, , , i m m ' 1 Frank Partsch, Editor Mike Jeffrey, business manager Page 2 Monday, March 29, 1965 UIlllltlltlltlllll1lltllll)l(l(t4tlllltlllllliilititlMllIllllllllllllliitlJIIIIii(lll1llllllllllllllltllltt Tearing And Building It has become the fashion of late to write long maga zine articles about college students. These apparently ana lytical pieces roughly resemble the Kinsey report without sex; they ramble through interviews with deans and stu dents and campus upkeep personnel; ramble on through the "constant pressure to make a grade," the "fear of atomic warfare," re-identification of values." the "search for identity," and on. new We have enjoyed these articles, although not with every word in them, and have been amused the reaction around our own campus. It can be divided into three classes: "I like to think that Nebraska is mature enough to rise above all of these 'student trends and movements."' "The guys who write those things are just looking for readers." "This University is so dead that it would take more than an atomic war to make us realize that we are living in 1965." And the third group is surprisingly large. Tear Apart And Rebuild Essentially what these articles are saying is that college students, unlike their predecessors, are not accept ing tradition without first picking it apart and re-assembling it better. We would like to see that very process happen to a lot of things around this campus. Student Council is showing the way, and more groups will surely follow. Some of the most interesting conversations we have heard concerning this renaissance-type aversion to the status quo have concerned the role of the individual in a world that is fast changing from the isolationists' dream to the humanitarians' worktable. While we cannot deny that many of the so-called humanitarians are hypocrites, we must agree that the idea looks good on paper, and that a great deal of reevaluation is in order before manv University students can feel that they are in order. Guilty Of Profits Many of our fellow students are actually feeling guilty about going into the money fields rather tlian the service jobs. This is especially strange in a state notoriously short on money, anyway. But these thinkers are wondering about better worlds and changing minds and wiping out the Nineteenth Century from every facet of life. Our point is this: we can agree that thought and education and reason are essential and that reexamination is necessary to the world for which we are preparing, but we fear that many are taking up the banner and waving the bloody shirt of "the revolution that is shaking today's colleges" because it is a FAD. Ripe For Fad When and if this University emmerses itself in the renaissance, we hope that such will not be the case, for we realize that many of the inhabitants of this University are ripe for a new fad, pent-up with the scorn that they have received as products of Nebraska conservatism to the point that they will do it up big, but uneducated enough in the realities of intellectualism (as opposed to academia) to really blow it. We await the renaissance impatiently, for this campus is long overdue. It is beginning slowly and, we hope, will progress slowly, so that each may chose whether to enter it. having plenty of time to become acquainted with it and join it for the right reasons. FRANK PARTSCH Review Shaw's 'Heartbreak House' Among Most Effective Ever By Pat Drake G. B. Shaw's "Heartbreak House" opened to a sell-out crowd Thursday night at University Theatre. Without reservations, it was un doubtedly one of the most successful productions to date on the Howell stage. Directing his first Univer s i t y production, Stephen Cole combined excellent act ing, directing and staging into a delightful evening of theatre. Charles Howard, technical director, should also be congratulated for his contributions. The Shotover mansion was imaginatively designed; and constructed. One almost wanted to spend another evening there, drinking brandy and howl ing at the moon. Costumes by Robert Devereaux added much to the performance. A strong and well balanced cast was, of course, the most important ingredient of the evening. Having stopped the show twice opening night, Dean Tschetter should probably have first mention. His role as "Boss" Mangan, the in dustrialist clod, was played superbly. His nervous tics, mock arrogance and total bafflements pickled the au dience silly with laughter. Ti.e Daily Phona 477-8711, Extension! 25(11, 2389 and mXJ?.w AU" I"ln '" r RITTEB, wa Millar! BOB J! 'T e"""rl lVNS CORCORAN, nidlt nrw, ,ditin PRISCIL. MFIFR WVVp'SS't v'iY' , JORDAN- KR'TH WVOR, RICH ...i... '. IfL J.'ir'' Jup'"r wr"i LARRY JOHNSON. aoorla Inland POLLY RHVNALDH. CAROLE RENO, JIM KOKSHOI, cam edllnrai SCOTT RVNEAIWON. MIKE KIRKMAN. PETE LACEi CONNK ' RA?& ?;N' ..l.l.nl. JIM UiLK, nubtriipllon man. tori LYNN RATH- JN, circulates manager i Kfr H1RSCHBACH, photographer. fnlwerlnHon ratal M per acmeater or Kntend aa aecond clasa matter at uader the act of Auauat 4. mi2 wThVD,U?.tNeb?k',J Wbllahed t I"""! SI. Nebraska Union, on Monday, Wedneaday, Thursday and Friday durlnt the selvool year, except durinf raca noa and final examination period, and once during August m h. v!?huhVi' Vn4v'nily Nebraska jtdenta under the Jurisdiction f the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications. Publications shall be iih? uHr".'0 b? i.1"" S'-omrnlttee or any person outride the Unlver wln'ted Nebrankan are responsible lor what they cause to be meanings," "now concepts." and on agreeing to watch Andy Backer as Captain Shotover was equally well played. Backer has a unique talent of becoming what it is impossible to become. His timing was particularly im portant and his execution of it was just right. Mary Thorpe, Karma Ib sen and Bobbie Kierstead as Hesione Hushabye, Lady Utterwood and Ellie Dunn respectively, flushing about the Shotover house in pur suit of all the men, added their own worth to the show. Miss Ibsen, reclining in Goya nude fashion, shot her lines out during the third act to the respective cast members in silvered piqu ancy. One scene between Miss Thorpe and Miss Kier stead, bothered me. Miss Thorpe was cutting and ar ranging flowers as Miss Kierstead proceeded through several pages of ex position. I am afraid the ex position was lost as I be came fascinated with the flower cutting and arrang ing. One other small fault I find in the direction is the table shuffling in the first act. I started thinking, who is going to pick the table up again and where are Nebraskan 2590. U per year. the post ofllca ta Lincoln, Ncbraaka, IN7E6RATI0N oooooooooooooooooooooc By Bob Bosking Besides referring to the activities of a shady lady's business manager, the word pimping has a more perti nent meaning to collegians. To pimp means to cut up, to mock, to ridicule. What's the difference be tween pimping and kidding? Pimping is malicious, I say. Kidding is in fun, no harm intended, verbal practical joking; pimping is deroga tory, done with the intention of shaming the unwitting victim. You may say that pimping is all in fun, but think of the people whom you just love to pimp. Now, why do you just love to do it? No malice aforethought? You're kiddin' me . . . So what's wrong with pimping among firends? Now that's all in fun. "W7e get along OK; we're just bored or something." I deny the "bored"' so it must be the "something." But since the closest I've come to Freud is buying a cheap volume of his col lected works (which re mains unopened), I won't try to analyze the why's. The ill effects: tell me, pimpers of NU. where do you draw the line? When does pimping end and sin cerity begin? When are you pimping and when are you serious, or downright derog atory instead of ha-ha-ha? they going to put it this time? Well, back to my praise of the acting. Tom Crawley, as Hector Hushabye. hammed it up aft er the audience started re sponding, but then who wouldn't, wandering around in Arabian garb, looking like Lawrence of Arabia incar nate? Bob Hall and Rich ard Mahood had their nice moments on stage and bal anced out the cast. Gloria Houser as Nurse Guinness should possibly practice her falling into Mangan's 1 a p several more times but then she bounces back into her part again without a wink. Jerry Mayer, cockneyed as he is, insisted on playing the burglar scene as a fun ny burglar. This is fine. It's just too difficult to stand on the stage and become a symbol without a placard held high. The burglar scene has been dubiously debated as the play's only flaw. I find the scene particularly funny, adding meaning in its own righ.t A 1 1 h o u gh "Heartbreak House" is not one of Shaw's most widely known or pro duced plays, it seems par ticularly .relevant in this day and age of nations bent on self-destruction. One al most wants to join the cast at the end of the show and start 'ban the bomb' chants and 'drop it or dismantle it' campaigns. How much more meaningful would the play have been had we heard the sound of scream ing jets rather than prop driven aeroplanes? I sup pose It would have gone un noticed, drowned out by the sound of our own laughter. Editor's note: "Heartbreak House" has been held over until tonight, due to its success. o o o o Yes, pimping is a chal lenge to the wit. It takes real skill to pimp up to the edge of slander. But what if someone doesn't have the subtle brain that you Uni versity Wits possess? What if it's some alum, or your advisor? Oh, but you'd know when to stop pimping and be serious and straightfor ward. Now that I've made all these righteous pronounce ments. I'm scared to go back to the house. I'll prob ably get pimped to death . . . Mancini Ads Dear editor, After attending the Henry .Mancini concert Friday eve ning, I can only conclude that the advertising was the most misleading ever used for a Student Union-sponsored attraction. The phrase "Henry Man cini and His 40 Piece Or chestra" implies Mancini plus musicians with whom he has previously worked. Instead, those at Pershing Auditorium saw Henry Mancini and 40 musicians from the Omaha Symphony. Despite the handicap of firing Dear editor, On the evening of March 24, an English 121 textbook was taken from a coat rack in the Union. The title is "Masters of American Literature." It is a thick paperback book, which is old and torn. Since it contains notes that are Admonished, Dear editor, Having confronted Black sheep face to face and hav ing been corrected in my mistaken views (i.e. only council members could be on the civil rights commit tee of the Student Council), I present myself ad monished, amended and con verted. But now that I have been set straight and being the sort of person I am. I sug gest we organize. First of all, the people "in power" should be personally con tacted; Dean Ross, Chan cellor Hardin, the Board of Regents, EVERY Student Council member, all should receive an informative, ra tional letter stating the facts and enlisting support. Knowledgeable, tactful representatives of the meas ure should be available to speak with interested stu dents. These primary ?- " "-'i ho.";f.'.ly gai" the perh-ps righteous, but entirely necessary backing of the Establishment and the inclusion of current FS NCC leaders on the commit tee. The next thing to do would be to activate those who have previously main ' ' ' 'isdainful distance from student elections (in cluding fc""C members, sc-'Migy grad students and the "bearded beatniks") to get out 1 ""n for a can didate who represents their vievs. This group carries more th-n enough votes to elect memrs reflecting thei- Ideas but has not --ly USed their power with much effectiveness. By Gale Pokorny The year is 2000 and the scholarly gentlemen have just assumed their positions around the make-shift ta ble deep beneath the earth's surface in the dimly 1 i t bomb shelter. Little is going well for these men and the' thou san .- .ike (hem but they have long since decided to make the best of what they have left. Despite the utter chaos on the surface with its charred soil and polluted water, the multitudes huddle like moles underground in their burrows and attempt to carry out as many func tions as they can of their former great society. Ta k e these gentlemen around the table for exam ple. This morning while taking turns at the hand generator, one of them hap pened to mention that it was almost 40 years since the dictionary had been revised. One thing led to another and here they are with the task of sorting through the thousands of entries and discarding the Words that had become obsolete in the last four decades. One of the men rises to address the group, saying that he has jotted down some words on a piece of paper that he thinks are un questionably no longer of use to the vocabulary. He proposes that they vote on them right now and save trouble later on. The men nod their heads in general agreement, and tell him to proceed so that they might judge for themselves. The speaker clears h i s throat and reads the first word, "laughter." Immedi ately a little bespectacled man at the opposite end of the table raises his hand 'Misleading' only two rehearsals, it was a good concert, and Mr. Mancini lived up to his rep utation, but that does not excuse advertising which carefully omitted any men tion of the fact that the or chestra would consist only of local talentr-. . Ironically, the hit of the evening, a superb comedi an, was not even noted in the pre-concert publicity. Whoever handled the adver tising is a sure bet to suc ceed on Madison Ave., or in the used car business, if he isn't killed first.. Steven Halter It Back very important to me, I wish that the individual who took the book by mistake would please return it to that coat rack. The coat rack is located in front of the Colonial Dining Room in the Union. I can pick it up from there. R. D. Zuehlsdorf But Suggesting Voila! This is a hurried, incomplete list of ideas and availabilities open now to proponents of civil rights in Nebraska. It may be naive in its concepts, but it is en tirely si" cere and I offer to join any inte ' "d group or person in enacting its pro posals. Liz Aitken Editor's note: We under stand that the members of - ttee will be ap pointed, not elected. No Compulsion Dear editor, Despite the fact that I am an ardent supporter of civil rights and a violent foe of the John Birch Society, I feel no compulsion to associ ate with pseudo-beatniks. Liz Grosshans (Grosshaus) CORKers Trade statistics show that Canada exported no grind stones last year. A British magistrate up held an earlier ruling that a pedestrian could not pos sibly be a vehicle. a The first performance of a flea circus took place in 1846 under the able spon sorship of King Louis Phi lippe of France. , :C. White, of Tollesbury Essex, England, won jhe winkle-picking , champion ship of East Ang"ia by pick ing 156 pounds of winkles In an hour and three-quarters. ractis :2I S and'faqulres what that un familiar word meant. The speaker explains that ear lier while leafing through an old copy of Webster's Third International, he had come across the term and found that it referred to a physi cal action that accompa nied mirth and joyousness. He went on to say that about half a century ago, it was a fairly popular word but during the events of re cent years, it had quickly and completely dropped from the common tongue. The vote is unanimous and the word is struck from the dictionary. "The second word that I have written is "honesty," continues the speaker. Again the little man with the spectacles speaks up but this time he protests. He says that just last year he had heard that word used. When the speaker asks him how the word was used, the little man replies that he thought it was used in a joke. "Just as I thought," says the speaker. "Gentlemen I believe that if you think about the word "honesty" for a minute, you would agree that the abstract quality that it once stood for or the lack of it, is the reason we are in this re grettable situation. To the ancients of the 18th and 19th centuries, the word has quite a unique meaning. It stood for fairness, sin cerity and the lack of de ceit in a man. The major ity of those ancients prac ticed honesty and all went fairly well. But as the so ciety emerged from the 19th century, and entered the fti Campus IS EUROPE? College life is such a busy one. what with learning; the Mnxixe, attending public executions, and walking our cheetahs, that per force we find ourselves sometimes neglecting our studies. There fore this column, normally a vehicle for innocent tomfoolery, will occasionally forego levity to offer a quick survey course in one of the learned disciplines. Today, for an opener, we will dis cuss Modern European History. Strictly defined, Modern European History covers the history of Europe from January 1, 19f4, to the present. However, in order to provide employment for more teachers, the course has been moved buck to the Age of Pericles, or the Renaissance, as it is better known as. The single most important fact to remember about Modern European History is the emergence of Prussia. As we all know, Prussia was originally called Russia. The "P" was purchased from Persia in 1S74 for S24 and Manhattan Island. This later became known as Guy Fawkes Day. Persia without a "P" was of course called Ersia. This so em barrassed the natives that they changed the name of ths country to Iran. This led to a rash of name changing. Mesopo tamia became Iraq, Schleswig-Holstein became taxe-Coburg, Bosnia-Herzegovina became Cleveland. There was even talk about changing the name of stable old England, but it was for gotten when the little princes escaped from the Tower and in vented James Watt. This later became known as the Missouri Compromise. Only last week he invented the German short-haired pointer. Meanwhile Johann Gutenberg waa quietlv inventing the print tag press, for which we may all be grateful, believe you me. Why grateful. I U tell you why: Because without Gutenberg's inven tion you would not have this newspaper to read and you might never earn that IVrsonna Stainless .Steel Razor Blades are now available m two vaneties-the regular double-edge bkde w. have all come to know and love, and the new Personna Injector Elude. Lucre of injector razors have grown morose in recent years even sullen, and who can blame them? How would you ec J if you were denied the speed and comfort and durability and truth and beauty of Personna Stainless Steel shaving? Not very jo ly 1 11 wager! But injector shavers may now rejoice-indeed all shavers may-for whether you remove vour whiskers reK. ulnrly or mjectorly, there is a Personna blade for you-a Per sonna h amless Steel Blade which will give you more JxuAr shaves than Beep-I eep or any other brand you might tS U by chance you don't agree, the maker, of PcnonnruJSdly buy you a pack of any brand you think is bette Y es friends, we may all be grateful to Johann Gutenberg for The next f " bout The next time you're in Frankfurt-am-Main, why don? you drop in and My thanks to Mr. Gutenberg? He is eldcrlv-S years last birthday-tut still quite active in his UbSyoXr BuTl k,lt,nW? i Gemmn Paired pointer 7 But I digress. Returning to Modern European History let us now examine that ever-,x.pular favorite, Fran ' ''." taugl.l only to minu y .od Victor En,, ,u.ffhtw S STiS everybody waltzed till dawn and then tired k..t l : . Burma SHa,& &ZSn2i 20th, something fatal started to happen. The age old prac tice of honesty seemed to have outgrown its own use fulness and slowly was pushed aside by its oppo site. "The infant practices of lying and cheating were de veloped into an exacting art during the early 20th cen tury and by mid-era had mushroomed to an alarm ing size. Although it favored no age group, it was much more evident in the youth. It was even more evident later in the 50's and 60's in our generation for during the mid part of the 20th, we, gentlemen, were the high school and college students. We were the ones who had not the slightest conception of the word, "honesty." During those years we ac quired the values that led us straight into this catas trophe. "Remember back in 65 when a couple of us were thrown out of that academy that the Air Force used to run in Colorado? And re member on the Nebraska campus how dishonesty was laughed at and condoned by everyone? "I believe that this was the beginning of the end for when the world got into the hands of our generation, it refused to respond to t h e methods we employed. Our lack of moral worth carried us on and on or if you will, deeper and deeper, til the roof finally fell in on us. Yes, gentlemen, we can't pity ourselves. We did what we did willingly. Now I suggest we vote on the word and move on." The word was dropped. kith (By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie Gillis," etc.)