Pacjs 2 Tuesday, January 13, 1959 The Doilv Nebraskan I 'i 1 Editorial Comment" They Tire Easily wmes now that semester nightmare known as final exams. And about now, comes also the usual reproofs from instructors, advisors, friends and clergymen who all say "don't cheat." Unfortunately, these reproofs are too seldom taken to heart. At a short staff conference, the members of the Daily Ne braskan Monday afternoon came up with an amazing variety of ways by which they personally witnessed University students fudging just a little on the side of dis honesty. Now the Daily Nebraskan is not going to say, "Don't cheat, fellows. Be good guys." That would produce a cynically hearty snicker from those who would cheat any way. It would also be a pretty trite way of filling up the editorial page because some how, good old fashioned honesty just isn't highly regarded in some circles any- more. But the Daily Nebraskan is going to suggest a policy by which cheaters may be dealt with. Perhaps the greatest punishment the University could mete out to cheaters is to let them get by with it. Over the short term, this might make certain of them look pretty good, but if they don't know what they've got to know for the long haul, they soon will be surpassed. After all, good grades are fine and honestly won good grades are truly com mendable (thank goodness, the majority of the folk around here get their good grades honestly.) A good solid five or six, honestly won, however, just has to be of more value than the same grade or better won by cheating. So let the cheater cheat. One of these days they'll wake up to find out they should have known better. What Worse Time? There ara already a sufficient number of critics warning college students of an over-emphasis on activities in their lives. College, most of us agree, should primar ily be concerned with the improvement of one's mental facilities. At the same time, a well balanced person will argue that he got that way by concerning himself with more than studies he also took and takes part in social activities. With these thoughts in mind we read the news that Coed Follies tryouts are to be held tonight. This means that for the past few weeks several sororities have had a good share of their population spend ing several hours each week getting a skit ready for these tryouts. The wiseness of subjecting a majority of a house to such preparation is open to question, and even more open to question is the time sched uled for tryouts. Practice comes right aft er vacation and during the final two weeks before semester examinations, which the Coed Follies folks decide is ideal for try outs. This naturally means that time once available for writing term papers, doing outside reading, or preparing for tests and finals is no longer available. The Daily Nebraskan earlier attacked the powers to be in Kosmet Klub for scheduling the Fall Review right after mi gration and homecoming weekends. Kos met Klub certainly was not any more guilty of bad scheduling than the Coed Follies group. One might conclude that if there are no suitable, pressure-free times to schedule these events, that they ought to die the sudden death which Penny Car nival suffered. Since we ourselves are sometimes jok ingly referred to as newspaper people, we are always a little sad when other news papers or news services go under. For instance, when the old Interna tional News Service was consolidated with the United Press to form United Press International, many an old newsman raised a glass to the INS out of nostalgia, and many a young newsman followed suit (per haps out of something else, but the spirit was there anyway.) But there was one newspaper organi zation whose passing caused a celebration among real newsmen for a different reason. And Stay Out! f That was on Jan. 13, 1958, when the Communist Daily Worker passed into lim bo with the threatening headline, "We'll be back." Most folks were glad to see "The Daily Distorter" go, and from the looks of things, it will probably stay gone. The latest report from the Justice Department says that Communist Party membership has dropped substantially since "The Worker became defunct, and there are even a couple of cases where American commies have left for China because they felt the American Communist group had become too stale and inactive. To these enlightened souls, bon voyage and we'll see you never. From the Editor A Few Words of a Kind e. e. Junes I I 1 e.e. Glancing through Nation magazine I fell upon a short editorial, "Dissent at Washburn U." It went thus: "We don't know what Washburn Uni versity of Topeka, Kansas, did on the grid iron last year, but it has an editorial full back on the campus who deserves some kind of All America mention. It seems that ... the cam- mis nanrcnonAf W fl C 111- formed bv local postal ff. authorities that a pam- ... . i j ' - phlet aaaressea 10 n, en- titled "The German Dem ocratic Republic: Its Uni versities and Students," was undeliverable as 'for eign political propaganda.' The post office kindly explained, how ever, that there was a loophole in the law which would allow the insidious docu ment from East Germany to slip through; if the Washburn Review would state that it had specifically requested the pamphlet from its publishers, the law would no long er consider it 'foreign political propagan da,' but a little old ordinary piece of mail, like a Christmas card or, perhaps, a pam phlet entitled "The United Kingdom: Its Universities and Students." "But a Review editorial writer . . . wasn't having any end runs, and crashed straight ahead over center: " 'The post office has been duly in formed that this material was not request ed by us. It has also been informed that, in view of the fact that it was mailed to us, we expect receipt of it by return mail ... "It appears . . . that the United States is busily erecting for itself its peculiar brand of 'Iron Curtain,' complete with a committee of little men deciding for us what we may or may not be allowed to read . . . In addition, of course, this is the ultimate insult to our intelligence, for it suggests rather openly that we are not to be trusted to exercise good judgment in our handling of controversial material . . . (that) we can be trusted to read only what the little men say we can read.' " After this great hurrah for freedom of choice in the selection of material to read or not read, and believe or not be litve, I felt neglected that I hadn't the opportunity to produce such a rousing masterpiece. Then today I surveyed my mail and discovered the following note from the postmaster: "This letter is to advise you that the Postal Service has received foreign mail addressed to you consisting of certain publications which contain foreign politi cal propaganda as defined by the Foreign Agents Registration Act (22 U.S. Code 611-21). "Such matter ordinarily would be treated as nonmailable. However, such matter lawfully must be passed through the mails and delivered to the addressee when it has been ordered, subscribed to, or is desired, and is not for dissemination. It is possible that you did not order this material and that your name is on a mail ing list over which you have no control. Therefore, in order to determine whether the publications listed on the enclosed card may be passed through the mails and de livered to you please return this card." I looked at the card but couldn't find where it listed the questionable publica tion. And then I signed my name on the card and sent it on its way to the mail box. The note caught me in a gentle mo ment, and I was all fired up to judge for myself the merits of whatever foreign pub lication was being denied by tired eyes. Actually, I rather like this Post Office policy. The only trouble is that it is too limited. I think it should be expanded to include quizzing you on whether or not you want to receive a letter which may contain business or product propaganda, or whether or not you desire to receive letters from firms you know you owe three or four dollars for books, magazines or records. Think of how this would eventu ally clear the mailboxes of junk mail, allowing more time for the quick handling of lovers' or extortionists' letters. What an unprincipled cad I am. RTTTT -EIGHT TEARS OLD gsb.r: AnM'tated Colleriate Pres Intercollegiate Prew BepraeBtative: National Advertising Service, Incorporated Published at: Room 20, Student Cnion Lincoln, Nebraska 14th A R The Pally NelwikM H pabllhe Monday. ToeodaT. TTi iIiihi'i- and Friday 4 urine t arhonl yrnr, except tarlBK eaeatlona and mi period!, by atodent of the CmtVersltJ ' Nebmaka under the aathorliation of the fsemmittee ea Ktndrnt Affair a ae ripmaaloa ef atn amt ootnlon. Publication ander the larMlrttoa of the ftubeoromlttee on Sttiocnt Publlntlnna ehall he free from editorial eennnrahlp on the Part of Iho Hnhmmmlttee ar M tfct pgr) frf any aieniber of the faealty ef the Cal- Tna HIMIIH"! .'w. - m par- Daily Nebraskan many mponsfMe tar wlia they aay, er as er ae pnniea. rerjruary a, i5a. nbeerlptlaa ratal an SI per eaaaettar ar II for the aeademte year. Entered a arenad elaae anttar at the peat efflee hi Uneoln. Mebraaka, ander the aet af aaraM 4, Mil. EDITOKlaX STAFF Editor Brae HlB8, Manaclnr Editor fieorr Moyer Senior ntaff Writer Emmie Llrapo ftnnrt editor Bandan Lambert Copy Editor. Carroll Kraai, Diana Maxwell. Sandra Rully, Gretthea Side. rt,'r Marilyn Coffey. ftoadra Weal en. Wyaa Smltnberger. Stall Photographer Mlanett Taylor BUSINESS STAFF BniHaeM Mmaaer Mn tuilenttn AMlataat Buainea Manager Ht.n Kalmaa, . . Charleao On, Norm Rohlfinr Circulation Maaasar Jerry frapp n3'"V -" -? tf FATTEsA ( GUN IN THE ' west! J Mv Little World v . . . by Judy truell The secret of success is timeliness! Where would Hannibal have been if he hadn't had some rather frost bitten elephants and some Alps to cross; where would have been if he hadn't fished down in his pocket and found his last sil ver dollar which he threw across Judy the Potomac with much bra vado; where would Francis Scott Key have been if he hadn't had 20-20 vision? I mean, after all, when these things present them selves grab them! And where would this column be this week if it hadn't been for Co-Ed Follies? Probably non existent. I heard a man last night say that he loved to be little the "suburb dwellers" and that when he ran out of material, they somehow went off on another spree and sup plied him all over again. With amazing regularity, things occur and reoccur that are ripe for the picking for any alert, energetic, hustling, in-on-the-source of things young go-getter columnist. Perhaps this is why 1 have to be prodded on four sides to even open my eyes. But enough of this drivel and on to the thing at hand Co-Ed Follies. There are three classes of people who emerge when these times come to separate the sheep from the goats (or in the other words the tal ented from the cow-like non talented.) First there are the skitmasters who exist solely on tranquilizers, cigarettes, black coffee and a determin ation which far exceeds noth ing less than equalling the Flickering Art By John West f?at of building the Great :Yall of China. ' Second in this little hier- archy are those few fortu ! nates who know that they have both a right and left foot and" who can somehow manage to dance, smile, and sing all at the same time without gazing frantically at their unmanageable feet. And last are the peons who can carry a tune only if there are 30 other people backing them up and who only want to stand and pretend they are a tree or at most occasional ly wander from side to side of the staee honing to not i trip over some prop on the way. I With this eager little band f workers, the skit master has the overwhelming task of j marshalling them into a sem I blence of a formation, getting them standing on the same i feet and in a few extreme j cases singing the right song. I Is it any wonder that she be gins to eat her meals alone, becomes gaunt and haggard, land swears that if she ever ; lives through this she will never go to another movie musical again. But with iron i will she calls practice after j practice and the "perform jers" come dragging down to jthem with muttered dire threats of what is going to happen to certain people ! them know if they have to get up once more at the unheard of hour of 7 a.m. for prac j tice. I PnnciHorinfT irViat IVtPV Vlflva 'to work with, the girls who; do take on this task of skit- master deserve to stand up and take a bow ut the same time, my mosi sincere sym pathies are with the bruised, stiff, groggy, performers who are trving their hardest. Al though it may seem to the casual observer that they are a disorganized mob, there is order in that chaos. One of the happy realities with the coming of long play ing records has been the availability of music from motion pictures apart from the dramatic action it accom panies on the screen. Important and beautiful compositions have under scored our movies since 1927, the real beginning of the sound film. Although some critics argue that music for movies is created with the in spiration of an assembly line, this is definitely not the whole story. The film medium of fers the working composer the unique opportunity of real ly needing his work. How less exciting a sequence Barbara Graham's capture would have been in I WANT TO LIVE! without Johnny Mandel's jazz selection, "Stakeout." The question then arises whether film composition has any real merit for home ! -tening. The scores for "Kings Row" (Erich Wolfgang Korngold); "The Barefoot Contessa" (Mario Nascim bene); "East Of Eden" (Leon ard Rosenman): "Peyton Place" (Franz Waxman); and "The Big County" (Jerome (Moross) answer well, and these are but a very few ex lamplos. Indeed, some movie (music, particularly the efforts of Copland, Walton, Roz sa and Leonard Bernstein, may well survive the supreme test of greatness that of dur. j ability. ! Film Society planners find i themselves confronted with an unusual situation. The ti tles of three of the 10 fea tures in that well attended j foreign film series have been changed for reasons the pro iducers describe as "better 'business." I It was somewhat logical !that "Rouge Et Noir" find its American release as "The Red and The Black," but Handy, West and the Film Committee really really wonder about the degree of ! confusion when Wednesday's i'The Bigamist" appears as , 'A Plea for Passion" and "Crime and Punishment" is billed as "The Most Danger ous Sin." Burning Midnight Oil Builds Up Sleep Debt W'riter Declares Draft Law Demoralizes Senior College Students American college seniors" are required to cope with De fense Dept. policies that are unimaginative, extemporary, unrealistic and inadequate," an associate dean at Amherst College says in commenting on present draft laws. John C. Esty Jr., in an ar ticle appearing in the Jan. 10 issue of Nation, Urait- Dodger or Patriot?", de clares that from the perspec tive of college students "the status quo is absolutely un viable." Esty warns that the "corruption of 'universal service' is corrupting their (college students) sense of duty, uncertainty is making cvnics of them, and their talents and training are de liberately turned from the service of their country. A captain in the Air Force Reserve, Esty says that col lege counselors must now in form male students "don't plan wait; become a father sooner than you had planned; go to graduate school even though you're not ready; pick your college major after con sulting the draft-exempt list." If a counselor gave this kind of advice in normal times, Esty contends, he would be fired for Incompetency. It should be as patriotic to develop one's mind and intel lectual talents as to do a pet ty job in the military, the au thor writes, and attacks the fact that universal Selective Service has lots its universal ity with only one in four eli gible persons being drafted. The author says that most students are taking part in either six-month or ROTC programs to escape uncer tainty in their future. The fault of the six-month pro gram, he argues, is that the student is obligated for the next 5'i years and often faces hardships as a result. "An ROTC student sacri fices the 'impractical' or 'non-vocational' courses, such as music appreciation and lit erature, which might have opened the way for years of leisure time richly and mean ingfully spent." Esty writes. Thousands of you exam-i pressed students will be burn-1 ing the midnight oil during j the next few weeks. After- wards, states an article in the! January Reader's Digest, you should take a day off to sleep off your fatigue. MilllnMe of A mni.!niinc rl . . 1 itiiiiiiFiin ui nun nun uuu t get enough sleep, the article says. By becoming over drawn at the sleep bank they can get into serious trouble. To test the results of pro longed sleeplessness one vol unteer recently kept himself awake for 72 hours. He re ported these effects: he be came lightheaded and de tached; voices seemed to come from far away; objects appeared to move in, then back away; he burst into fre quent laughter for no reason. The effects are similar though milder says author Theodore Irwin, w hen we lose even part of needed sleep. Every sleep cheat suffers some damage to his health. Timing and coordination usu ally suffer first; then hearing and vision. The amount of damage depends on the length of the sleep debt. Most sleep cheats stay up for seemingly strong reasons the late television show, an exciting movie, a poker party. Some are "moonlighters" who hold down second jobs to pad their incomes. But for others, less obvious causes are involved. Often these are neurotic. The fren zied man-about-town, for ex ample, may be trying to es cape from a painful reality. The stay-up-late housewife may be rejecting sleep be cause of tensions and anxie ties. For such persons, lack of sleep is a symbol of deeper trouble. The amount of sleep needed varies with the individual, says Irwin. To find out your own need try going to bed early enough so that you'll wake up without an alarm clock. But remember to ad just your sleeping time to your activities. The more tired you are, the more sleep you'll need. Collegiate Roundup K-State Folloivs iVU; Greeks Have Quotas Belsheim 'Good" Edmund Belsheim, dean of the University Law School is reported in good condition in a local hospital. Dean Belsheim suffered a mild heart attack, but is ex pected to be released shortly. Kansas State College The Kansas State Panhellenic Council has accepted a quota limitation system for next fall. This plan will guarantee a balanced membership to sororities interested in estab lishing new chapters at K- State. Maximum over-all chapter size at K-State will be 80, in cluding all active members, affiliated transfers, and pledges. This does not include married women. Maximum chapter house capacity will be 50 and the chapters will not be allowed to maintain an annex. The pledge quota which will be dependent on the num- iber of girls going through I rush, is to be set each fall j by the Panhellenic Advisor. Using past statistics, the , pledge quota will probably j range from 27 to 30 girls. Kansas State College Voo doo doll heads on mixed drink stirring rods, sold by the YWCA Y-Mart last No- jvember, were discovered to contain poisonous jequinty beans. The head consists of a carved cashew nut with two of the jequirity beans for eyes. An official reported that no illnesses have been blamed on the poison so far. LITTLE MAN ON.CAMPUS -sjfc'p make Yhemxouw mi'. a5k vmmr l fveo um up with m. mutz. this vmm.' - LITTLE MAN ONXAMPUS I Wg WfiLlkP 8 WW TH' PAY THEY STMT OHTHATCimeV