrrnth week fiebr asko ALoc'X'todc: Forty-Eighth: No parking south Bme Tuesda.y in killing reported. Bong (D-La) drew from curb any time. LB 562, the highw'ay No.

83, between North Platte vieus on the ible South from Tenth to Thir- ing bill Mavwood was closed but to the Korean conflict, teenth and Fifteenth to Thirtieth: vote xvas 16 for were on No parking south curb anv time. foi killing, Tinwdav. po this From Thirtieth to 13 not voting The Highway 30. a new hridgo ooo No parking either side any time, motion to kill the bill, which wa.Jiout. e.ist of Chappell caused paiallel even without nego- Restriuiions except set-backs.

No was introduced after a hearing haffie to be dctoured, Rej-iairs to Jn other word.s, our loi-'C baek to the and to part of a traffic report, to the commissiun about a month ago by George Barton, consulting engineer from Chicago. The commission recommended to the council the following program: Twenty-seventh from to No one side any time, no parking either side between 4:30 and 6 p.m. Between and South: No parking west side any time i and no parking either side be- tween 4:30 and 6 p.m. Between South and Van Dorn: No parking i west side any time. Function Fates Bill Passed As Senators Push Far Finishing either side from the west Monday was made Sen Peterson Highway 30 were be- city Jimits to Tenth.

i mg rapidly, the A.s.sociated a littip below, a 1 J- debate followed. Pre-s rcnnrtpd comr. uni'-ts sinqilv ceasing The commission also diseu.ssed icjioiuu. The New Jersey is a sister ship of the battleship I tiesday Cy Sherman retired irom acth-e gonTraGTicertod'today'as newspaper work when he left nisi ignating the national c' six pcvsitidn as sports editor of The star July 1, after 31 months of action 1 Korean waters. Maj.

Gen. Clark autumn posed Ruffner, Sen. (D-Ariz), Mayor Victor E. Anderson said was compieteci shortly belore braska has I 1 rir i Cl i I'f rvai i shop. In addition to being a sports! awakened to the inherent dan- writer, he was an expert printer of elaborate recruiting sys- It was before the turn of the terns to lure outstanding football THE WEATIIEII and warmer VVed- 'pleting action on the measure be- Tore the first of the year.

He made the announcement after ai vMH Mmvl for fu wouldhave been required for century that Cy began calling, talent to many universities and i nerdly Thurenay cloudy: bighi meeting with the pol-! Among the 1.485 army combat ears; trucks up to one, University of Nebraska athlct'c Colleges by generous subsidies to: Wednesday 80-s5. icy committee. veterans from Korea who arrived ton S3, other farm truck.s S5; teams the Cornhuskers. pi'omising high school stars. Mr.

kan sas Fair and wanner Wherry Objects Tue.sdav at San Francisco trucks from $5 to $10 In a blinding blizzard on Sherman had taken his stand, a Thanksgiving day in 1893, he saw position he maintained with dig- a University of Nebraska football nity and great vigor. He was the team defeat the University of sturdy, pioneer critic of practices low'a. The next day he was cha- of pro.selyting, unsparing in his grined to find that victorious denunciation of a development eleven referred to as he felt threatened a sport he in the news columns. loved. Then and there Mr.

Slierman' Only a great devotion to the decided football team game and an even greater devo- was deserving of a better tion to the young athlete led him Two years later, 1895, in Lin- i to defy those who chose to mis- coln, he embarked upon a career understand his It did day; high 75 east to 85 west 1:30 a.m... ..59 .70 2:30 a.m.,, .59 3:30 3:30 a.m... ...59 p.m..... .71 4:30 a.m.,.. .58 .70 5:30 a.m...

..57 ..........68 6:30 a.m......59 p.m .6.5 .60 8:30 81.30 a.m..,...619:.30 p.m...,., .57 9:30 a.m.... ..64 10:30 p.m..... .54 10:30 a.m......6« 11:30 p.m., ,52 ...67 12:30 a.m. W't'd. 51 12:30 p.m..,..

.68 1:30 a.m.......... ,49 1:30 p.m., 69 The house ways and means: 10 Nebraskans, two of them Lin- according to capacity, committee, with which tax coin men, the As.sociated Press' The election law codificat must originate, is working on a-reported. They returned on an; was amended on the floor measure which would boost taxes; army transport. General William make the following princi between $6,000,000,000 and Mitchell. changes: The Lincoln men are: Pfc.

John i. Permission of a pre.sidentinl NurfulK niMtte Siilntiy .20 Scott.ibhifl Alhioti ,07 Valentina Auhu.rn .40 no to Ben rlro Fitlnnoiit .02 Fair bury IlartinKton KalK. t'lty lia.atlriii.i .1.5 Rad C.imbrldge Takamah .02 York 'olberfiton lloblrase Kimball .31 vpinia City ,20 Imperlili I'ftik Hebrmi Supprior .14 Sirom.iburg .10 a 1 ut. men are. I ic.

uunii i. Bermission of a pre.sidentinl 1 Sen. Wherry (R-Neb), the re- C. Hang, 5402 Pre.scott and or candidate iff Of fw. Williams, 5720 must be obtained before his name Others from can be entered in the preferen- Highest temperature lowest 65.

Sun rises 5 03 a.m.; sets 7.44 p.m. delaying the tax bill. Nebraska are: tial primary. be held SAN General Tie William FI. I No Family Of Four Moves In as a sportswriter that was to last i not disturb him because his com-, for more than half a ment frequentlv was to Passed before we worry about a marked by ability, distinction and (continued on Page 2, Col.

1) jmthee Precipitation to date, high purpose. In 1900, he tened all athletic teams of the U. of N. the In 1907, with the appearance of the annual yearbook using the nickname as their not even a roof on the! the name became official. house under construction at 5525 Honored By Club i Ellendale Road yet, but a family In the fall of 1933, the of four have moved right in.

club of the university accorded i more, the noise and Cy an honor seldom conferred on bustle of carpenters and brick- anyone but a member of the var- layers seem to disturb sity team by presenting him with; the mother her three young- a gold football and emblem- sters. atic of membership in that or-j a plump, matronly robin ganization in recognition of giv- an amazing amount of trust. ing the Huskers their name. human beings. Then in 1946 the Nebraska More than two weeks ago the legislature passed a bill naming, biyd Hew into a door framework.

Nebraska the Cornhusker state. and laid three blue- Cy received the pen Governor i eggs. Her snug home rests Dwight Griswold used to sign the middle of the yy house, which is being built by year ago M. Cpl. Roy L.

Anthony. Omaha. g. Primary will uui iiiai vv iintir. vvc Pfc.

Gerald L. BCnZCl, Scotls-! T.niiom he told a reporter, bluff. years and Total May precipitation to date, better get that lax bill Pfc. Russell L. Crowell, Ode.ssa.

veterans home from tiie Pvt. Jimmy D. Hansen. Nor- rean war Tue.sdav. folk.

Short state Monday, two iian.sports, witli Cpl. Francis F. Hibbard, Has-' encountered this soldier.s and 358 marinc.s. ting.s. attorney general's of- entered the Golden Gate from Pfc.

Ralph D. Makinster, Red; eliminated. Japan. Cloud. Sgt.

Russell D. Wauneta. Sgt, Robert E. Smith. Grant.

iiiiestioned by Lodge Bradley said he believed il would be easier to negotiate terms with the Chinese than the Russians the hine.se hurt more than the And he added he would trust the more than the Russians. Discussing the U. N. military nims in Korea, Bradley said: are trying to inflict maximum ca.sualUc,s with a minimum to Ir.i ourselves so that we can get some yi! kind of jrJ': End It, Tobey Urges 4 In the midst of this testimony, Tobey pleaded with colleagues to the curtain on the inquiry into I the firing of Gen. Douglas Mac' Arthur.

Ho declared am im- Jpre.ssed with the futility of much that is going on here Tobey said: vve get all through, IVIacArthur will still be deposed from his position, (Secrctar.v of Defense will still he the man in charge of the defense of this country, the joint chiefs will still be the same a sthey are Installed High Ideals Olson Brothers Construction Co. In the fali of 1949. at a half- foreman Hirsch of 2500 time of a university Twelfth told The Star that game, Cy was given an honorary as soon as the rafters life membership in the university robin was there. Alumni association The citation given that day read: was a great dad to more than one immortal offering words of encourage- hard at work. Hirsch was anxious to point out the little bird's courage.

She has casually ignored the workmen even though they pass under and over her nest every day and at one time had to nail insula- 1W4I SlifShily Jliirl In Two Milford women were slightly Tue.sday night when their car plowed into a truck a mile north of Sew'ard on Stale highway 15. Taken to Milford for treat- Ukraine Flag Presented To University An exile from Russian opptes- sion in the Ukraine has added the flag of his home land to those which will soon decorate the Uni- vctsiiy of of He is Joseph Klischuk, 26. of 322 South Seventeenth, who ment w'ere Mrs. D. E.

Bender, came to the university in i949 67, of Milford, and her daughter, via a diplaced camp iii Dorthy L. Bender, 36. Miss Bender received head and other cuts from flying glass. Mrs. Bender also receivtxl cuts, and both were suffering from the safety patrol reported.

Germany, Klischuk said he got the flag from the Ukrainian Congress committee of New York, which refuses to recognize Soviet control of his country. The congress onginally wa.s an ment, sound advjce inspiring counsel embodying the highes photograoher clambered Ideals of sportsmanship snapped I manhood. He instilled loyalty picture from Cornhusker ideals high in the' skies. In recognition of his faith- MOVE OVER Robin surveys the situation before settling herself on her nest, the heme for three newly hatched youngsters, The bird has built a nest in the framework of a bouse under construction in Piedmont and her tamily right in the midst of pounding carpenters. (Star Staff Photo.) She ignored the flash bulb but ful service, the Alumni Associa- 0 hpj- nest when he grappled Buify feathers.

'Z with the film doubtful that the Ct iTreeil Manips Five iaier le was back will have to be evicted until her can move in. the Meadow Gold an- Dci.siny fpr another picture, babies are old enough to fly. Besides, it' Miss Bender was driving underground grouf) working in south when her car struck the'the Ukraine. Now, although it back of a truck, which had stop- headquarters in New York, it still ped for another truck, which had niaintains contact with the a flat tire. The struck truck was Ukrainian underground army, driven by FTank Adamson, 53, of During the second World war, Albion, who was unhurt, underground army rumbered over a million men, Klischuk After the war, however, Soviet armies cut its ranks.

A skeleton Is a of bones The flag Klischuk handed Dr. with all the people scraped off. George W. Rosenlof, university THE BIG IDEA. i registrar and director of admissions, 'was a layer of blue over a the owner, C.

C. Me- Dance to Leighton Noble The meaning of the flag is DONATION FOR HALL OF Joseph Klischuk. originally from ihe Ukraine, presents the flag of bis home land (o Dr. George W. Rosenlof.

who plans a hall decorated with the Hags oi foreign home lands. (Star Staff Photo.) eleventh Dr. Rosenlof has re- been assembled, they will ceiyed so far. mounted on in a hall of He hopes to get a total of 40 a university building, Dr. Rosen- robin Cracken of 637 South F'ortieth, Enjoy one of leading blue sky and wheat, bands.

schuk said. Ukraine is tries from which students are at- The tenth flag was presented dance Kli- flags, representing all the coim- lof explained. Dairy Products Ask retail route. The Su.tday the eggs halchefl Foreman Hirsrh pointed out tmpossibie MS'hl, or caU 1 into three mouths ringed with a lot oi work to be done She trusts humans too much, lor Turnpike. Adv.

1 K.llschuck’s Hag was. thtv WhFn all of the llags have. Scliana.

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Pages Available:
914,989
Years Available:
1902-1995