The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 23, 1947, Page PAGE 2, Image 2
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Sunday, November 23, 1947 PAGE 2 Nice Try In an effort to validate the action of the Student Council in ob jecting to the racial discrimination which was prevailed in pig Six conference circles for these many years, The Daily Nebraskan sought produce student response by the polling system. The results speak for themselves ... the Nebraska student governing body acted in complete accord with the majority sentiment. Therefore, the Lincoln conference of campus leaders likewise has received the blessings of the UN student body. If, however, history is soon to repeat itself the only appropriate comment to the student body and the Council is "nice try." If our memory serves use correctly, in May, 1946, students on four Big Six campuses raised an objection to the same clause, which at that time was so quaintly referred to as "a gentlemen's agreemnt." Just as is happening today, those four campuses referred their senti ments to their respective faculty representatives on the Big Six Board of Governors for the board's consideration. The result! The board moguls, always glad to know student reaction to any ques tion, merely put the gentlemen's agreemnt in writing. Like we say, nice try! Consequently it is felt that the action of the students on these some four campuses is futile. Today as it was a year and a half ago. We're young, we're only students and we're rather simple. All the time we thought representative government meant just that, but like I say we're young. Which brings up the only logical question in our minds, just who is supposedly represented on this Board of Governors? If it's the faculty, then speak up, where did we first hear of the definition of representative government? If it's the administration, then moisten your vocal cords and expound! If it's the students, then let the students be heard. Unless of course we've become mere names on registration fee receipts or numbers on an IBM machine. Our Forty-Scond Yr! IVu T.TV4.S. TUXEDO TIME AT SIMONS! Tcdlorfri to perfection. . mid-night blue worsteds with groicrrain faced long rolled lapels. THE PERFORMER 39.50 And You Know It's Perfect . . . Because Simons Won'! Let You Wear It Unless it FUst VU CMlnf Second ,7e Dear Editor: The results' of the racial dis crimination poll, I . feel, will be known even before tabulation unanimous support of the Stu dent Council's decision. Around the campus today one couldn't help notice the unusu ally large number of Daily Ne braskan's with this ballot blank missing. This great interest, I be lieve, was created by the recol lections of most veterans. Some of us worked with Negro soldiers during the war and found them both cooperative, hard-working and entertaining. Some of us recollect that our constant at attemps to hitch-hike rides on a furlough were almost always helped by a Negro driver irre gardless of official regulations. You know too that some of our finest musical work comes from the Negro race. We, whites, look down on the Negro because his living condi tions are below ours. He is re stricted in almost every economic field. Authorities say remedies will be slow to come. This is our fait because it is our natural instinct to look out for ourselves. As whites have we any right to restrict the Negro from competi tion in our athletics? Lets go on the books as one group of humans who believe in equal rights for all men. Lets have one field in this land of ours where at the present time, there are no restrictions on the Negro. Maybe the Constitution should be revised to add another free dom the freedom of participa tion. William S. Stocking. JhsL (Daily. ThJbhasJicuv , ' Member Intercollegiate Press FORTY-SIXTH IfEAB fluh.oHpt.on ig fl.60p emeter. l &? year, bj.vo manea. diubk cvpy - - - . : - -days and Saturday, vacation and examination period, by the University im uder the npervtlon of tbe Publication Board. Entered a second the eoHer KtCADl MfUtl mjRH.lra w, A t h. anmnririmi at the Class Matter at the fort Of tic la Uneola, Nebraska, wider Act of Congress S. 1818. and at (pedal rate f posture prvrtoea tor t. 1917. authorized Beptemoer JO, iwtt, March section 1103. Act of October The Dally Nebraska la published by the stnoent 01 me university vi nnwu a expression of students new and opinion only Aecoraini o Law t-overoln student publication and administered by the Board of Publications "It 1 thVdeelared policy ol the Board that publication under tt Jurisdiction shall be free from editorial censorship on the part of the Board, or on the part, ol any member of the faculty of the university: but member of the taff of The Dally Nebraiksn are personally responsible for what they say or do or cause to be printed." EDITORIAL STAFF .... , Dak Novotn Mi.' rditors". " 7 "7. H1U. eore.. Miller New. Editor Jeanne Kerrlcan, Norn Lerer. Wally Becker, Cub Clem, Tottw iddocii Kports Editor At New Editor Special Feature Editor Society Editor .ri'n Oould Flan . .Jack Helzer Irwin be sen Ralph Stewart . . Keltb Frederlcksou Sam Wane) Charle Hemmlns-soa Business Manager Circulation Manacer v Assistant Business Manager Bill Wilkin. Merle Stadler, (Ed Note: The opinions expressed by columnists In The Dally Nebraskan do aot necessarily represent those of the University or The Dally Nebraskan.) Student Placement Meeting A.me- l if. At o iuonuav Aiiernoon The meeting between UN seniors and representatives-of the Civil Service and the Corps of Engineers will be held Monday evening at 5 p. m. in Room 107B Social Sciences. The purpose of the meeting will be to find placement for deserv ing students who would have a hard time finding a good job in their fields in other days. The entire placement program at. this university is under the direction of T. J. Thompson, who is acting under dual capacity of Chairman of the Educational Placement committee and liaison officer,f the Eeighth Civil Service region at the university. Other information on senior placement may be obtained from the office of the Dean of Student Affairs in Room 104 Administra tion. Engineers and chemists are especially wanted by most big comorations now. according to Dean Thompson's office. THE DELTA UPSILON'S finish of their skit with the chorus spell ing out Delta U on their unmentionables. Anything for a laugh. Veterans Swell College Ranks To 2,500,000 "A decided drop in the inflow of new veterans but an over flowing reservoir of total col legiate students" is the report on current attendance at American universities and colleges made public by Dr. Raymond Walters, president of Cincinnati and na tionally known statistician of higher education. Telling of preliminary statis tics received from 350 approved institutions throughout the coun try. Dr. Walters said: "As com pared with the first-time G. I. invasion of the colleges a year ago .there are fewer freshman veterans on the campus this fall, the decreases ranging in gen eral from 10 to 75 percent. "However ,a remarkably high proportion of the 1,000,000 vet erans who entered college last year with federal payment of their tuition and subsistence did academic work and have re turned to upper classes this year. "There has, moreover, been a big increase in the number of students going to . college di rectly from high schools, so the combined veterans and non veterans taking both fulltime Campus News In Brief Ii Tau Sigma The president of Pi Tau Sigma should contact Jane McArthur, managing editor of the Cornhus ker immediately, concerning the group picture which was sched uled for Friday, Nov. 28, at 5 p. m. It will have to be re scheduled before Dec. 1, since this date is during Thanksgiving vacation. Air Reserve The Air Reserve Association will meet Tuesday No. 25, at 7:30 p. m. at the 4 and 8 club in the Lincoln hotel. Lt. Enger will speak of the Oklahoma City Air Reserve convention which he attended. COBS TASSELS All CORNHUSKER salesbooks mut be turned back to the Corn huker office before 5:00 Tuesday, Nov. 25. and part-time courses will prob ably approach 2,500,000 as com pared with about 2,000,000 in the fall of 1946. The current enrollment will likely prove over 50 percent largeer than that of the ' prewar peak reached in the fall of 1939, Dr. Walters concluded. McWilliams, Noted Author Tq Talk Here Carey McWilliams, noted au thority on the history of racial minorities in the United States, and the causes of racial con flicts, has agreed to speak at the next all-university convocation on Wednesday, Dec. 3 at 11 a. m. in the Union ballroom. McWilliams will talk on "Or ganized Racism A Threat to Democracy." A California at torney who was head of the Cali fornia division of immigration and housing from 1939 to 1943, McWil liams has spent a good many years in the study of the various phases of the subject of minorities. He has written many books such as "Prejudice," "Brothers Under the Skin" and "111 Fares the Land" which have received widespread attention in this country. Urges New Policy. . Urging the necessity for es tablishing a new policy about mi norities, McWilliams says that it must be based on scientific fact and not upon a "miscellaneous col lection of old wives' tales and su perstitions" and must also be based upon the American concep tion of citizenship. Ominous signs today, and re newed attacks of violence upon Negroes which have gone com pletely unpunished. One of the threats to democracy, he warns, will be made thru power politics utilized by demagogues. California Grad. Carey McWilliams was born in Steamboat Springs, Colo., on Dec. 13, 1905. After attending Colo rado schools he entered the Uni versity of Southern California, where he was graduated in 1927 with an LL.B. degree. In 1940 he became president of the com mittee for the protection of the foreign born, formed for the pur pose of preventing passage of the numerous anti-labor and anti alien bills pending in Congress. Opinion Poll ... (Continued from Page 1.) ballot. Tabulated as a percent age of persons interviewed, the survey results are: Question I . II III Survey Yes M.91, srt.i 59.4 results Undrrldcd No OS. 4 09.9 .4 87.5 1S.S U.t indicate that while nearly 90 of those ques tioned opposed the discrimination against Negroes in current Big Six rules, students at large were not as keen for the rest of the Student Council resolution. The majority opposed endorse ment of the council demand that the University withdraw alone un less discrimination is eliminated. However, about 60 were favor able to reforming the conference including only the schools admit ting Negroes. Classified FOR SALE Sire 38 "Tux coot size 38. Reasonable. Call 5-801 complete. Top- 118. LOST Brown blU-fold lost In Coliseum at . 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