Thursday, January 16, 1964 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 us Property ff Bue Use: iftcofte ireeiraDeiT1 "The University of Nebras ka does not belong to the Board of Regents. "It does not belong to the faculty. "It does not belong to the student body. "It does not even belong to the Legislature. This University belongs to B of Nebraska." With these irordi Dr. Ben Greenberg, past president of the Board of Regents, summed up Ms function as a Regent to keep the Univer sity for all of Nebraska. Greenberg made these com ments in an address to the Nebraska American Associa tion of University Professors, which was printed in the lat est, issue of the NEBRASKA ALUMNUS. In Us speech, Plftks Vei ns Pettcy," Greenberg As cutset) the function of the Board ef Regents in the Uni versity el Nebraska. "Our Nebraska constitu tion," he said, "says that the government of the University, under the direction of the Leg islature, is vested in the Board of Regents, and that our spe cific powers and duties are to be fixed by statute. . . By judicial decision we have also been found to be not an independent corp orate body but, rather, an agent of the state." ... A faculty member sav ing that a Board should dele gate its authority, expecially in matters of educational pol icy. . . . And, finally, a univer sity president saying, 'Sit on the throne but sit quietly un less there is a rhubarb then settle it" "Some people," Greenberg said, "are afraid that the leg islative body's budget direc tives have gone beyond the bounds of propriety and have invaded the province of the Board and the administrative officers of the University." He commented that a sys tem whereby the University would work under a flurry of direct orders from the Legis lature would not be comput able with our Nebraska Con stitution or statutes. "When I look at the record I the Immediate past, hew ever, I am not convinced that the Legislature of Nebraska has any intention whatever of assuming direct control of the University," said Dr. Greenberg. "It is true that the record contains incidents that I wish it did not contain, but they have not been the result of formal action by the Legis lature as a whole." fairs is a pastime 'that legis lative bodies will pursue for long, if they pursue it at all. "When the cloak of institu tional management is gath ered tightly about a legislative body, that body not only gets the cloak, it also gets the di rect responsibility for what happens to the university," he stressed. Therefore, he believes that university governing boards will not become obsolete for a long time. fciibntftr. TODAY YOUNG REPUBLICANS meeting at 7 p.m. to hear Gov. Frank Morrison speak in the Pan American room of the Student Union. NU Coed Accepts Educational Grant Nancy L. Gibson. Omaha, braska Home Extension Coun a junior in the School of Home I eil officers and directors Economics is recipient of iXL one hundred and sixty dollar i "sk"Ce"f!r for Con' ! uniting u.umauun. Active in 4-H club work Rather than worrying about invasions - of administrative boundaries. Dr. Greenberg ..u th.t m .hrtt and COED FOLLIES SKIT j j ' MASTERS meeting at 7 p.m. energy should. be oevoiea Wjin student Union. extending educational oppor-l STUDENT TRIBUNAL tnnity of high quality to more meeting at 5 p.m. in the Ad- ! educational grant, j The grant was made possi j ble through donations by I Home Extension cluhs in I Boone. Box Butte. Merrick ; and Platte counties, i Miss Gibson was selected as the winner during the N'e- and with a keen interest in Extension work. Miss Gibson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Royal Gibson, plans to be come a Home Extension agent upon graduation from the University. people. "It is part and parcel of our total effort to advance toward greater knowledge, toward greater productivity, and to ward a better life for an ever Increasing number of people," he summed up. What Is Happening? Continued from Page t our toleration of the nihil ists and the Communists can only be just that toler ation. That it must never amount to a kind of doc trinal egalitarianism which ends us up with the strangled cry of our age: How can we really, truly, definitively, know, that they may not in fact be right, and we wrong? What the University of Texas needs, and for that matter just about every col lege in the land, is spiritual composure. And that can be done when we make the fundamental distinct ion that recaptures the g r e a t insight of our forebears. That while we of the West are flawed, our ideals are not; and that the great problem of our time, both intellectual and moral, is to bring us, in the West, to adhere more closely to our ideals, to doubt ourselves but not our ideals. It is curious that many people who -ore shocked at the proposal that Earl Warren should be impeached are utterly undisturbed by the proposal, advanced by so many members of the aca demic community, that we should impeach our ideals. PRO- in the ! ministration Building. AWS COURT meeting at 4:30 p.m. in 345 Student Union. DINNER WITH A FESSOR at 5-.10 n m west cafeteria of the Student! Union. STUDENT COUNCIL Peace I Corps Film will be shown in the Student Union auditorium at 7 D.m. KOSMET KLUB tryouts at ' 7 p.m. in the Student Union ! ballroom. . YOICE OF FREEDOM will ! be held at 9 p.m. in the mu sic rooms of the Student Un ion. JUNIOR PAMIELLENIC will meet at 7 p.m. at the Kappa Delta sorority house. LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS Read Nebraskan Want Ads ' few.. JSfc I How ever. Dr. Greenberg said that the Legislature has pivMi informal vmmiiri3. Greeiibrg stressed that , tions and recommendations to since the Board of Regents Board just as do manv ieu ui uk uuuiic interest, ; tsthcr rrvuirtc many questions arise concern ing what it should do Explaining tills, Greenberg cited" examples. "When we add to the specific Nebraska gnideposts the opinions ex pressed by people deeply In terested In the welfare of high er education throngboat the nation, we find: ... A Regent saying that a Board should guard its policy-making authority with diligence; "As for the fear of legisla tive encroachment upon uni versity affairs and I am speaking in general terms Builders Will Fill Committee Posts Builders interview will be held Saturday in 334 Student Union. ; - . ! Positions for chairmen and assistants for the following committees are open: calen- W3S that what we are wit nessing is some incidental fallout from the widespread : effort to stop the further ! growth of what many people call Big Government. Dr. Greenberg said that he did not believe that the direct management of nniversity af- now and not of Nebraska spe- dar and directory, first cifically my own feeling is j Glance ag public relations, ag tours, advertising, college days, tours, publicity, and campus promotion. Past experience in Builders is necessary. Inteniew sheets may be picked up and re turned to the envelope outside of the Builders office door. Applications are due by 5 p.m. Friday. . . Ag Honors Program Gets OK From Original Group By Mirv McXeff j Ag News Editor j Freshman students win soon determine bedy condition as a I genetically crossed to deter result of special feeds and ex- j mine which specific trends in I periments. each plant will transfer to the ' be selected to participate in A agronomist a CT0S toe Ag Honors program strong science background is j Planning on ing grad :.,te In June the group of s-1 Leroy Svec, as a result of the Lwk m floriculture. Mats n i dents who participated m the flexibility of the honors pro-1 hrs to nnhiish th rnit Af ; gram. The math and physics j ois bean experiment in a crop ! Kill feiVC HUH A UCUCI UICB' EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS PROUDLY ANNOUNCES A DACRON'COTTON OXFORD THAT WILL NOT PILL! OH, given time a short-necked man with a heavy beard could pill any oxford cloth, they're that soft. But until just recently even Little Lord Fauntleroy could have pilled a DACRONcotton oxford cloth shirt with one curl tied behind him. Which is why we didn't put out any of them. Sure you know what pilled "means; It's when the fabric gets roughed up into little pills. Well, Du Pont has a brand new type Dacron that resists pilling. It came out about a year ago, but we waited until Greenwood Mills, the weavers who make our cotton oxfords produced a DACRONcottori oxford they were proud of; a really luxuriant lofted oxford. And that brings us up to now. We are making Eagle Shirts of this new material in both a Tabsnap-collar and a button-down collar. At about S8.50. original Honors course will graduate, according to Dr. Franklin Eldridge, director of resident instruction for the College of Agriculture and Home Economics. Present participants in t h e Honors program include Wil liam Alschwede, Walter ground, be says, for grad work, since he also waived at least 20 hours of normal course requirements which did not deal with his specialty. One of two dairy majors in Bjorkluad, David Dorm an, i the senior Honors program. science magazine. He wished! the b e g i n n i n g Ag Honors ) courses could have spent ; more time on individual de- j partments within the College ! of Agriculture. He estimated that over 20, hours of regular course-work L I' ILAM language, something few Ag! stuaents nave the chance to do. ho1 hoAn AltfMm4J C. Russell Hahn, Gary Mc- Ron W i 1 1 o n. Alpha" Gamma j ZZ Volker, Donald West and Ron i hich milking cow s are sus Wilton. ceptible. He plans on doing master's works in dairy ani Row have the students whe 1 mal nutrition, finished four years under the j special program reacted to By eliminating aO pre-requi-it? According to Don West, a sites for courses in the dairy major in technical Ag ecoa- science curriculam, Wfl omics, the impressive part of j ton says be has bees able to the program, aside from the waive from 25 to hours of flexibility it allows in plan- andergradnate and non-esse li ning coarse work, was the tial courses in favor of grad courses. complete introduction to au phases of Ag work made pos sible throngh the fresh man and sophomore honors courses, Ag M and !M. De said that by visiting the vari ous departments and examin ing their function and re search work in depth, it was easy to visualize oneself as a member of the staff doing re search work. The twelve senior members of the Ag Honors program major in five different fields, including technical agronomy, animal science, dairy science, horticulture, and ag econom ics. Russel Hahn, an agronomy major, carried out a review of technical literature for his honors project during his jun ior year. For the senior year and part of the Junior, he and a faculty member have been doing research under a Na tional Science Foundation grant in soil microbiology. Dave Dorman, an animal . sclen major, whe mentioned that for a junior-senior proj-j ect be bad worked in coop-1 eration with Dr. L. J. Sump tion of the animal science de partment using ultrasonic vi brations to measure the depth ! backfat on live animals to Dick Mattson, a Burr Hall senior, whose undergraduate major is horticulture, has done experimental work with bean plants which had been Nebraskan Want Ads sot tu MoMK Home. 1M MixM. M s lit, am hape. 1Ub Currolki Traitor Court, IM SKL Ptuae 43Z-M12. Cibwm dMtrie vitur. Im Paul model. 17S. call Dava. 43S-W.J. tmj rrtmtltr MnMl Harm. 1 , Early Amnion. Tetephw 43Z-234L Phi Alpha Theta Holds Meeting To Organize Unh-ersity graduate and un dergraduate students in his tory who are interested in for ming a local chapter of Phi Alpha Theta, honorary history fraternity, should attend the meeting being held this after noon at 4 p.m. in 207 Burnett Hall. Further information may be received from Dennis Thave net. 229 Burnett, or Dr. Steph en Ross, 230 Burnett. Tabsnaps, you may recall, are Eagle tab collars that need no collar buttons. Our button-down collars also have a property highly prized by the toney cognoscenti: a sort of sloppy bulge. We used to call this "flare" until we noticed everybody else was too. Besides, it really isn't a flare, it's a sloppy bulge, but it's ours and we like it. So if you want a drip-dry oxford shirt that won't pill perhaps you'd better drop a note to Miss Afflerbach (she says forget the footnote) and ask her where in your town you can find Eagle Shirts. This is because many fine stores prefer to put their own labels in our shirts; very flattering, but tough on Eagle eyed shoppers. Write her care of Eagle Shirtmakers, Quakertown, Pa. Du Ponfi trademark for its polyesier fiber. That wouldn't be a bad name for an Italian fashion consultant. Say, do yoa suppose we could get Miss Afflerbach to change her name to Toni CognoMxnti and e 1U EAGLE SHIRTMAKEKS. OL'AKERTOWX "ESNSYIVaNU FM CENTi t room aaa-mrat apartnut. ntllltte a Id, 4a month. Alao, rtneptnf ram. ahan 17, Mala, vm "W-m eampva. 3W1 W. meat. l Male atudMt to atnre ajart KK TRYOUTS: KoarMt Klt try out. for "lire Bye Birdie": Thur Jan. 1Mb. 7-l .m-. Pri.. Jan. 17th. 7-IO a.m.. Sat., Jan. lata, la a m t a.m.. Sun.. Jan. lth, 24 a.m. callba-k at all eaUn SHARE H0US J IMaHca north at cumpm. rtean. Bpoar elaaamen vntrrrA. mVH. 10ST: Oild pin with three r-flrt b a arrat deal Plraw cmU alter p m. U iound. February 14th is the deadline for "Rag" Subscriptions 9 CLIP AND MAIL DAILY NEBRASKAN . A DA LY ROOM 51 I I NEBRASKA UNION ! UNIVERSITY of NEBRASKA S ffc.. . 1 Svl klfBAlMfl LET YOUR PARENTS ""w"' nEMt " I , READ ALL ABOUT, YOUR ; iiuivreciTV iu tuc mmturt I Vll T krvi in ilia, wa.ua . a a EBRASECAt j j 5 $3 per Semester Thank You! H t .i I 1 9 r. 9 K f x '; i i r . A ' I