Fox's Facts 4 : it -V. :-? b id ' . . As ) T if i i i ... ) . f ' ' V V hi V " V J . -.8 , , : ( n" '' irk - V .-v.. J V, t,ff 7 ! ' I ' 7. if '0 Alan'yn Hoegemeyer, editor Page 2 Mike Jeffrey, business mcnager Wednesday, October 20, 1965 To Ease Problenfi There is a parking problem on cam pus. Despite reports that there are am ple stalls for whatever size or make of car you are driving there are not. Lincoln students have a continuous problem finding a place to park their car. Most begin the day at least an hour earlier in order to get a parking place on campus. A five dollar fine is new this year for those who park in a University zone without the proper identifying sticker. The problem is not limited to students only but has become a daily headache for many faculty members as well. The campus policemen , check the parking meters more diligently this year, and the motorized-types make more fre quent trips around University Square with their long-handled chalk markers. More students than ever before are finding little yellow tickets on their wind shieldswhich necessitates a trip to the Geography Building within a week or an additional fine is imposed. Past editors of the Daily Nebraskan have dealt with the parking problem. Several have suggested that the solution is to prohibit on campus parking entirely. This solution would solve, in part, the building space problem. Instead of rows and rows of shiny vehicles parked on slab after slab of cement we could have buildings classroom buildings. This solution would also bring on oth er problems. Lincoln students would groan: ride a bike from Havelock? Those students who drive 20-50 miles in to Lin coln every day for classes would emit even louder groans. And obviously a stu dent from Schuyler or Bankelman would be handicapped without a car on cam pus. The Lincoln community provides less than adequate eating and entertainment facilities within walking distance of the campus. Though the bike-only-routine has been successful on a number of campuses, it is not a practical solution for the Uni versity of Nebraska. The predicted in crease in enrollment urges some solu tion. A less drastic measure could ease the problem. Freshmen and sophomores could be prohibited from obtaining parking per mits. The number of drivers applying for permits would decrease. The places their cars now fill could be used by the older (more fortunate) students who daily put miles on their cars looking for their parking space. This solution would not be welcomed by the freshmen and sophomores, but it is practical and necessary. MARILYN HOEGEMEYER Teach-In Discussion Disturbing Dear Editor: I think those interested in our present policy in Viet Nam found, in the teach-in discussion Sunday night in Love Library, an enthusias tic atmosphere. But there were a few things which distrub me that I would like to bring out here. My opinion is related to Dr. Trask's and Dr. Sakai's assertion that the Commu nist China's expansionism is an outgrowth of Chinese history rather than a con flict between communistic and free economy ideolo gies. I find it is quite irrele vant to attempt to establish a linkage between Commu nistic China and historical China. Communist China does not represent historical China. They are two totally different societies in the cultural sense as anthro poligists use the definition, only unfortunately we do not have t w o, distinct names for them. Whoever is familair with modern Chinese history, or specifically with the May Fourth Movement in 1919 will know how hard the Chi nese Communist scholars, who first introduced com munism into China through Japanese translations of Marxist works, have tired, along with anarchism, and individualism, to eradicate Chinese traditions. Communists brand the long respected historical images: Confucious as thief, Lao-tze as cheater, and Mo tze as robber. They destroy the basic structure of Chi- nese society: family s y s -terns. They unto everything that Chinese culture treas ures. Thus I would declare that Communist China, in the true Chinese sense, is not Chinese. And if one is a real Chinese, he is anti-communist. Dr. Sakai adduced the Mo gol attempts to occupy Bur ma and Japan in 1280 A.D. and Manchurian invasions of Tibet as examples of old Chinese expansionism, but do you recall these two for eign dynasties also con quered China, including the 10-day massacre of Yang chow, the Chinese populated city. If we would ever be con- Daily Nebraskan Member Associated Collegiate Press, National Ad vertising Service, Incorporated. Published at Room 51, Nebraska Union, Lincoln, Nebraska. TELEPHONE: 477-8711, Extensions 2588, 2589 and 2590. fttibterlpttoD ritu are (4 pr irmoirr or M lor tho nrademlc rrar. Entered at mcoim) clasa matter at too Dost (fka to Lincoln, Nebranka, andVr the act of Aumt 4, 112. The Dallr Nehratkan Is published Mondar. Wrdntitdar, Tburaday and Friday during the school rear, aicrnt during vacations and exam periods, hy atudents et the Lolvertlty at Nebraska under the Jurlsdidlen ! the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications. Publications shall be free from eensorsbip by the Kubcommittee er any person outside the University. Members el the Nebraskan are responsible lor srhat they cause to he printed. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor, MARILYN HOKGF.MKYERi manaaik editor. CAROLE RENOi nesrs editor. JOANNE STOHLMANl sports editor. JIM SWART,' night news editor, BOB HKTHFRFLLl senior stall wrllers, WAYNE KHU SClll.lt I Junior stall writers, JIXIE MORRIS, STEVE JORDAN. JAN ITKIN, BRI'CE GILES, DIANE LINDOLIST, TONY MYKRSl East Campus reporter, JANE PALMKRl sports assistant, JAMES JPEARSKi copy editors, TOLLY KHYNOLDH, SPENCER DA VIM, JACK TODD. BUSINESS STAFF Business manager. MIKE JKFFFRYl business ansiitanls, CONNIE RAH. Ml vsrN. BRi:t,E WRIGHT. MIKE KIRK .MAN, SHIRLEY WENTINKl rlrrulallon manner. LYNN RATH J FN subscription nianacera, Jim Runts, John Rasmussea. HI HINFSS OFFICE HOI KS: I I, p.m. Monday throuah Friday. 121:' NOW 3 3 ".....,; a I WINNER OF 3 1 I ACADEMY AWARDS! I ANTHONY QUINN J Student lummer fob in Ger many offered by Lufthansa German Airlines, in coopera tion with the German Gov ernment Labor Office. Stu dent may work on farms, In dustry, or In hotels and hos pitals. No fee is charged for assisting students 18 years r older in securing summer jobs for 1966 in Germany. For further information and obtaining the official appli cation forms, ploase contact. Mr. Omer Aktimur TRAVEL AND TRANSPORT, INC. 3230 Harney Street Omaha, Nebraska, 68131 YOUR COLLEGE CLASS RING A LIFETIME SYMBOL. OP A PRICELESS POSSESSION YOUR COLLEGE EDUCATION. It le also a pieoe of fine 10K Jewelry you will always be proud to wear . . . Created by Owatonna, Minnesota Order Ring Now At , CAMPUS BOOKSTORE 1245 R Street LINCOLN 8. NEBRASKA By GALE POKORNY What with hour exams and the daily quiz, outside class work, themes, extra books to read and analyze plus the regular work, one has little time these days to keep up with the adven tures of Gomer Pyle on tel evision. In fact, seldom does the opportunity arise when a college student even gets near a tube let alone have the time to sit down an1 stare blankly into one with childhood fascination and awe. Since we don't have have time anymore to watch and keep up with the local cartoon shows, the college student must seek entertain ment elsewhere and a form that doesn't require regular submission. The local movie palace precisely fits the bill. One can wander into the movie theater anytime diir ing the evening and find the same quality of entertain ment that is being emitted from the tube these days, namely instead of being fed an hour or a half hour of corn, one can now get his vegetables in two and. two and a half hour in stallments. The plots are the same too, nonexistent, and the acting in both re minds me of the good o I d days when I was an eighth grader participating in the annual Christmas pagent. But yet, when all the com paring is over, movies are still preferable, in my book at least, because they pro vide a lot better source of chucks; not as a result of what is on the screen, but because when you watch television you don't have a hundred and fifty idiots sit ting around you, (I don't anyway). If you want to watch the local athletic team work out some night, just go to one of the theaters downtown and you can sit there all evening watching the boys use up their special twenty five passes by throwing bags of popdorn back and forth and yelling various signals. It doesn't make any differ ence if they miss parts of the show, they've already seen it six times before. If your sex life is giving you problems, look around, Roger Romeo and Candy Christian are there some where, sometimes you can pick up some valuable pointers. If your University s t u -dent ego has been shot down lately, look around again, there's usually some fifth grade dwarf there making some kind of noise for which you can stare h i m down, into submission and silence. This never fails to boost one's moral. If your sense of humor is giving you problems and you are beginning to doubt its perceptiveness, you can always compare it with those of the throngs of oth er college students that abound there and see if you too can snicker .dirtily in all the "right places." Also a m o v i e theater is just a good place to yuk it up w i t h a lot of your friends. A good laugh is likewise good for the moral and nothing brings down the house like watching the heroine slowly die of gang rene or something. So as you wander back to your respective rooms feel ing slightly squirmish with all the rancid popcorn and watered down, ice cube filled Coke you have ab sorbed, you can see why the "talkies" have hit it big among the college genera tions and tomorrow's lead ers. Base-r Panhellenic has set the av erage required for initiation of sorority pledges at 2.0, as opposed to the 2.3 required by IFC for fraternity pledges. Undoubtedly statistics will show a higher percentage of girls initiated than boys, once again proving that girls are smarter than boys. cious of how many millions of overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia are anti communistic, if we are ever aware of how many free Chinese intellectuals in this region are waging a neo Confucianism movement to hit communistic ideas as hard as possible, we would not at will blur the distinc tion between Chinese heri tage and the non-Chinese communism. We would then not chase those millions of free-loving Chinese into the arms of Red China by branding them as the disa greeable result of Chinese expansion as colleagues with Red China. Thank you, Lloyd L. Lee FLOWERS and THE HOUSE OF ORIGINALS 1133 NORTH COTNCR BUVO. LINCOLN 8. NEBRASKA for corsages E. gift and v V I i. ZsM lv mK house decorations omecomina 434-6361 ru i mi, i a i in i n u u w .i i ! SJf-'L r. i e 9 man. vqitHMmmwwM npnn I 1 9k III S3 MWUh - I ( pi MP"' 1 I i iLjl O'OODOJ After-Shave, $3.50, Cologne $4.00 Available at these campus stores: Miller & Paine Ben Simon's & Sons, Inc. t - , ..,iii..,ii.nriii.ii -tit- For Students? Davis Backed Dear Editor: I wonder... the decision to neutralize Thanksgiving. . . Was it really made in the student's interest, allegedly to lengthen their holiday? Or merely made to facili tate attendance at a nation ally televised football game? Which attendance, under Lhe former circumstances, might otherwise be not quite so 'mpressive? No doubt the administra tion is extremely happy about the problems 01 sched ule change which it did not find? But what of the prior commitments and travel arrangements of those who had previously planned to go somewhere, such as home? And why WAS the decision formally announced a week later? Jack Hennessy Dear Editor: My compliments to Spen cer Davis for his discerning observations on two front page articles appearing in Thursday, October 14, Daily N ' raskan. His remarks reflect the feelings of a great number of students of this Univer sity, who, taking the so called action groups as a grain of salt, did not take time to comment. Rod Basler Solution Dear Editor: If Dean Ross wishes to demonstrate his concern for the students and lay to rest all claims of administration apathy, the solution is sim ple. Fire Trask. Sincerely, Dennis Gleesoo 1965 UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA Home Coming Show jfl" f m LAil .V J, -it - Starring George Shearing Quintet Plus The Other Thrtt rep Vocal Croup And Rusty Ryan Comedian Pershing Auditorium Sat., Oct. 23, 8:30 P.M. Tickets $1.75, $2.00, $2.25 On Sal In Nebr. Union Dorit Miss This Great Show George Washington, the Father of our Country, made history when he led the charge up San Juan Hill. Later Presidents have attempted to equal this historic charge, only to have their Diners' Club cards revoked. If you already know where it's at, but don't know how to tell it-let George do it for you! Charge to your nearest record store, book store, or any store that sells records. There you'll find history in the making; and find history book covers, not to mention biology, math, and other selected short subjects. What do book covers have to do with records? That's another chapter. (And, unless you're a loser, you'll check out the lineup' of Capitol records, too! That means the Beatles, The Beach Boys, The Lettermen, The Seekers and so on!) GOLD'S records , . . street floor