Pace 2 THE NEBRASKAN Friday, April 6, 1956 Nebraskan Editorials: Little man on campus by Dick Bibler i 'I k - e t nto The Students' Hands Two questions that could be very important la the University in succeeding years will be Jut to a vote of the student body May 7 one asking student opinion of the instigation of the honor system at the University, and the other asking opinion of the establishment of a Student Tribunal. - The Student Council has already approved the tribunal in principle. However, since there, rould be no sense in having an honor system or a .tribunal unless the student body wants them, these plans would not be formulated unless the student body voices its approval in the election. A special Council committee has spent a good New Opportunity An opportunity for University students to hear one of the foremost men in the field of sociology wCl be presented next week through the new series of lectures on the humanities. Dr. David Riesman, Jr, lawyer, author and socialist, is being brought to the campus by the University Research Council to initiate a new series, University Lectures in Humanities. Ia the words of the Council, the purpose of this new series is to bring to the campus recog nized scholars who will, from the background of their own specialties, explore and interpret the implications of their knowledge for man and his place in tbt universe. Although Dr. Riesman's field is primarily so ciology, he should have something interesting for every student on the University campus if they will take the trouble to attend the lectures. Students and faculty alike can benefit from the experiences of this man who has engaged in research at many of the leading colleges and universities throughout the country. This new series is another attempt by the University to bring to the campus opportunities for students to broaden their education outside the regular academic fields. Through the lec tures and seminars Dr. Riesman will present, much can be gained that will not be found in class texts. The University Research Council should be commended for originating another series in addition to the Montgomery Lectures. The opportunity is here. The success of the series depends upon the students. BS. deal of time investigating the possibilities of these two programs. The committee recom mended that the honor system and tribunal be approved by the Council. They also urged that next year's Council for mulate these programs, if a vote by the students shows general approval. Because of this recommendation by the com mittee, University students will decide the fate of two ideas which are presently no more than suggestions The general idea of an honor system includes a lessening of faculty supervision in exams, sup ported by a promise from the students not to re ceive outside help from any source. This system is now used in schools such as Tulane, the Uni versity of Virginia and Stanford. A Student Tribunal would enforce University regulations and enforce an honor system, if such was included. Schools having tribunals in clude Iowa State, Kansas State, St. Olaf and Stanford. Further Nebraskan editorials in the next weeks will explain different facets of a student tribunal, and what it might consist of. The honor system, its purposes and its functions will also be ex plained. In these editorials The Nebraskan will endeavor to give the students a clear idea of the questions on which they will be voting. Whether or not an honor system or a tribunal would be positive improvements at the Univer sity cannot be known until they are tried. They should not be tried unless a majority of the student body approves of the ideas, and believes the Council should go ahead with their plans. The responsibility of deciding these issues has been put straight into the hands of the students. The Council was wise in doing this, as a student tribunal and an honor system would affect each and every student. They are of such im port that they cannot be left solely in the hands of the student representatives. This is one of the few chances the student body has to decide on issues affecting them so directly. It is the duty of every student to take notice of the importance of the election, and to do his best to make a wise decision. Take notice of these issues, students of the University of Nebraska! They have passed from the realm of the activity world into your bands. F.T.D. Combined Student Effort The Unkm has announced its plans for the evening Spring Day activities. A carnival, out door movies, three one-hour performances of variety acts and a street dance are a "shot in the arm" to the Spring Day plans. These evening events come in addition to the barbecue and afternoon novelty track events an nounced earlier. . ' The JJ Club's organization of afternoon fun has been carefully arranged. Organized houses are selecting teams to compete in such sundry events as toig-of-war, football throw and greased pig catch. The Ag Exec Board deserves praise for its work to arrange the barbecue. It has the finan cial backing of the administration as well as the Students. The Student Council, Union, X Club and Ag Exec Board have worked out a holiday that is geared to suit the entire' student body. The results of their work is an example of what can be ' accomplished by the combined efforts of studrat groups. The goal of the Student Council's Spring Day committee to establish a campus tradition that every student can enjoy, will owe its success to the joint efforts of the groups. The Union has sacrificed their annual birth day party and has given the Student Council their full cooperation in achieving the Council's goaL By arranging for the extra events they have pursued their job of filling student's needs. The N Club has broadened its scope by work ing on Spring Day. Their participation is an indication of the interest the students as a whole are taking in the new campus holiday. The Ag Exec Board by transfering its energies to the city campus has shown a spirit of unity of both city and Ag campuses working for the good of the University. The organizations deserve praise for their spirit of willing cooperation. The Ag Exec Board, the N Club, Union and the Student Coun cil have worked together with a Busker spirit of cooperation, each doing its utmost to make things a little nicer for University students. Let's hope the students too cooperate to make Spring Day as successful as the plans indi cate AH. Council Prestige At Stake The ultimate decision regarding the lines of authority of Student Council, Interfraternity Council, FsnbeQemc and Student Unkm is still pending. Meaowbik, the Residence EaEs for Men hsva submitted a request to the Council, asking that RAM Council be exempt from the S.7 scholar ship standard passed early last fall. The request was referred to the Judiciary Committee to de termine if the Council bad authority over RAM to impose the scholarship ruling. Tfees actions place Council prestige in a precarious position. first of aS, fee Council has passed a ruling which was originally designed to apply to all ftodezg activities of general University interest. Kow they find that three large campus or famza&ons ETC, Panbeflenkt and Student Umoo consider themselves immune because of pedal Regent provisions; two others The ? ferasksa and the Cornbusker are apparently exempt because they are answerable to a fac ility committee, toe Board of Student Publica tions and another groupOx RAM Council is trying to slip from beneath Council authority. Ia other words, the Council has in theory passed sa all-activity regulation affecting scholarship, but In effect a ruling which, as of bow, earn be applied to only two-thirds of those etudes?! fa extra-curricular activities. And which can be watered down further as e&ssr organizations try to remove themselves from tli clause "of general University interest" ad Cooscil jurisdiction. Thus, w5A the difficulty in enforcing this regulation, why should the Council ever again wish to pan or why would it be fair to pass ither aH-esmpus ruling when it can never Securely bt applied to all student activities? AM fcltowtag this line of reasoning to its logical conclusion, what use is there for a Stu dent Council which is not "the supreme campus governing body" and which cannot pass legisla tion affecting all campus activities. Whether or not the original decision of the Judiciary Committee will be upheld or rejected, the final disposition of the ruling is one which is important for the prestige of the Council and student government at the University of Ne braska. It cannot be delayed much longer. B.B. I Afterthoughts ! Not Appreciated The campus police known for their vigilance and scrutiny sometimes aren't appreciated for the long hours they put in inspecting the park ing lots of organized bouses. One night recently two gendarmes put in a minute examination of a sorority parking area and flashed their lights across the windows. They were greeted with a torrent of unlady like exclamations from a coed their flashlights bad rudely awakened. Escapist Spring is maiMfesied on a college campus in many ways. Coeds blossom into tropical foliage, convertible tops go down and balmy breezes drive industrious students out on the highways and byways of the campus to study under the blue sky. Perhaps the most relaxed of these is one character who has been seen serenely reading out on the third-floor fire escape of a fraternity bouse. It makes him feel aloof from worldly cares, he says. The Nebraskan rirrr-nvE teaes cus . Vmu4 mm nmi mivr a at mm rfft to Meishen Associated Collegia! Press Uaaata, ., mr . im. latareafieglais Press 9A)m EDITORIAL STAFP m M epmmi&vt KatoaaJ AdverHsiaf Service, rmmmm"-m"mm"ZZ?.?SJ rw t iMWIWtf Mm mm PvILfcr-f at Mmm 23, Ciofeist L'aioa ,rr'"'''"'!"rr!r"'r""KiS2S St. St TMtum ,..Sa Caah, AiVaa ffrfeffc, tmr homry, CsSTcrsUy ef Nebraska tout ,.,iara mtm ffr pfwi a"Hw LiiVSiiS, rea.fct ,n,Hmm k Wrtim wrr f r m, Wmnm XmrmHf, Wmnf mm tmrmmm. WM tHr, Inn, afearaa f"hr tia war. mmmrpt rf wmrwnmm tMwnmj IJnmm. tr. M IwaaM. rat iMroo. Vmmry : -"-- , a4 mm t (' wC It.tsmt, Tar. Alnanavt, Pmt roi. f w i.h"-rit M r foWui, fMma rim4 itr frluaaM, few Kink, -. M.mi't an m,mii titmtrw ttrt Mm frtr Pattmmm. , , , . hmm"w"- fm . eM- Z.Jtl?lsSn SlAf f - t n -f. ' m f lrn -: - 'S.-wi vrrs mirnna atawai'mr ....... f'.ittna Midia mi ' ".''. am fmrt ml mm 1 mmmmm VHHmmm ...... J""" ,JT rr!; f ,-..-i.,.i.im tit.it ttxm tF-n-jf DWwMMt w waT Ctrmtmtomn Hanmmt ... .....4,., ..... SixtawS Umltr g I T"V Kf COULD U tli OTHfCrCOAW-JUSTLAUOH AT TH WBDNJ KStf 5 1 MSSMa CS Independent SG J Slate Explained Well, students, here is your Sil int Majority back after these many weeks. The style is the same Vaii ttio mimnse is the same WOi f I to represent the independent stu dent in The Nebraskan. The big news in the independent world this week was the announce ment of the second annual all-Independent slate of candidates for Student Counca college represents tives. Selected bv the four largest to dependent organizations on cam pus, the slate represents the best qualified Independent students who are willing to run tor uwncu seaw. Omm mainr chansre was made in the selection process this year. In stead of presenting a person ior every office, the slate has only the absolutely best candidates. Last The Challenge VJlllGiniilflil Of S ilfQE'QSf In Poefpy "Af wts" Seen By WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS American Aataor and Physician The poem as encountered in our university teaching does not oc cupy an important place compared with the sciences. In fact it is quite lost in the welter of technical sci entific subjects. That is an advantage to the stu dent of the arts because when an important branch of learning is neglected the changes that are tak ing place there may be said to find their greatest freedom to develop. When the vulgar eye looks askance at them you may be sure that the life within them is quickening, making ready for the spring. We hear very little of Greek and Latin to say nothing of Hebrew and Sanscrit which the faculty of Yale, for instance, used to teach. I cer tainly am not advocating a return to those practices. They pointed to a difference in the interest of the world at large, whose withdrawal has left us with qualitative starvation, that has left us with a generation of cripples. If you lop off a whole segment of the knowledge of what goes on in the more sensitive reaches of a man's or a woman's aesthetic re actions to Lie you will produce frustrated individuals who for their satisfactions will resort to noth ing in the end but war. Let us grant, from historical precident, that the poem is an im portant topic for a man's interest- that is, quite apart from the ful fillment bis hungers after fulfill ment of yearnings, his thirst to know what other men, and women! of the past have given their lives for. Granted again that for the full est appreciation of the poem a Today's Challenge was writtea especially for The Nebraskaa's eolnina by William Carlos. Wil liams, noted Americas author, poet and physician. He is a mem ber of the National Institate of Arts aad Letters and the Bergea Co. (XJ.) Medical Assa. He re ceived the Dial prize of S2000 for services to Americas literature fa 1 2 S, the National Book Award for Poetry tn IMS and the Boliingea Prize ia Poetry ia 1953. knowledge of at least two or three foreign languages is important. There is awakening, painfully for the most part, at least a cur iosity about what these "nuts" the poets are up to. If this goes on we may in the end have a revival of the art which will be a good thing, because some thing you have to accord to the vulgar, when you have succeeded penetrating their thick skulls they frequently show a sovereign vir tue known as common sense. In America we speak a jargon, an idiom, unknown to our mas ters, I speak of our -school-teach- J Ml J. i GREEN Hangover The sun rises early and hot on a coated tongue. My bead is large and heavy, and is not a part of me With luck I shall be dead by noon. Leroy Ballerina- No woman at all could ever love you. No woman who speaks, and plods, and keeps ber skirt down. Women live on and on outside men's dreams. You whirl luminous from darkness into men's eyes. never at all into their arms, never, never into their kitchens. But, we know you we of the daylight, of swift words, and slow feet We know And we fear you. Charlotte Bull Definition for a Small Child To be afraid is to talk too loud and laugh too long and shiver when you bear a song. Charlotte Ball Tomorrow When Coring is no more. And am apple's a core, When a life is no more , And tears are shed for When youth is no more And the rich glow is poor When love is no more . And hearts are at war Then gather together, consider the weather And think what tomorrow will bring. Black Coffee Black coffee I drink when I'm lonesome, Black coffee I drink when I swgy. And a curse on the man who pollutes it Tomorrow at dawn then? Toucha, Metloda Ray Wellnda Ray ers. The difference between it and the language spoken in our class room is subtle. It arises deep in the tissues of the race and is characterized for the most part by a metrical qual ity which our popular jazz ap proaches but does not typify jazz is of African native origin but at least breaks from the horror of our "Victorian" acceptances. It breaks the stasis, at least that, but we are for the most part not negroes, certainly not primi tives and even those of us who are negroes can not be satisfied for long with such a "speech." In making our new verses the measure of our lives, what has taken place in our thinking has to be taken into consideration. We are not living in a geocentric uni verse any longer! but in one where a relativististic yard-stick is the rule. Briefly with the poem it is no different. The accepted poetic foot, fixed and conventionally measur able no longer is to be accepted, though for practical reasons it is still taught. A variable foot has now begun to be considered, one with a mul tiple number of syllables to the measure. The measure remains as always fixed, "free verse" is a misnomer, there can be no "free" verse but only a new way of mea suring it. Thus you have a glance at what is going on in the art of the poem. year a person was endorsed for each position to be filled. In sev eral cases reluctant persons wera asked to run in order to complete, the slate. Not so this year. Every man and woman on the other side of this page . was picked because he or she was considered the best-fitted for the position. For positions that no one was qualified, the inter, viewing board selected no candi date. The selection of a group of qualified candidates is only the first part of a program to improva the value of the Student Council, The avowed purpose of the four organizations, Barb Activities Board for Women, Residence Halls The Silent Majority for Women House Council, Inter Co-operative Council and the Resi dence Association for Men is to improve the value of the Student Council through a threefold plan: 1. To set up an interviewing board to select the best Independ ent candidates. The four, groups will then officially support these candidates through a mass pub licity program. 2. To make available to all stu dents, independent and affiliated alike, more polling places with suf ficient capacity to allow a size able number of votes to be cast without long waiting lines. (Last year about one out of four students voted and many of these had to wait in line. The first requisite to more voting is adequate polling places.) 3. To encourage the independent student to vote. The groups hop that points 1. and 2. will be effec tive in making this third point successful. The reasons for a lack of independent voting in the past have been: inadequate polling places, few independent candi dates, no clearinghouse to unify the independent vote and plain old apathy. The first three of these reasons have been abolished already with the selection of the slate and the cooperative attitude of the Student Council elections committee in the planning of better polling facilities. '"Tie problem of apathy is mors difficult. The answer lies in a super-publicity campaign. Public ity means money and student or ganizations are traditionally broke. However, a letter is planned, which will go to all independent students, containing the qualifications of tba candidates on the slate, a list ot polling places, hours and so forth. The four organizations art co operating well and from all indica tions the plan will be carried out successfully. The final result still lies in the hands of the independent student on election day, May 7. Wms&ofl Letterip Proof Of Free Press Demanded Tta. bum Tto W mt Oft-2S iw. TV V- anaun nra m rtcat aaa mil law mrmm. Jim kwar aa okM mmUm tmt aaaw af Ow wraar ham ar Ta nMfcaa. Faa aaaaa aav aa aa la mm a To the Editor: Be careful, Fred Daly, that you do not break your arm patting yourself and your colleagues on the back! Your editorial entitled "Freedom of Campus Press Vital for Free Expression" describes interference with the editorial policies of the campus newspapers at Florida State University, University of Texas and the University at Gear gia. Then after a deep breath and (I hope) a somewhat uneasy con science you state, "The University of Nebraska is fortunate no such situation exists here." The three cases that you men tioned involved highly controver sial questions such as criticism of a college president, a governor and the natural gas biSL to addition to supporting moderation in racial integration and support of Sena tor George in opposition to Gover nor Talmage. At no time has The Nebraska involved itself in these controver sial questions or others of aa equally controversial nature. I ask two questions of the staff of The Nebraskan: 1. What would happen if you were to strongly criticize the poli cies of Governor Anderson, Chan cellor Hardin and the University Board of Regents in terms which would either state or imply that it is time for a change of Ad ministration? 2. What would be the results of The Nebraskaa's taking sides in the present political campaign, particularly if the policy clearly showed that the goal of such a campaign was a change of admini stration? If you can honestly answer these two questions with the simple an swer, "Nothing." then and only then do you have the right to say "The students and the faculty of this University should be thank ful that its press is free even if they don't always agree with it I demand that you prove your self a free press before you hand out self-congratulations. If you cannot so prove yourself then shut tip and continue to pen your in consequential editorials about the IPC, the Student Council, drinking, panty raids and exams. Ze-oneth D. Iindqiust You Are Invited To Wcnfup ST. PAUL OETHOBIST GlfBHOII lilh una M Ktrrrt Moratae Worship 11:88 KM. Sermon topics "CitriafaWey of Glory Cfcorrk f,vj Ons-4!a JUL ttodlo Mittfotrf Evory tundor VPS A.AA A - m -J-:u AJ4. EFOB lliaa AM. Ministers: FRANK COURT, RALPH LEWIS, EA31UEL EIXCXIXER DONALD BLISS WESLEY FOUNDATION TironfJI'0"1 SUNDAYS SACRED THROUGH THE HOLY HUSH OF WORSHIP! J lyiHla1l if-- ... .l ? I