Hi..il-i i.i.i .1 III JM.1U.JL. JU! I mmw ii I . .in i mi. m COOCOOC nde To ran s Frank Partsch, editor Page 2 Friday, April 9, 1965 MIHlllll!IH!l!!!ll!M.!!.M The Power Of The Times Any examination of the policy staie nients released today by IFC and Pan Hellenic must necessarily begin "Well, they surely don't say too much." One of our English teachers holds that effective criticism means the justifying of weak links, and. as part of this criticism, we think we can justify a few of the obvious weak links found in these statements. The times not the Daily Nebraskan, nor Administration, nor the Friends of SN'CC have dictated that discrimination in the Greek system is to die. Realizing this during the last two or three years, Greek leaders have held countless discussions over what the role of the individual chap ters, the nationals, the administration and the Greek coordinating bodies should be in ushering out this discrimination. With an eye toward the conflagration caused at universities where the administration was forced to act because of Greek dis interest, and with another eye toward the easily-ignited alum tempers, the Greek leaders here have produced these state ments. Any weakness here can be found in their haste to extinguish both fires without getting burned themselves. By themselves, these two statements are worthless. Their potential value lies in (1) the fact that they show a legitimate concern for the problems they face and (2) the fact that they have admitted their need for help and have asked for it. When I haven't signed the Peti tion yet. and I really have no desire to follow the mad Carpenter from Terrytown through the streets to watch pigeons splatter the statue of William Jennings Bryan at the Capitol, but I am com passionate by nature. This morning is one such case. I was winding my way to class, having unusual dif ficult staying on the side walk due to gross wining and dining last night, when The Spirit hit me. Twas then I decided to colonize a chapter of Camp Fire Girls at the University of Nebraska. I used to be a CF girl. We had rumbles with the lo cal Girl Scouts, and our fa vorite lark was to crumble Your own birth date may have already won you a Honda in Parker Pen's Birthday Sweepstakes! For example, if your birth date is December 1st, 1942, your entry is 12-1-42. Just fill in the coupon below-take it to your Parker Dealer for his signature-and then send it to us. And you might as well know this: you Hondas ... the powerful C Congratulations! New Camnaet Jotttr. First for gfrl-tize hand. Uses the big refill. $1.98. T-8ll Jotter. The workft first ball last stiwl -writes a clean, clear words, tl.98. pantir 48 ConvartiDte. Trie pen that with handy reserve Ink cartridges, bottle. Standard model-$5.00. Bad Seed IV a trail of brownies which lead into a dark alley where we waited with official Camp Fire Girl hatchets. Not cookie brownies, you un derstand, little girl brown ies. We were a tough group. The best thing about hav ing a CF chapter at XU is that everyone could spot the activity gunners. Just count the red, blue, yellow, green, purple, or brown beads on her vest. No more of those nickle and dime do dads that hang on sorority pins to mark the favored few. And the hikes! Ah. a loaf of bread, a jug of beer, and we were off. Fifteen rosy cheeked maidens stalking the countryside for a good spot to dig a modest latrine and bum five acres of pine for a campsite. Think of the Win a Honda just for being born saw-"" ..!..--. winners have your choice of - 110, or the deluxe CA-102. eirl-size ball Den made I 80,000 - word Jotter j Name. I pen with stain- l line up to 80,000 I City. I I S your Pirktr Dstlcr I rule. No DurchaM fills two ways- J " ', and wnrr tin pronaitsd by law. Contest or from an Ink I !l0"'.'?'il 30, 196S' I to "Parser Swpsta," P. 0. ton 4909, Chlcaae, III. Blrtti Date Mike Jeffrey, business manager long range work can be used to eliminate discrimination in these groups, this is the best way. When the times decree that sudden action is necessary, help is needed. And, implicitly woven between the human rights cliches is a request for help. The buck has risen to the top. where the responsibility has rested from the begin ning. The delegation of authority has been sterilized by the times, and the first stringers have to be called into the game to stave off the rally. Now, the statements, themselves. IFC will work for the support of the Board of Regents to implement civil liberties "with in member groups." PanHell wants to sup port the Board in implementing civil lib erties at the University. Here we have a glaring difference, one which reflects on the composition, freedom and initiative of the groups involved. There is no real cause for concern, here. Both groups were given a chance to say what they wanted, and both took advantage of it. We assume that the Re gents will read the two the same, for both are vague enough to be either strong or weak. We await results, not statements. For what these are worth, we commend them. For what they can do, we await eagerly and praverfullv. FRANK PARTSCH green beads a girl could earn in college at a wood sie. When we weren't out in the bushes practicing karati chops on each other, we were assembled around a small inferno of logs, mud rolled potatoes, and saddle shoes, blazing a dark red. (similar to the red beads one earned for cooking a mother sow in a pressure cooker with an apple in her mouth.) At any rate, the Univer sity could use the Camp Fire Girls. Next week I will be in the Union with a pe tition which I would appre ciate everyone signing so we can bring the organiza tion on campus. If I can get Terry's support, we have it made. .VS. (J) ' ft, n jpJL ' -t J DAD EZ O J i f Iv C V Maker of the world's most wanted pens Take this coupon to your Parker Pen Dealer j or get a coupon from him ! -JUtt. right away for complstt SwespiUkai renuirtd. Contsit voided ki WitrAiMin i Withholding Dear editor, 1 am writing this letter in regard to the article writ ten by Miss Smithberger in Wednesday's Daily Nebras kan. I am more disturbed by the journalism practice than by the issue involved. The purpose of a good newspaper is to inform. It should enlighten the public rather than confusing it. To be specific, I believe that a good newspaper should pub Worst Discrimination Dear editor, Every time we turn around we hear cries again discrimination. Sel ma. etc. Now the budget committee is proposing one of the worst kinds of dis crimination, that of discrim ination according to wealth. The proposed increase in tuition will not hurt Ed ward Jackson's car-owning, Honda-owning students i Tuesday's Daily Nebras kan) for they could afford a much larger increase than that proposed. The student who is hurt by this increase is the student who has to save and scrimp to buy his books, or whose folks are scrimping to get h i m through college. For the student who has a financial straggle to just attend college, this could be the straw that breaks the Shindig More Important Dear editor: I don't know how many people knew President Johnson was to give a ma jor address Wednesday night at Johns Hopkins Uni versity, but it was weil pub licized for several days. This was one of the most important policy statements on our position in South Vietnam that the President has made to date. Assuming a large number of students would be crowd ing the TV area in Cather Hall, I went down a few minutes before the Presi dent was to go on the air to assure myself of a seat. Nearly all the seats were filled when I arrived. As I stood and waited a few mo ments during the closing of the preceding program, I was appalled at the sight I saw. As Shindig ended there w as certainly no doubt about finding a seat as ful f sMsJ & ..... at your Oldsmobile Dealer's! Best buys of all are under the Value-Rated Used Car sign Many late-model, like-new trades Many still under new-car guarantee All sizes, all makes, all body styles All at easy-to-take prices e So what are you waiting for? A streetcar? See your local Oldnmobile Quality Dealer now! Information lish all the information concerning an issue, not part of it. Withholding the essential information, a s Miss Smithberger did. in evitably leaves the readers lost and confused. No doubt Miss Smithberg er wrote her article with good intentions, but 1 do be lieve that it is only fair and good journalism practice to let the readers know what the whole issue was about. Victor Tseng camel's back. This is an ex treme and cruel form of discrimination, for it is de priving someone of an edu cation, of a chance to im prove his lot in life. Mr. Jackson and State Senators you might be able to afford this increase! Some people CAN'T. Is it your right to deprive these people of an education? 1 think not! Larry Toothaker P.S. Write your state sena tor! Editor's note: Mr. Tooth aker imornis us that he has written approximately the same letter to his state sen ator. We would like to note that, as a member of the varsity track team and as a senior, Mr. Toothaker would have nothing to lose if a raise were enacted, and think that he should be com mended for his concern. ly half of the students left as President Johnson came on the air. Don't students realize we are fighting a major war in South Vietnam? Don't they realize that hundreds of men including many Americans) have been kill ed there in the past few months, not to mention the past several years? Are people so wTapped up in themselves that they think only of how they will be af fected if tuition goes up a few dollars? How many stu dents realize how the Unit ed States will be affected if we lose the war in South Vietnam1? Is Shindig really more important than the Presi dent's statement of our pol icies, aims, and intentions in South Vietnam, or have I misjudged the importance of this world crisis??? Gary W. Lcntz Are you afflicted with the pain and inconvenience associated with pedestrian travel? J Get blessed relief with a Value-Rated Used Car loirimeir 0 Ray Shepard The racial problem has various causes. The three main ones are economical, political, and sexual. Be cause it is spring(made lu cid by girls, who are trading their silly knee socks for the more sensual bare legs) and because it is infre quently mentioned, this cor ner will write about sex as one of the essential prob lems in race relations. Looking at Negroes one can easily discern that there is a wide color range, from blue black to ghastly white, in Negro people. There are also different de grees in hair texture and facial features. These de grees are signs of inter breeding. Your great grand father went to the slave quarter too often just to be checking on the slaves. The white man suffering from these puritan ideas of sexual insecurity has as cribed super-sexual powers to the Negro. We have all heard the ribald jokes and the myth of the buck nig ger. The white man has en acted laws aimed at the Negro, prohibiting interra cial marriages. When Ne groes were lynched they were often emasculated. These are examples of a sexual fear. The southern while does not want his schools racially mixed because there is the problem of the school dance. The northern white does not want the Negro to move next door, not because the Negro might rape his wife or daughter but because the wife or daughter, believing in the myth, might throw themselves at the Negro male. The Greek houses are noi racially mixed because w hite students do not want to compete sexually with Negro students. What would happen if sorority doll went to her house dance with a Negro date? And, it does not take a waiver from the national group to bring a date to a house dance ! For those of you who think I am putting you on. the next time you catch your self staring at a mixed cou ple having coffee in the crib, ask yourself why you are staring. Sex is not THE. but it is ONE of the problems in race relations. Onlv until e' if USED CAKC we can look at sex as some thing other than what PLAYBOY would have us do can we start to solve the sexual myth. Perhaps by then some of the politi cal and economical aspects to civil rights will be over and we can begin to see people for what they are. The Daily Nebraskan l.EE MARSHALL. manaalna Milton SI'SAN HITTER, Mm rditori BOB SAMFELSON, orU roitor! LYNN CORCORAN, vflt news ulltorl TRISC1LLA Ml'LLINS, irnor itarf writer: STEVE JOR DAN. KFITH SCNOR. RICH MEIER, WAYNE KRECSflHER, junior start writers; JAMES PK.ARSE. ir assistant i POLI.T RHVNAI.DS, CAROLE RENO, JIM KORSHOJ. copy rdltorsi SCOTT RYN'TARSON. ARNIE PETERSON. MIKE KIRKMAN. PETE LAOK. CONNIE RASM1TRSEN,. kariswaa axlsUnls; .MM II('K, snliscrlpttaa manareri LYNN RATHJEN, elre. lation manager! Kip Htrachbaeh, photoirapher. Phone 477711, Extension! 258S. 2SS9 and 2590. Subscription rate S3 per a mester or $S per year. Entered as neoond elan matter at the post office in Lincoln, Ne braska, nnder the act of August , 1912. The Daily Nebraskan to published at Room 51, Nebraska Union, on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday daring the school year, ex cel during vacation and final ex amination periods, and once during August It Is published by I'nlverslty of Nebraska student under the juris diction of the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications. Publica tions shall be free from censor ship by the Subcommittee or any Person outside the University. Mem bers of the Nebraskan are respon sible for what they cause to be printed. THINK... PIZZA HUT PIZZA PIZZA HUT 46th of "0" 489-4601 tiiV 11.1,111 I. .Ml... J ) d imc rum nm hinit, ncimu, ic9siiil tin. Dtaltr (ifnature