9 ft. i t university or iNeprasko -Nebraskan Editorials- The Great Ideal Campus Capers By Bruce Conner On the 86th anniversary of the University of Nebraska, those who somprise it can accept the day apathetically or they can throw back their shoulders, settle down comfortably in a oft easy chair and meditate upon the G-R-eat advances made at this G-R-E-at University of the G-R-E-A-t State of Nebraska in true sub conscious oratorical form. Or, they can seriously and intelligently pon der the problem of where the University is headed. An anniversary calls for retrospection with an eye to the future. It is not the time for glorified words hung from pink clouds ex tolling the greatness of its faculty, students and alumni. The advances of the past P6 years at this time should be accepted gratefully and with pride, but that pride should not prevent ua from observing the shortcomings of the University. Thanks to the men who have administered tha University's long range building programs (and to the legislature for appropriating the urns needed), we have made great strides in the last decade. But there are still plans and dreams to be realized. As long as we have antiquated buildings such as the pharmacy building, the University administration cannot relax. The answer is not simple, but an answer must be found. Tha physical plant of the University Is only small part of the factors which measure a UMOC Abandoned? Last week AUF abandoned sponsorship of the Ugliest Man On Campus contest, Instigated as a soliciting "gimmick" a few years ago. UMOC was designed to pressure organized houses and dorms in to contributing more money to AUF during its annual fall drive. The idea was to set up an elective contest with candi dates based on the amount of money their houses or dorms contributed. A maximum money goal was set and if the houses met thia goal they were allowed a UMOC candi date. AUF has been under criticism for using this method as a money soliciting device. A charity organization, AUF was accused of misinterpret ing charity principles. The purpose of AUF was not to force students into contributing money by setting up a competitive situation in which tudents had to participate or "lose face" but to create a desire on the part of students to contribute money to worthy causes by their own volition. This is the basic principle of charity and this year AUF seems to have re newed its responsibility to that principle. UMOC, by virtue of its purpose, has no place In the program of a charity organization unless that purpose Is changed. AUF could have main tained an annual UMOC election if they had so desired only on a different competitive basis. Had the organization merely abolished the pur pose which UMOC served and maintained the contest as an annual campus election on a per aonal competitive basis it would have been more compatible with the campus spirit. UMOC has been accepted as an annual tradi tion, not because of AUF in particular,but be cause of the interest it has created in the past among the campaigning candidates and the student body in general. The Nebraskan hopes UMOC will not become a past frivolity. The energetic support per se that UMOC has had in the past is indicative that the campus wants and is willing to par ticipate in this activity. All UMOC needs is a new "face."-J. H. university's worth. Its administrators, faculty and students, backed by the people of Nebraska and particularly the alumni, contribute to the real University, which in essence is an ideal or goal. This Ideal is something which has never been satisfactorily defined but which hinges on the word education. The basic problem of a university is to define education. With this definition in mind its personnel then have a direction towards which to bend their efforts. In this respect the students and faculty have let the University down. They have missed the real meaning of the word education. Each member of the University population is so close to his individual position that he "cannot see the forest for the trees." Students think of col lege as a four-year sojourn without responsibili ties other than to mind their own business and protect their interests. Professors become so concerned with their particular courses that the courses are isolated from the broad stream of knowledge called education. The colleges too are guilty of a sort of isola tionism. Administrators and faculty members must place greater emphasis on re-examining the goals of each college as they fit into a University education as a whole. They must conscientiously evaluate the consequences of this trend toward specialization and recognize its place complementing liberal education. A new chancellor-has attempted through close contact with students to unite the self interested student with that ideal or goal of a university which gives its buildings and per sonnel meaning. But in his effort to under stand the students' individual problems, he has not been met with a similar attempt to under stand the over-all workings of a University, Unfortunately, students and faculty members have developed a self-satisfaction hinging on selfishness that is depriving the administration of the moral support and understanding that is necessary before the University of Nebraska can fully realize the ideals in the minds of its founders 86 years ago. Our University is a good one. On its 86th birthday we have no right to ignore the strides which have been made during this century. It is not the time to glory in these strides, but rather it is the time to continue the strides through a greater understanding of what edu cation is all about. K". N. Spring Preview Warm weather and optimism seem to have a definite relationship. The warm spell, which should remain for a few more days, makes the carefree young man more carefree and the spirited young woman more spirited. ' A campus hero, inspired by visions of ver dant picnic acreage, attempts a flying leap over one of the many small, muddy streams which flow through the campus streets. He fails to reach the required distance and be comes very wet. A group of students pick up the remains of previous snowfalls and snowballs and loud words are exchanged. But spring really isn't here. The mud may mix with the white snow, and it is definitely much easier to journey to classes in 40 degree weather than in temperatures of very few degrees above zero. While this pleasant weather is here, why not enjoy it, and when it leaves, as the weather men say it must, we can look back on this diversion as a preview of coming spring months. S. J. Campus Circuit Businessman Stresses Need For Humanities In College Reprinted From The Daily Tar Heel University of North Carolina We watched a Business Administration major thumbing through his class cards yesterday (economics, business organization, accounting, corporation finance) and reflected on a speech made this year at State College by William Euffin of Durham, president of Erwin Mills and former president of the National Associ ation of Manufacturers. The over specialized college graduate, said Mr. Ruffin, who ought to know, "can feel the lack of enough training in the humanities, in language and literature, in the arts." And he added: , "Describing a man as "well-rounded" has, I Suppose, long since become trite, but give me a better expression. At least give me a man for leadership in Industry and commerce who Is a good speaking terms not only with the technical phases of his own business but with many other Important facts of life to which be will find himself exposed the languages, literature, the arts and, neither last nor least, religion. Ila will find himself sorely in need of them and in my opinion cannot develop his full po . tential without them. He will even find it diffi cult to hold his own in the lower echelons of Industrial and business leadership unless he is well-rounded man. "I predict . . . there will be more demands from industry and business to give broader education on the liberal arts courses to the college man working for the specialized degrees." These are not, we repeat, the sentiments of an English professor, but of a businessman. They have been echoed, in the last 12 months, by such distinguished Southern businessmen as the personnel director of the R. J.' Reynolds To bacco Company, the president of Carolina Pow er and Light Company and the vice president of the Norfolk and Western Railwaj i.e Gen eral Electric Company is spearheading a con vincing national crusade for the humanities. The Ford Motor Company is emphasizing liberal arts education as training for its new employees. There is, in all this, the suggestion that a graduate of the University may be a whiz in accounting and business organization and still not be prepared to succeed in business without a little Plato under his belt; that, in fact, the progressive corporations of the day might pre fer an employee made intelligent through hu manistic studies and sciences humanely ap proached to the most aggressive business-trained graduate. There is one consideration more: that the strength of a democratic society is directly proportionate to the number of its citizens whose thinking is not limitrd by their occupa tion and, their class. If, in the end, democracy has any implications, one of them is that its citizens must become involved in it, and not just through their jobs, but through their lives. This seems to us to place the one-track mind behind the times and to form a sermon to the student with the one-track batch of class cards: Greek civilization may be as important as cor poration finance, to your employer as well as to yourself. The Nebraskan m'V -figrnVTI VP 45? m 1 eelal rate 9oUun miMed nt b ftecrlasj ! "'liZSSZfSS? "EDITORIAL STAFF IstercoDeKMte Press . ... . jm Harrtnw RjIMsaaMw National Advertising Service, EdUarw'Pan Editiir Nk Incorporated $Zfi&? .V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V.V. M"1T ASS TSe f?pntsn ! published by students ot the t'ni. Sports Kdilor Brae Hnwmium .-. at fteomskai under the authorisation of the Copj Editors Fn-d Daly, Koger Henkle, $ .t-i:'- on Stnelent Ajtaira ma an expression of tu- San Jensen, Martini Mitchell tt -:-. FuWimtlons under tha Jurisdiction of the At Editor . . o Damkroaer i - mi on Ktudeiit Publications ahmii bs free from Night New EdHor Koaw Hankie . no!tip en th prt of the Subcommittee, Reporter! . . . rlewlT Deep, Joanna Jiinee, Bans tr i-i t-.e paurt of ny pernon outside the Univeralty. The Jeleerhois, Lucigrace Swifter, Julie Marr, Barb Sharp, ev. . - of The Mebnuknn ataff are personally red- Jere DiVtlbiu, Barbara Sullivan, Meaner Piter, Peaty t a for What they aay. or do. or cause to be Volike, Corrlne Kkstrom. Krai BelMorff, Judy Boat, Ron i,,,l WarwMki, Lillian Hascoolidee. Annette Meat, Connie C .rtpfjo, tt n II I semester. S2.S0 JialbM ot Hu(. Ruth. Koui Pat Brown, Marlene Bantin. i-e co'teae. rmr, U walleA Single copy 5c Pan- Johnson, Kay Lew son, Boyer Wnlt. -4 three tue week durin the school year weep i BUSINESS STAFF .- and examination period. One brae la pnblUbea Mi , Ante Jy the VahtnUr of Nebraska nnder the Business Manager . Chet Klneet . f the Committee o Student Publication. Au't Business Manager .... Ben Belmont, Barbara r.icke. i it exn.nd ri natter at the Pott Office in tieorge Madsen, Andy Hove l.... htbtmajt, suum o e Cenaroo. March , 187 w Circulation. Manager la bingei Givin' 'Em Ell Arise, Proofreader! Ye Vengeful Ghost "Emll put it together as a special project In geology and he hasn't figured out how to get out of it yet." Where There's Smoke High Schools Fail To Prepare Student By JOHN GOURLAY and MIKE SHUGRUE Nearly 50 per cent of fraternity pledges will not have made 'their initiation averages first semester if University statistics hold true. This is miserable and inexcusable. We grant that fraternity pledges represent only about 25 per cent of freshmen at the University. However, this fraternity problem highlights the existence of a well recognized freshman problem. This percentage should make every University student pause to consider. What is the problem? Much of the blame for this poor showing goes to our state high schools. Many school graduates, even those with high grades, are not well prepared for college work. They don't have what college professors call "foundation." Nebraska high schools are too easy. Too many teachers are medi . ocre. Schools do not require stu dents to work and study. Attend ance for three years is almost a guarantee of a diploma. A minimum of ef fort lands ade quate g r ades. Courses are watered down. Emphasis o n "a d j u sting" and "develop ing personal- .. . . . s above tne ac Gourlay quisition of solid knowledge. Hieh school athletics are over emphasized. They are the only thing many schools care about. So cial life is ridiculously out of pro portion. The attitude of most stu dents is one of inditterence ana even scorn toward the pursuit of knowledge and the preparation for later life. The result is that our schools are turning out graduates unpre pared for college; immature in their outlook on life and mediocre in their ability to think and reason. Turning again to fraternity pled ges, we may say that these men are also hampered by their initial contacts with fraternities during the summer rushing period. Most future fraternity pledges get their idea of college and college people at this time. The constant round of wining and dining early i ? Iff Lelkrip (Editor's Notet Letters to The Nebraskan mutt be typewritten, double spaced and m t not exceed a maximum of 150 words, the Nebraskan reserve the right to edit lettera submitted. No letter will be printed if it Is not accompanied by the name of the author. Names will be omitted, from publi cation upon request.) Yes, Americanism! Dear Editor: In view of the strong efforts be ing made by many individuals and groups to curtail free thought, the impact of the new J. Leroy Welsh Americanism Award on the prob lem is worth considering. Many hatemongers claim they are for "Americanism" This is only nat ural, since Americanism is an ac ceptable ideal which is hard to de fine. I am glad Mssrs. Carson and Holmes are aware of the dangers. but I don't believe the award is as dangerous as they fear. The first quality upon which it is to be awarded is "outstanding effort in upholding the fundamentals of con stitutional government and the bas ic principles of free institutions." Unquestionably these aims in clude rather than preclude free thought. The second quality i3 to be "extraordinary interest in civic affairs, and in governmental af fairs of his community, his state, and his nation." Nothing subver sive about that; it's downright sen sible. The third quality is "active support of the basic virtues of the Judeo-Christian tradition dedicated to the dignity of man." It's mean ingless, but harmless. On the whole the award is worth while. The real challenge will be to select the staff members who have made genuine contributions to Americanism. F. Jay Pepper , it Ur For The Record Dear Editor: To set the record straight and to terminate question to me on the subject, please record that I am not the "John Carson" who was signatory to a letter of advice to the faculty concerning Leroy Welsh's Americanism award. John W. Carson, Graduate Student, Department of History inculcates in them the partying principles of the College man. They are given no reason to be lieve that their free-as-a-bird high school attitude must change. This breeds in them a desire to conform and they tend to accept these "college" habits. Individuals often cause their own downfalls through lazines". If they had to learn to work and produce in high school they would probably have continued , to do so in col lege. Some, of course, are naive about college. Many, learning little while receiv ing good grades in high school, are ov- By ELLIE ELLIOTT I shall not continue this column where I was so rudely interrupted last week, because what I was going to say would have made my readers awfully unhappy; and I certainly do not want to make you unhappy. Far be it from me to disturb one's peace of mind. In stead, I shall descend from my pedestal and muse. I have been brought face to face with real ity ... or, rather, with the ghosts of reality. I have I , V been shocked into me reau- ration that the 1S pencil of the proofreader is more powerful than the mind of man . . . and more powerful than the typewriter that is- the instru ment of this mind. Shakespeare in all his glory could not have Imagined a character so sublimely non-subsistent as a proof reader. In fact, Big Bill might have learned a considerable amount o technique in his crea tion of ghosts, had he had the rr- m 4 Quick Quips Shugrue erconfident of their college abili ties. The University has a responsibil ity in this situation. Every student should be here to get an education. People who are in school but don't want an education have rio place here. If University graduates are not going to be prototypes of high school graduates, . the. University should demand more from its stu dents and weed out sluffers may be those who survive would gradu ate with more than a diploma. Slogan on a restaurant near the Hoover dam: "Best by a Dam Site." The Maharajah of an interior Indian province decreed that no wild animals could be killed by the populace. Soon the country was overrun by man-eating tigers, lions, panthers, elephants and boars. The people could stand it no longer and gave the maharajah the heave-ho. This was the first instance on record where the reign was called on account of game. Some people have no respect for age unless it is bottled. A self-made man is usually an example of unskilled labor. opportunity to observe this twenti-eth-century ghost of our.. The myr. iads of vengeful ghosts appearing in "Richard III," Julius Caesar," and "Hamlet," were mere appren. tices, in both vengeance and the art of ghosting, compared to the proofreader, The proofreader, for reasons ob vious to all ne apaper readers and writers, dwells in a cave deep be neath the river Styx. There, with his eyes closed, enveloped in neb ulous mediation, he sits. Before him, stretched upon the rack, are the stories and columns for to morrow's paper. As he reaches blindly for his leviathan of a black pencil, tremors of omnipotence lev itate his whole being. He manipulates his tools the rack and the pencil with a mag. nificent dexterity equalled only, perhaps, by the executioner in charge of la guillotine. The bodies upon the rack are stretched so out of proportion that their maker would not recognize them. The foot becomes indiscernable from the head, and either might be in discreetly delegated to oblivion, as the demon cries "Touche!" and thrusts his lead point home. The cave reeks with the honest sweat of industrious labor. His head throbbing in three-quarter time, his fingers numb, he diligently propi tates pronouns, instigates insipid Inversion, and slashes subjective similes. On his wall, flashing in red neon, is is motto: "Mine not to reason why; mine but to con fuse. The final paragraph must go; leave the reader to peruse." Finally, the proofreader, ex hausted, slips the bloodied pulp into a clouded bottle and tosses it into the Styx, whence it drifts soggily down to the newspaper mill, and thence to the reading public . . . And so I muse ... ah, wilder ness. USE NEBRASKAN WANT ADS Room and board available at the Norrla House Co-op at $12.60 per week. Meals alone art J9.00 per week. Ph. 2-5848 at 1725 Q Street. 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