VNtYUUITY Of Him MBRAftY E miiiimiimmiimiininniiimfinnminiiiiiiiiiini un i i 11 bfl yypl JjUnttiiwil Ammi D) U If y m REVIEW CAMPUS . . . AWS STANDARDS Week has been observed on the Uni versity campus with a new emphasis on creativity. The week has included a speech from a former National Mor tar Board president and a group of displays. FM RADIO station for the University campus has re ceived further consideration by G. Robert Ross, vice chancellor and dean of stu dent affairs, and Robert Spearman, professor of jour nalism. Dean Ross said that certain parties connected with Lincoln radio stations had expressed concern over the possible campus educational station. THE UNIVERSITY BOARD of Regents accepted a report recommending that the 1,400 acre agronomy farm east of Lincoln be used for residential purposes. The land, which has been used for agricultural experimentation, is scheduled to be phased out and the work transferred to the field laboratory at Mead. GENE GADD1E, a Univer sity journalism student, was heid in contempt of court, af ter contacting seven members of the Duane Pope jury, by Federal District Judge Rob ert Van Pelt. Gaddie was working on a story about how the trial duty was af fecting the private lives the jurors. of CITY JOB CORPS officials in Washington are considering a proposal to use the Lincoln Air Force Base, set for de activation in June, as a Jobs Corps Training Center. The proposal was jointly spon sored by the University and Northern Natural Gas Co. DUANE POPE'S trial for the bank robbery and killings at Big Springs, Neb., was highlighted in the U.S. District Court when Franklin Kjeld gaard, sole survivor of t h e bank robbery in which three persons were killed, was brought into the courtroom. He gave the jury an eyewit ness account of what hap pened. STATE STATE SANITATION Engi neer T. A. Filipi said Ne braska is well ahead of the national anti water-pollution program. Refering to the fed eral Water Quality Act of 1965. Filipi said Nebraska al ready has a water quality plan adopted in 1964, and ail it need do is submit it to the government. GOVERNOR'S COMMIT TEE on Education, clearly not satisfied with the status quo of Nebraska education, concluded its initial meeting on an aggressive note. The committee directed its exec utive board to formulate pro posals dealing with manda tory minimum educational programs in elementary and secondary grades, a master plan for education and reor ganization of Class I, II and III school districts. STATE ROADS DEPART MENT is planning an ambi tious road beautification pro gram for the future on the Interstate and primary high ways in Nebraska. Accord ing to the Nebraska break down, the state has completed four major rest and recrea tion areas on the Interstate and on such area on a primary highway in the period from Jan. 21 to Sept. 1 of this year. NATIONAL... PREMIER FIDEL CAS TRO, possibly facing growing domestic pressure, is now ask ing the United States to re vise the just-concluded refu gee agreement so that more discontented Cubans can leave the island at a faster rate. The Cuban leader said that the monthly rate of 3,000 to 4,000 refugees expect ed to start pouring into Mi ami by Dec. 1 was "too small" and would result In a "jam up." SEVENTEEN-year-old ser vicemen have been banned from duty in South Viet Nam. The new pentagon policy, ef fective Immediately, will not affect men on sea duty in wa ters off Viet Nam. Nor will H end overseas duty for 17-year-olds elsewhere in the world. The minimum age for service in South Viet Nam will be 18, the Pentagon an nouncement said. By Marilyn Hoegemeyer It was 10:10 a.m. Thursday morning. No one else In the Nebraskan office except a photographer typing -a note. The phone rang. A male voice said rather slowly, "Is yoh spoats editah theayeh?" Not expecting a voice that didn't mutilate the "r" sound as a Nebraskan does, I explained that Jim Swartz wasn't in the office, explained my position and asked if I could help. 'Weell, yeahes you can," the voice drawled. "Ah'm Don Jones from the Sigma Chi house at the University of Arkansas. We wondah if it's true that you-all are going to the Orange Bowl instead of playing a real football team at Dallas?" The voice went on, "We read in this morning's Dallas Morning News (it's the only good paper we can get heah in Arkansas) that you-all'll make the decision after you play Oklahoma State. Is that right?" I explained that I understood that a definite statement would be made after that game. "We think that if you do decide to go to the Orange Vol 81, No. 35 f fa Y f i A Photo by Chuck Kurtznun A U.S. FLAG . . . that has flown over the Capitol building in Washington, D.C., was presented by Diane Michel, Panhellenic president, (left) to Rod Johnson, vice president of Nebraska Union Board, (right) Thurs day at a luncheon. Nancy Probasco. president of Junior Panhellenic, (center) presented the Union with a new Ne braska flag. The U.S. flag was sent to Panhellenic by Sen. Carl Curtis and bloth flags will be permanently dis played' in the lounge of the Union. Hyde Park Forums To Resume Thursday Hyde Park was canceled this week because of prob lems of congestion and sched uling, according to Richard Scott, Nebraska Union pro gram manager. He said that the discussion forum was planned to be moved to the Pan American room in the Union, "but since it is primarily a food-service area, it is booked up with events for weeks in ad vance." The forum will be held next j Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in the Union Lounge as before, ac cording to Scott. He said that steps were planned to "rem edy our problems of conges tion in the hall-ways." The hall-way congestion blocks traffic to other meet ings and areas of the Union, Scott said. To help this, members of the Union Talks Tryoufs To Open For Lab Theatre Tryouts for six University Laboratory Theatre produc tions will be held Monday through Wednesday. Held in Room 201 Temple Building from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. and again from 7 to 10 p.m., the tryouts are open to anyone interested in theatre. Castings will be made for 25 male parts and 14 female parts. The plays, running two on a bill, will be presented Dec. 15-16, Jan. 8 9 and Jan. 15-16. The plays, their authors and their student directors, are: "Ths Tiger" by Murray Sehis gal, Pat Becker; "The Collec tion" by Harold Pinter, Shari Hamre; "Hughie" by Eugene O'Neill, Bill Rosenthal; "The Breasts of Tiresias" by Gil laume ApoHlnalre, Janet Zas trow; "The Hour-Glass" by W. B. Yeats, Sally Catterson. and "The Creditors" by Aug ust Strindburg, DeWayne Harrison. Kx ' ' i 1 M .7- and Topics Committee, which sponsors the forum, will act as 'traffic managers" to keep students from blocking the hall-ways. The lounge area may also be roped off, according to Scott. 'We ask observers and par ticipants for their coopera tion in not blocking the hall ways," Scott said. "Otherwise we may have to move the for- ii m frnm the cnmvc " he add- Fisher micultural By Jane Palmer Horses, oxen and human hands are still common farming tools in Chile, ac cording to Everett Fisher. Fisher, who works in the agriculture department of a Chilean school sponsored by the Seventh Day Adventist Church, is on leave from Chile as a University stu dent in dairy science and nutrition. He explained that agricul turally the people of Chile are 25 to 30 years behind the United States. "Most people work with horses and oxen. Many are still broadcasting seeds (sowing their seeds by hand) and cutting wheat by hand," he said. Even though Chile is 25 to 30 years behind, this does not mean that in 25 or 30 years they will be at the same level the United States is today because their rate of progress is so much slower, Fisher said. "Chile's rate of progress Is such that the range be tween us is becoming wider Bowl it's because you're afraid to play us down at Dallas. Now do you think that's right?" With the ole Husker spirit gathering faster with every word, I nearly shouted that if we decided to play in the Orange Bowl it certainly wasn't because Nebraska was afraid of Arkansas. It was the voice again this Jones who said, "What else can we think if you-all decide to have fun on the beaches instead of playing a real team?" I asked him if he were a member of the campus news paper staff. He said he wasn't just a student offering a personal challenge to the University of Nebraska Cornhusk ers. "If you-all aren't scared of playing Arkansas, we'll be looking for you in Dallas then. Nice talking to you. Bye now." "Yea, nice talking," I think I -said. The voice was gone. It was 10:14 a.m. Several people had wandered Into the office wanting to talk. We talked. Several staff mem bers arrived. We laughed about the Jones call from Arkan- N HSPA Welcomes Students The Nebraska High School Press Association (NHSPA) m ic Sdfh annual rnn- wiu uuiu no u.v James Morrison, assistant .fA f irtiimaiism a n d said that crwenn cfink IIV VAV.VU tfwv from approximately 60 high schools across the state. The program will open with p general session in the Ne braska Union. J. K. Hvisten dahl, former executive secre tary of the South Dakota High School Press Association will speak on "The Changing Face of the High School Newspa per" in the morning session. C. J. Medlin, author and professor at Kansas State Uni versity will also speak at the morning session. His topic will be "School Yearbook Ed iting and Management." The program includes ca reer workshops in advertising and in radio and television in both the morning and after noon. The advertising work shops will hear representa tives of the Lincoln Advertis ing Club while radio-television workshops will tour Lincoln radio stations. Three sectional meetings are also scheduled for stu vention today at the Univer-1 mere w m- . -;t terest m birth control in Lat- dents In newspapers and year- veye(i between one third and books. four-fifths of the women had i used some sort of birth con The convention will con- trol devices. "They were suf clude with a banquet in the ficiently motivated toward Nebraska Union Ballroom, their goal to put action to Robert Spearman, director of their thoughts," Stycos said. KPIX-TV, San F r a n c i s -i Time Is the problem. Even- co, from 1957-1962 and now as sistant professor of journal-' ism at the University, will, speak at the banquet. ' Motes Chilean rather than narrower. This will continue to be true if they are left to progress by themselves, but with outside help they may progress faster," he noted. Fisher indicated that this slow rate of progress in Chile is not because "they don't have the Interest to progress, but that they don't have the capital to invest." Point Four in the Alliance for Progress of the United States has done much to help Chile, he said. He ex plained that the advisers sent to Chile during Tru man's administration were an example of a good way to help these people. "Advisers were sent in to teach the people technical knowledge," he stated. "They trained the local peo ple to handle technical things by themselves and then left. This left local peo ple capable to handle these things by themselves." Fisher noted that although he is a Seventh Day Ad verrtlst missionary, his work in the agriculture depart The Daily Nebraskan Latin America Mevi Attitude On Pop :4.;., , ""'s-" Moyne &tycos, Cornell ! -the : Stycos, director of the In- ternational Population Pro gram, told an audience in Love Library auditorium last night about the population di lemma which faces Latin America. "There is more activity and positive interest now than ever before among govern ments" to ease the popula tion problem, he said. "The wheels are turning, but we still have to push them and point them in the right di rection," he said. The Latin Amercan opin been ion today would have "unthinkable ten years unplausable five years and unlikely a year ago, ago, Stycos said. The old idea that Latin Americans, because of reli gion and custom, want large families, has been proven un true today, he said. "L a t i n American women do not want all the children God sends," he added. Surveys have revealed that most Latin American women want between two and four children. In the cities sur- tually, effective action will re sult. "Every five years Latin America adds another Spain," ment of the college the past nine years really hasn't been religious. He explained that the Chil ean college has about 500 students and is located in Chilian, Chile, as part of a chain of schools started by the Seventh Dav adventists. He said that much of the equipment at the college is very crude and that In 1961 he came to the United States on a summer fur lough. He attended summer school and took back 18 tons of equipment. Typewriters, p r o j e c -tion equipment, a cement mixer, tractors, cultivators, corn shellors and many more pieces of farm equip ment were included In the load he took back. Some of the equipment was pur chased by the church, some donated and some obtained through the self-help p r o gram of Waverly, la. "I'm supposed to go back to Chile in February." he said, "and it should take me until second semester to finish so 1 sure hope that 1 can slay." as. Everyone thought It was funny-cute feature storj. But we were suspicious. At 11:30 a.m. a long-distance phone call was placed to the University of Arkansas, to the Sigma Chi house for Don Jones. A voice answered, "What was the name, mam? Don Jones? Ah'm sorry, we don't have a Don Jones heaver." "Thank you sir, thank you very much," I said. So who is Don Jones? At 1:45 p.m. the phone rang. It was a long distance call from the University of Arkansas, from a sports editor on the Arkansas Traveler, the campus paper. He was checking on a call from a Nebraskan. a Bob Kawalski, who introduced himself as the assistant sports editor for the Daily Nebraskan. Kawalski's story was that a poll was being conducted at the University of iNebraska concerning the upcoming bowl games matching Arkansas and Nebraska. ' Who is Kawalski? He doesn't work on the Nebraskan. "I think someone's just having a little fun." the Traveler's sports editor said. We agreed. Don Jones and Bob Kawalski may be one in the same -Jones, a guy with a fairly convincing southern accent. Kawalski, a guy with a Nebraska name a guy who wants a trip to Dallas, revenge on Arkansas. ulation he said. "The increase in pop ulation from 1920 to 1980 alone will populate an India and Pakistan," he said. The problem is not just high fertility, but "fertility com bined with low mortality. The balance of birth over death is unprecedented," he said. These rapid increases are absorbing resources which could otherwise be used to further capital investment. Economic growth is be ing kept to '"frustratingly low rates" Stycos added. To illustrate the immediate problem ef a high population rate. Stycos explained the crowded conditions of El Sal vador. El Salvador, like much of Latin America, must dou ble its present school space in the next few years in order to maintain its present educa tional standards. "We're not guessing about figures in this case. These children are al ready bom," he said. la'KRI'Xr FISIIKR . . 30 mr iM'hlnd the 1'nik-d tin ::r -fy-K 'pf zin it ' i ' V r ' ' t ;-t; f 3 Xt r f L? ill j IF ' III - - mt " f 2! g-wi4 ; I H' A I I1 W,.V '' I 1 " It f H ? I ' V ' It ' f i ' , mm ft " " .Wf ' if . 4 m I i... jfc, i , It ' ' v m zlr y t?t- m 4 - f . XS 1 l f J ' V ( I r: mi r. ' I i ? -1 .i-H- I ' . ' t fix I t; 11 ' i, J s- "LI IP Z r ! ' " , tL r t r : -5 n ..... . . " tr ! ! r. t L ! '' t. ,f . TV -V ' r : f z Friday, Nov. 12, 1965 Shown Control A Pan American Confer ence recently recommended that all nations develop popu lation policies as part of their outlook on economic develop ment. Those attending the conference also felt that gov ernments should make family planning services available, he said. The United States is more willing than ever before to lend aid for programs of popu lation control. The public is no longer overly sensitive about population control, he said. "Now the danger is in too much haste, too much mon ey, and too much 'hard sell'." he said. Americans must be prepared to meet "traditional suspicion" and the Marxist influence. Tntellectuads often oppose American aid, especi ally when it is accompanied by cutbacks in heaJtli pro grams, he said. . "Chile Is agriculturally 25 to StuU - s."