EDITORIAL OPINION 'Leaders' Should Brush Up on -Meeting Procedure s IV) you discuss an amendment to a motion? s Can it motion be tabled and removed from the table in the same meeting? Can the president an organization voice opinion or does he (she) only have the authority to conduct the dis- s cussion of others? I 3 at These questions confront leaders of campus activities and organized houses each week in their meetings and g most of the time go unanswered or disregarded. Why? Because too many "presidents" have not taken the trouble I to verse themselves on parliamentary procedure. The result of lack of parliamentary formality in cam- pus meetings is wasting the time of manyV'little Indians"., 1 the workers, assistants, members, who must sit patiently while the "big chiefs" argue over whether or not the amendment to the motion should be discussed before vot- tag. Activities would become far less ""busy work'1 if they were organized organizations run by organized leaders with authority. Part of this leadership quality could be developed if a group such as Student Council were to print a handbook 1 on parliamentary procedure. Last year the Council spon- sored a workshop for officers of organized houses and activities on campus. i s A good idea, but was it effective? Judging from the manner in which many of the cam- pus meetings are conducted, these'workshops were either not sufficient or some groups themselves made poor choices of leaders. s This is not to say that all groups are negligent. Many hold dignified meetings, and these are the groups that maintain the interest of the workers the little people and provide an incentive for the workers to aspire toward leadership in the organization. When a leader lacks re spect of the members, he fails to guide the organization effectively. Student Council would do well to expand its work shops and to further promote leadership among students. Leaders on campus will be future leaders in other com munities. It would be a shame if we were molded into a busy-work-but-do-nothing generation of Time Wasters. G. S. Singers Concert Preview Of Fine Seasonal Shows If the Christmas concert presented Sunday lay the University Singers is any indication of the seasonal en tertainment to be presented, then we are in for many fine shows during the next two weeks. The ninety-five member chorus put on two excellent shows Sunday afternoon to overflow crowds in the Union ballroom. Fine solos by Carolyn Rhodes, Paula Knepper, Jocelyn Sake and Louis Lawson, plus the appearance of the String Quartet, added to the Singers hour-long pre sentation. In the coming weeks we will be able to hear more fine musical presentations such as the Madrigals concert and the annual presentation of the "Messiah". (D. C.) Sitting In By Carroll Kraus A return to the Daily Nebraskan office is rather re freshing after a semester's absence. And it's rather stimulating to sit in the editor's chair once again, at least for a day, while Editor Probasco is back in New York City, rubbing elbows with the bigwigs of the journalism world at the Sigma Delta Chi conven tion. There have been some physical changes in the under ground office the Rag staff calls home, both in the staff per se and the office in general. But largely the atmosphere is the same. It seems to be an atmosphere of trying in the way the staff feels it can do best to better the university com munity in some perhaps intangible but sincere way. If the University is better off for the information and opinion it may glean from this newspaper, the staff's job has been done. If the staff intends to use the experience gained in this office to help in a life in journalism or if it uses the experiences in leadership and personal contacts in any other field, the Daily Nebraskan has served an other purpose. Errors creep in during the length of the working day In this office, as happens everywhere else in "the Uni versity community", or downtown or in Washington, D.C. But the sincerity and the quest for helping others In this sometimes intangible way has always been some thing that has impressed me about all the staffs of this newspaper. Few other organizations, I feel, have as strong a feeling of loyalty as do Rag staffers; maybe every other organization on campus may say I'm wrong, but I think few past editors or managing editors or re porters on this paper will disagree. As for my part, my formal relationship with the Ne braskan ended months ago, but it's kind of nice to think that a few of the things that you have thought were good or worth fighting for in the past are carried on every day In a living establishment a college newspaper perhaps never entirely right but never really wrong, if for nothing else but sincerity itself. Daily Nebraskan Member Associated Collegiate Press. International Prw episentathre: National Advertising Service, Incorporated Published at: PHm 29. Stndeat Union. Lincoln, Nebraska. SEVENTY-ONE TEARS OLD 14th K Telephone HE 1-7631, est 422S, 422. 4227 sttoCTtaHan rar mi J tw wnwlw ar tS far ttir araarmfa Biirtwd (Frond rhi matter at thr ami afflee la Uarata. ttrtratta, tka act af aaraat . 111. 1 Bally flefcmafcaa h aaMMwa Mm,, Twwtar. WrAxroMT am) lrt """ arhaal TrT. rxreat nr! raratfem ami nam prMiulii, nr "" l!lwalty af Wrtrarta aiMrr anttUrlmtlnn of fhr mrmilttrv a fltnrirat Attain an rrnrroti of tnrat an4nla. PaMlrattna amlrr tar Simrwmmmr aa fttmlrat Pahllratlom (nail nr frrr fna -MUM-lal "rMl " " part af the Wnarmiimlttrr or rt, thr part at any mm attfe thr I'nlvrnllir. THt- ntrmhrra ( the Dallr Nrtiranlcaa itaff an vZZZntTi " " " " W- alitor " Enrrm,t W" !I?11L1," Iraw 4!alhnwia ?d,l"Tl Hal Rrmra ?lr!L 'ill k firraM l.imhrnaa l27. UT Pa f'". Mwrr, Orrfrhrn llirllhrni fftarr tvnfrrt Nnnn tkM ti .k i. Jtnlrr Staff Wrttrra. Kmtj dim. Km Night Urn Kaitar BUSmKfls Wmlnrat Mimnr Attant titmr Msnarrra fiirrnlatlaa Manairrr CMaalflea Maaafar ......... ....Baa rairrat. Naan tVUHfnrd, Chla Wg rMn uw ST APT Fcrrawm, Wtan ftatman Chip Kaklln, tntm Srhrnrdrr ftnh Kaff Jarl 4l- ) European Socialist Movement: Uf Brandt Succeeds in Germany, IGaitskelVs Chances Should Rise By Eric Sevareid 1 Herr Willy Brandt, the big shouldered mayor of Berlin, may very "well be I remembered in history not -as the practical organizer who defied the armed C o m m u- nists sur- I r o u n d- ing his city, but as the politi- cal thinker who led Europe- an socialists Sevareid through the agonies of their final break with Marxism j and showed the way for rc- constructing European pol- itics in the American pat i tern of two parties agreed in aim, disagreeing only I in method. I He has an excellent I chance to do with the Ger- man left what the beleagu f'ered Hugh Gaitskell is des I perately trying to do with the British left. This is the importance of Brandt's ex- traordinary speech accept- ing the Social Democratic I nomination for the chancel- lorship not his dramatic, f head-on admission of the truth in the rumors about i his illegitimate birth. If Brandt succeeds, Gaitskell will have a better chance of succeeding, and before 1961 is out we should see the two leading Euro- pean socialist movements at long lingering last on all fours with the realities of I the mid-20th Century. These rebirth pangs are I severe, for they mean the p final abandonment of illu- sions, the most painful pro- cess the human psyche can go through. The price to be paid includes giving up the illusions that the class I struggle is the central driv i ing force of history; that some special, (peace-loving virtue inhahits the breasts I of "the workers;" that in 1 a workers' party the voice I of the majority is the voice I of infallibility; that work I ers organized can somehow s avoid the human evils of I other big cale organiza- tion; that socialists in power will have an inher- ently better chance of I reaching an over-all "set I tlement" with the Soviet Union; that giving up atoni 1 ic arms in .the west will somehow cause the Soviets to give up their drive for fworld communism. The evils of sacial fnjus 1 tice are plentiful in Ger man and British society, as they are in our own, and as long as this is true there will always be a left wing party " call It So cialist, Labor or Demo cratic. But two immense changes have destroyed the old philosophical basis of European socialism. One is that the dominant charac teristic of the Soviet spec tacle is no longer egalitari an social transformation but aggressive nationalism. The other is the scientific revolution, more funda uiil WASNT BiiILT IN A tAY. mentally affecting man's life than the Industrial rev olution to vhich Karl Marx was reacting. No spectacle hi "Britain is more embarrassingly sad than the spectacle of many socialists who came of age in the '30's still trying to equate "socialist" Russia -with peace and 'capitalist" America with war. This is true of some, like Anthony Greenwood, now -challenging Gaitskell, who are by no means Communists or conscious fellow travelers. They are simply "true be lievers," and to them his torical facts that interfere with their emotions are non-facts, to be ignored. Einstein is superseding Lenin. The scientific revo lution means, as every day's evidence shows, that almost no matter what kind of political system a nation enjoys or endures, material abundance can be available to all, given sufficient re sources and technical know how. The resulting drive of affluence forces the en largement of a prosperous middle class after all, the goods must be con sumed. It forces the shrink ing of the laboring class, as research and capital (in the form, for example, of automation) outweigh the ingredient of direct la bor in the total value of goods. Brandt and Gaitskell know what time it is, and they know that the prewar that is, pre-scientific rev Ferae Naturae QUAERE The right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure is not a slight one to be discarded by the whims of the campus po lice or any other group. In defense of last weeks rifling of a glove com partment we are infor mally informed that the act took place so that the officer could determine to whom the car belonged. This may be legal, al though there is some doubt on the point, but we won der if it is justifiable. Had the patrolman found liquor in the car, we won der what he would have done. In good conscience be could not have ignored it. The end result woulfl have been that a citizen was found "violating a law and properly would have been reprimanded, when nothing in his behavior In dicated that he was doing so. Over the last week end a member of the gen darmes ran across a cer- r FLOWERS FOR THE BALL HILTKER - HOUSE 135 So. 12th i9 St law Pbit.E'Nttk olution social structure is torn apart, never to be Testored. Knowing the time of day, they also know what an other revolution, the revo lution in the understanding of human psychology, has taught us. They know that human nature is identical that, for example, the 'or ganization man's" sense of imprisonment and ego oas tration pertains also to those men whose organiza tion is the trade union. The -present plague of al most daily wildcat strikes in Britain Teflects "exactly this. Caitskell, victim of the union's block-vote in favor of British neutralism, must have envied Brandt's freedom in boldly telling the German trade unions that they were not going to boss either himself or the party. Altogether, the signs are good for a return to reality in the European "Left. Brandt seems firmly in charge and Gaitskell, I in creasingly believe, will re gain mastery in his own house, partly, when the time is Tipe, by outright expulsion from the party of the Silverman, "Mikardos and Ziliacuses. All this is vastly im portant to the worldwide cold war. A year from now, the Kremlin should be en countering in the European Left a hard crust, not the soft dough it has been kneading and molding so hopefully. tain notorious offender of the law in their eyes. This gentleman had done no wrong but the patrolmen in good faith thought that he had. Remarked said officer "You have gotten away with it for long enough. If you so much as b r e a th loud we're going to get you with something that w i 1 1 siick." Such a student now not only has to live up to the ordinary student behavior, but he must make certain that he doss not in any way committ any offense within the discretionary power of the officer. Such an offense, of course, would be usual things as rapid, but not distinctly careless driving, racking up pipes, or stopping for a few min utes on campus with an unopened bottle in a glove compartment. We can't say that such a situation is reprehensible but it seems undersirable, unnecessary, and a slap at the thought of equality before the law. "1 OF FLOIVEFIS j i HE 2-2775 ) Staff Vietc BOVINE The Career Opportuni ty Conference held Thurs day provided Ag students with the opportunity to be come more familiar with various professions. Such a conference was or ganized on an experimental basis nd the decision of the conference committee was to evaluate before plans would be made for a similar conference in fu ture years. The committee asked all students and fa culty to voice their views so the amount of Merest could be determined. In order to fceep the com mittee's request, "'Bovine Views" will present its out look on the conference. The conference in itself took consideralble planning on the part of the commit tee. The schedule of the sessions -and banquet were well prepared nd con ducted smoothly. Both the studentsand the faculty on the committee spent many hours preparing f?T the con ference. Suggestions for next year's program might be compulsory attendance at the conference unless at tending classes on cfty cam pus which most bave signed excuses by he In structor. The choice of career should not be made mandatory, but when al most 200 students take such an opportunity as a day off from classes, then compul sory attendance is almost a necessity for a success.. Students should value this as an opportunity to learn more as well as to become interested in a profession and looking for a job. But maybe the non-attending students dont plan to do anything when they finish school. Another improvement m the program that might de velop more interest and prove more helpful to the students would be to cut the time of the sessions and include one or two more sessions. Then it could be set mp that each of the professions would remain a day longer and would set up a temporary office. In terested students then could talk with representatives during their free hours and become more acquainted with the profession as well as Interviewing for a job. With this system, students that decide they are not in terested do not have to spend so long at that ses sion and would have the NOiOOSS BXED tsS0iMeRis A BoX The finest in town GOLDENROD STATIONERY STORE 215 North 14 Open Shopping Night to 9 L I laTLil m VIEWS by Jerry Lnmberson opportunity to Attend "-sioro smions they Blight jike. This might also aid the pro fessional representative as he would not have to spend so much time with those that are not really inter ested, once they find out about what that b might consist. A greater variety ot pro fessions might be contacted to include the Interest of all the students. Some of the students were dlsap prtimed this year because their particular profession al interest mas not included in the conference, Snch a variety might be a oppor tunity for the freshman and sophomore students to find more about related Indus tries and what ways they conld g in developing their major. Another improvement might be to include more non-agricultural professions but ones that college stu dents could easily succeed in. Such professions might be related to agriculture but not involved directly with ft This would be helpful for those students who plan to leave agriculture as the demand for professions out side of agriculture in crease. Such a conference -could not be set &pon a perfect standard because no con ference could satisfy some $60 students but such criti cisms may benefit to the satisfaction of the greater portion of the student body on the Ag campus. Juckmiu Teams Place in Contests Two University livestock judging teams placed 35th and 18th in the intercollegi ate judging contests at the a tional Livestock Exposiiton in Chicago last week. The livestock judging team placed 15th as they competed against a field of 37 teams. The team placed sixth in the sheep division with Fernando Lagos placing tenth among in dividual judges in that divi sion. Other members of the team were Paul Bengston, Richard Frahm. 'Gary Mc Donald, Larry Williams and Charles Williams. Twenty-six teams competed m the meats judging contest. Morris Beerbohm placed fifth in the beef breeding section and helped the team to place seventh. Other members were Herb Kraeger, Vance Uden and Gary Johnson. I Molzer Music t I HAS A stereo Contained PORTABLE STEREO PHONOGRAPH ; ExclusivV-M '5tere.0-Matic'4-Spwd : Automatic Change Plays all Ster' ind Monophonk Records ill spwdt, j sizes-. Hi-Fi records sound better than : sm ' ummnm v-m stv e m cam. I I loupe and off -white pyroxylin case. ( DON'T WAIT COME IN ( TODAY! V-M Moctel 304 ONLY 5995 The rMM&vf t MOLZER MUSIC CO. -0 219 Jio. 12th HE 2-5272 I ihit! life