Tuesday, April 17, 1956 Pacs -2 THE NEBRASKAN Nebraskan Editorials: Iittu Man on campus by Dick BibUr 1 v11 1 Jkl We LTighl Know The announcement Monday by Dean W. V. Lambert that Clyde Mitchell would not be re tained as chairman of the department of agri cultural economics came as a surprise to almost Bo 6ae. It has been common knowledge for sometime that (1) Mitchell was going to be replaced as department chairman; (2) successors all over the country have been contacted in regard to the position; (3) at least two professors have visited the campus to candidate for the position and (4) a list of 40-odd chairman possibilities had been submitted to departmental personnel within the past few weeks. What has not been common knowledge is why administrative spokesmen have, until Monday, attempted to stave off the accumulating pile of facts with such obvious half-truths as "Mitchell is still department chairman ... no recom mendations have been made by the Dean of the College of Agriculture to the Chancellor or the Board of Regents for any change in the depart ment chairmanship . . no individuals have been contacted about the department chair manship , . . Mitchell will return June 14 to resume his duties ... the Regents have not discussed any change in the chairmanship since July 1 . . . Legally, the University has every right to remove or appoint an administrative official at any time with the accompanying privilege of announcing this decision at any time. Morally, however, it also has the obligation of keeping the public and its own college com munity informed as to faculty and administra tive changes. Especially when the professor in question has evoked strong opposition outside the legally constituted limits of the University and especially when the carefully manicured statements to the newspapers create a com pletely erroneous impression. In fulfilling its moral obligation "to let the people know," the conflicting statements and obvious contradictions concerning the chairman ship of the ag ec department are clearly an act of bad faith on the part of the University administration. The questions which remain before us are: "Why were these conflicting statements issued to the newspapers in the first place?" Why, if Mitchell was notified twice in 195S of the decision, the reversion to obvious contra dictions? Why, if two candidates had come to the Uni versity to interview for the position of depart ment chairman, the need for the manicured press releases? 7hy, if the decision to remove Mitchell as department chairman was "strictly an adminis trative matter," the necessity for half-truths. Why, if everything were on the up and up, the choice of this embarrassing duplicity? Certainly, the need "... to strengthen the research and extension programs in ' agricul tural economics" was not this great. B.B. A Heritage Is Left A beloved figure will make his last public appearance before a University function to night. In directing the University Singers in their annual spring concert in the Union, Dr. Arthur Westbrook will bring to a virtual close a 17 year career with the School of Fine Arts and the music department. It will not, however, bring to an end his musical career, as he has accepted a position as a guest teacher at a California college. People like Dr. Westbrook don't stop all at once. At seventy years of age, he is starting out on the third branch of a life of music that began with Illinois Wesleyan University, where he was dean of the School of Music. In 1939 he came to the University, where he became director of the School of Fine Arts and chairman of the department of music. He re organized these two units, fused their faculties and required that instructors be friends of stu dents as well as teaching them. In short, he personally built a "spirit" into the music department. By his friendship with the students and the faculty, and his understanding of their prob lems, a feeling of co-operation has grown up. One faculty member said: "you will never find a touch of jealousy, a situation which is un usual for budding artists." Much has been made of Dr. Westbrook in the last few months, when it was known that he would leave the University because of the retiring age. He deserves this praise, which comes from every part of the University and the state itself where his musical influence has been felt. A truly Outstanding Nebraskan is University will miss him, not only has done, but what he is as a person. But he will eave behind him progress and development and will continue to serve the music the University and the state for a come. F.T.D. leaving. The for what he teacher and 17 years of service that department, long time to A Needed Addition The first Installment of the Humanities Lec ture Series, introducing Dr. David Riesman to the University campus, has been a success. As a nationally-known sociologist and as an entertaining lecturer. Dr. Riesman drew near capacity audiences at all his evening lectures and nearly all his afternoon seminars and in formal discussion groups. During his week on campus, Dr. Riesman proved himself to be more than willing to talk to people. At his two seminars, he spoke ony a few minutes and spent the rest of the time directing questions to members of the audience. At this time he showed an obvious interest in the University, its students and its faculty. - Although his field is primarily sociology, Dr. Riesman spoke on topics that were of interest to all of his audience. He was willing to dis cuss any field that members of the audience would suggest, ranging from academic freedom to methods of interviewing. Students, faculty members and people out side the University demonstrated their interest in what this nationally-known sociologist had to say by attending his lectures. This new lecture series was a needed addi tion to the extra-curricular programs sponsored by the University and the Nebraska Research Council. It serves as a good complement to the Montgomery Lecture Series, which in the last several years has tended to be scientific in nature. The bounds of humanities, on the other hand, are practically non-existant. Subjects in this field are of interest to all persons. Through this humanities series, it is possible to bring nationally-known figures in many fields to the University for lectures and seminars, as was done this year. BJ5. All University Production Since 1912, the Kosmet Hub's spring show has been the outlet for University theatrical talent. ' For the last six years they have pre sented a Broadway musical. ' The Spring show is the only annually sched uled production of this kind to appear in Lin coln. Its appearance is definitely needed and wanted, not just by University students, but by the people of Lincoln. The Klub will present its spring show, "Kiss Jle Sate," Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The show could be called an all-University pro duction, for . the actors, dancers and chorus members are representatives of every ..phase of University life. The cast includes under graduates, faculty members acting in the capac ity of assistants and graduate students. It is unfortunate that commercial talent will be in Lincoln one night that "Kiss Me Kate" is being given. The conflict may result in some students missing the all-University pro duction, thinking that outside talent would be superior. There are also fraternity and sorority parties scheduled for the week-end. The Kosmet Klub finances its spring show with the profits it received from the fall review. The receipts from "Kiss Me Kate" are expected to cover only a portion of the show's expenses. The musical is not a financial venture; it is the Kosmet Hub's purpose to give to the stu dents and other interested persons an evening of good entertainment. There are many reasons why the production should enjoy student support, but the best reason for seeing "Kiss Me Kate" is that it is a good show. Perplexing Problem An interesting and very perplexing situation has arisen on the campus concerning parking. It does not involve the usual situations concern ing lack of space, or designation of who should park where. It concerns the recently enforced practice of city police giving tickets to cars parked in front of the Residence Halls for Women. The police, of course, are only enforcing city traffic rules. This is their function, and they are entirely right. The problem is that there is little students can do to keep from breaking the rule. The double parking occurs only at the stra tegic times when men come to pick up their dates, then later when they take them home. There is a great swelling of traffic at this time. Host of the parking spaces around the Dorm entrance are already taken. A driver has no choica except to leave his car double-parked while he escorts his date to the door. Unless campus swains take to letting their girls shift for themselves after letting them out of the car, no immediate solution is at hand. This situation seems to be a small one in the great rush of campus affairs. However, when a student must pay a fine totaling in excess of eight dollars for breaking a law be cannot help broaching, it is important that something be done. Whether it be an agreement with the city ! police or somehow providing space within easy reach of the Dorm entrance, no one can tell now. There is no ready solution to this problem, only the realization that the problem exists. The University should look into it, if only to find whether, or not anything can be done. F.T.D. Tho Ncbrcslcan nFTf-FIVE YEARS OLD Kssfcm Associated CeTleglate Press EsiereeSegSste Press frfesetitafiv-! Nsmo1 AdvertislEg Service, lacerperaied FsSSOse sis T.mm EJ, Student Unlet lith A It University ef Nebraska '' '' ' Lisccla, Kebrau&a Wrfmtkaa 4 fHf)!She f nMda, W4car ana) i t " v, fMu eee hum io pttmmum w" . f : at tti i wrrtvj vf jswrafaa mlr . i ,a t ttm 4'b o sm" fir of ttm Swhsnimii. m tnto fohH , -! (m - from cS!Ml rn"thitt on tha t fc..-.i::.m, tat tXm tf an? ttwnhr , . . Af I r-irH, nr an ttw pmri of ., (. s.n (!-rerey. Tho member of tha ry.$m.n -:..ff .r rnm. ' :v nmwtnfl'ttl tar wt tSir as m mt moom M pmmtmt, CaanaM It, UttMV. .... Entered M Meant tlaa matter at tta pot utttn ta Uaevfc. KefcrMks, andar tb art af Anrmt 4. 11X. EDITORIAL STAFF Ea&tflaf n ftfttflal BntffHIaUvai KAtuurtal rca Editor KM flat MaMMTtag Editor ... . San Umtm Maw IWHflr ....... . ........... .. .. .. . . . aMrt Aporta oiiot Mm kriHtmn lr Editor Bob Cook, Ariraa Hrbnk, barb fibarp. Luslfrace Swlser. At Editor VtltrM rhiit Mfht Mew Editor barbara Mnarp Vlmiku Ptmtf Wrftm-a Cindy Z ilmm, Walt War. Hra Jim, Halt ftwitutr. Boh Martal. frtMkrtr: Naner fImff. Marlann Thytnnt, Oturrft fcoycr, Bon fvtn. Dirk tatrocuir Julie Dowrll. BUSINESS STAFF 7' MAY I EOCROvV A CUP of C Hta ? " Honor System A Noble Idea V 'Honour and shame from n condition rise; Act well your part: there all the honour lies." A. Pope The Student Council Is apt to come up with all sorts of fascinat ing ideas, not the least of which is the prospect of installing an "honor system" at Nebraska. In theory, an honor system is a noble ideal. It implies that the Given' 'em Ell students have a sense of honor; that each student will automatically do his own work and only his own work, and that he will not attempt to do last-minute research during the course of an examination. . It further imp&es that each stu dent assumes responsibility not only for his own honor, but also for the honor of his peers. For an explanation of this as- VC J 'Dialectical Pussy-Footing1 Questioned By Columnist Hardly did David Reisman fin ish appraising the status of aca demic freedom in American col leges than the Nebraskan came out with the announcement that Ag Economics chairman Clyde Mitchell had been released due to the implication of "outside pres sures," thus indicating that most of Reisman's comments may have fallen on deaf ears. This dismissal of Mitchell brings up some interesting indications of the kind of thinking that goes on at the Top around here. First, the fact that the Nebras kan was not able to print any names with its article on Mitchell indicates that the members of the faculty here may be, in some cases a little uneasy about losing their own jobs, an uneasiness which, in itself, points up a lack of academ ic freedom and higher-echelon im partiality. Second, any mention of Mitchell recalls to mind the dispute he had with Regent J. Leroy Welsh of Omaha, who was irate about Mitch ell's leanings toward a Democratic farm program in a magazine ar ticle. There were usual meaning less mumblings about the free en terprise system (which, x witness General Motors, never had it so good). It would certainly be ironic if, as the Nebraskan implies, Mitchell were ousted because of the conse quences of New Deal leanings, es pecially since just last week sev eral of the prominent political fig ures in this area came out for the New Deal high farm price sup ports. Mitchell has had an outstanding record while at this University, and is apparently highly respected by the Ag students and by men in his profession. Since 1949 he has worked to build up one of the best departments in the school, and he, himself, has gained national re nown. We don't get people like that too often, and it's a shame to lose him. But The Nebraskan has been be hind on this thing for several weeks now, since it was apparent ly common knowledge out on Ag campus that Mitchelll was in the process of being axed. Art Wlade Easy y Simple Rules By JACK FLYNN Because of the great success of my "Do-It-Yourself poetry col umn I have decided to branch out into the field of art. I recognize the need for the aspiring esthetic intellectual to be versatile. As I walk through the campus sewer ducts students I meet in variably ask me, "How do you make a work of art?" "Easy," I invariably answer. This is how easy it invariably is. First you must select a model. The Mirage This is unnecessary if you pos sess the ability to paint by ear. Be very demanding in your se lection. Bowls 'of fruit or flowers are very nice, as are mountains and people. Now that you have a model you must select a medium. Mediums, or, if you are a student of Latin,, media, used to be such things as ink, graphite, charcoal or paint. These are all passe and chicken feathers, licorice, peanut butter, orange marmeiade and the like are the rage in our modernistic world of art. If you are doing a mountain landscape use cement. A snow scene would call for talcum. Next you must make a choice of brushes. Tail feathers of the roc make the finest brushes. How ever, a chicken feather will do the job. Some people use mops or pig tails, but are not often successful. Now to work. Strategically place your unusued thumb between your eye and the model. Notice the un kempt condition of the thumb nail. Bite it off evenly and go back to your work. With the thumb positioned once again take the brush between the thumb and fo: 1.. ,er of your hand. Watch how ti nstructor doe it. Slosh the bn h around in the medium unto t ie brisues are gob ie. What you do to the canvas or burlap or feed sack is 'your own business. Be wild, sloppy, noncon forming. Close your eyes, call to the gods for reassurance and then strike out. The most necessary virtue of the artist is originality. However, if you do not desire to be com pletely esthetic -and somewhat commercial you can make use of certain prescribed symbols which save both time and medium. .Geometries, cubism, squarism, circlism, trapazoidalism and hex agonalism are some of the foolish names given to the practice of artistic symbol usage. With all these tips the simple student should be able to whip out a Mona Lisa briskly. Like the true artiste he will soon desire to perch atop a great boulder over looking a peaceful valley and leap over the side. '--fnM Mauaawr t BtMlnM Maiaagora . Ctraulatloai Genre Madam Mick Set. Rill Rudtrrll, CoaiU Furs l. Dun Beck Elshara aianortx ha Ccimpus Gres . Epitaph Come you muses and you critics who have not And read. Explore the best of roe. Now that I am gone and only my works stand Against withering time. My poetry grows in stature every day, And college classes will in time appraise it, While professors there, the all-perceiving, all knowing ones. Will pace before them to relate the source Of such works. Home, family, education, talents, and emotions AH will be studied. As mechanics check the factors that play, Let this suffice here. Not here the conclusive evidence of stern parents, See here the brush's touch he studied art. And wait! Here lie the effects of drink And sin and journalism, too, see line If! A strong guilt complex is manifest in this work, Look! His mother's charity overflows there. Seel Stop them, mighty critics, stop such idle babbling. Move on, ponderous, humbly powerful ones, tell Them the truth. Be not swayed by them, Let mn know your awesome conclusion. Yes, Surely it was not Noble who wrote Noble's works, . , But son other artist, sunken into an obscure grave. J oh a Noble Of course, everybody may be wrong, but the University's official pronouncements on the subject bring up another interesting point. To end this whole affair quickly and effectively, the University would only need to state, unequivo cably, that Mitchell will continue to be chairman of the Ag Eco nomics department next school year. Instead they have said that Mitchell is stffl chairman which is not what the Nebraskan is talk ing about and that no recom mendations have been submitted for a replacement which could be quite possible, but is irrelevant. The Nebraskan says that Mitch ell wont be here as Ag Economics chairman next year, ; J they havent been refuted on this point as yet. This sort of cute, dialectical pussy-footing may fool most of the casual readers of press releases, but it can't convince a careful reader and it is resented by a lot of newspapers. People talk that way only when they have something to hide. sumption one need only look at the honor system at West Point, where each man is honor-bound to report any dishonorable classmate to the authorities . . . even if that class mate is his best friend. . If an honor system is a noble ideal, it is an even more noble accomplishment. Honor systems are not constructed any more rap idly than was Rome. We cannot make men good simply by legis lating against evil, and we cannot make students honorable simply by legislating an honor system into existence. It seems to me that the official establishment of an honor system here is beyond the jurisdiction of any organization. If we deserve an honor system, such a system will develop of its own volition, and only after it exists in fact should it be recognized in legisla tion. An honor system is a privilege, not a right We must first prove that we are deserving of the privi lege not by voting our approval or disapproval in a spring election, but by conducting our scholastic affairs in an honorable manner. Few honest students would main tain that the student body is at present in a state of scholastic honesty. Few students have not ei ther cheated themselves or wit nessed cheating during the course of an examination. Proctoring is afar from being a sadistic form of faculty amuse ment It is in fact a pain in the neck. The faculty has discovered, how ever, that proctoring is often neces sary if the integrity of the course, -the honest students, and the Uni versity is to be protected. Many examinations in the Uni versity are conducted now on an honor system. The classes given this freedom have proved them selves worthy of it. Likewise, we cannot justly main tain that most of our examinations are conducted by stringent police action, except in the cases of such courses as English A or B which have proved through bitter expe rience to demand such surveilance. Until University students are wil ling to depend solely upon their own skills, and until they are wil ling to report cheating when they see it, we should not expect, let alone demand, an honor system. The honor must be visibly pres ent before the system is officially recognized. Nebraskan Lett e rip A Matter To the Editor: Reference is made to the article "'Foreign Policy Lacks Reality" and the subsequent letter by Ray mond Balfour. Although Red China has un doubtedly become an undeniable historical reality, we, the peoples of free nations, can only tolerate Communist ideology if necessary, but mast not recognize Communist nationality. To do so would only jeopardize the democratic supremacy of the free world. Red China must not have a representative seat in the UN because the Nationalist Gov ernment in Formosa is stiH the true representative of China. The Communistic indoctrination betrays the 5000 years of Chinese culture and hence is not acceptable to the Chinese people. It seems plausible that "the pos sibility of the Fonriosa National ists ever returning and unseating that government is remote if not impossible." Yet should we succumb to tyran ny just simply because the wrong often seems so strong? Red China can only stand on her own merits or else fall on her own inhumanity. According to an article in the March S issue of Time, "at least Of Principle 20 million Chinese have been de prived of existence . . The free nations, which profess to be Christian and have not been able to prevent the Communistic upsurge, at least have "a duty to understand" the real situation that the Communistic triumph was not the victory of "Uncle Mao of Pe king propaganda" but "'it was the triumph of terror." The issue involves as much prac tical political considerations as moral and philosophical implica tions. It is a matter of principle rather than a choice of govern ments. President Chiang Kai-Shek, hav ing long foreseen the threats of Communism, has been leading the nation in the sacred cause of Tighting against Communism for more than thirty years. The con sequence of the fight at this pres ent state, be it 'victory r defeat, does not tell the whole story. - The evaluation of merits lies in the principle fought for. In this "world's gigantic battlefield," the forces of right and wrong are a matter of "common sense" if their interrelationship with moral teach ings or Christian ethics is being denied. AagastiBe Chen Kelso Choang Stupid Regulations I believe too that this University should be first concerned with the campus residents. The regulations concerning those loti are so stupid that at times they almost appear funny. Irritated Car Owaer To the Editor I liked Lowell Vestal's column, "Student Drivers Need New Space." I agree with it to the enth degree. I believe that every Car owner in Selleck feels the same way about the use of the 14th St lots. . Vicarious Experience begrudge my friend for trying to advance himself scholastically. Aa Artist Friend f the Poet To the Editor: The poetry of L. J. M. may not be good, but it is fun. But after all, who knows, he may be the har binger of "flaming youth" period.) 'A Student, nevertheless, has not the haziest notion about the character of my friend. He exemplifies the highest Vic torian ideals by excluding from his list of vices smoking, drinking and carousing. His poetry is a help rather than a hindrance to his 'pursuit of Truth. By writing verses, he is able to experience vicariously what a mul titude of less enlightened students escape to over the weekends. Since less time is spent with bis creations, he is able . to devote more time to academic pursuits, maintaining a surprisingly high average. Surely "Student," you would not DISABLED KOREAN VETS Ei&Bl FOR SPECIAL TBAK4IM6 TO OVPt COME PtSABUNS HANDICAPS MAY START TBADfiMd AT AS Jl TIMS WKtMS THEY CAM FINISH KFCRIsTHCCOMPliT- hv - ' V1 1 rV 4 Tt f..tl tafurtnatHm mtrt rmr nmr1 El !.. AJMIMtiimTHK