The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 09, 1959, Page Page 2, Image 2
Paget 2 Open For A While The' Doily Nebroskon hriQQy, uaooer y, Doon open, doors shut. When doors open, the outside can peek in for five or six miu;:tes. Then doors swing shut again. : , What happens when doors open, we 'can report. What happens when doors shu$ we can only guess r ask the persons who were behind the doors. Then our source is secondary. We then have rumor instead of reporting. f For approximately seven minutes Wednesday, the door to the Student Tri bunal was open open to a small group of spectators and members of the Daily Ne braskan. For those seven minutes, we can report to the campus how the Tribunal functions.' The room itself Is a small one on fourth floor of the Ad building. In the center is a table around which the student judges and the faculty judge sit. The defendant sits at one end. There are five or six chairs around the edge of the room where spec tators may sit if the hearing is cpen. The Tribunal chairman reads a state ment which is submitted in writing by the student being heard. Then he reads a statement submitted by the police depart ment, or whoever has referred the case. Then the Judges may ask questions. If the case Is a liquor violation they probably include questions of knowledge of the law, location of the infraction, age at the time, other persons involved. The defendant Is asked If he has any questions. Then the doors close. Spectators and the defendant do not hear the deliberations of the Judges. Putting together what was observed at Wednesday's session and what reportedly occurred during the closed hearings one conclusion appears Justified. That is the Tribunal acted much more like a court when the doors were open than it did when they were not. When the doors were closed, one of the judges knitted during the hearings. No needles were in sight during the open hearing. When the doors were open, the atmosphere was one of fairly serious de liberation. Once closed, the hearings be came quite humorous or so we are told ,-remember, we can only report hearsay, no matter how reputable the source. A further conclusion was that- the Tri bunal does not appear sure of its reason for hearing cases which occur during the summer. While several of Wednesday's cases involved incidents which occurred in August, the judges admitted that they were not sure of the University's policy concerning jurisdiction over persons who attend the University the other nine months. It is important to note in this connection that the Tribunal does not go out and seek cases. All cases are referred to It from Student Affairs. It does seem, however, that when such a case is coming before them, the judges would be wise to have pretty solid reasoning to back them in their handling of the case. This is not a matter of changing the structure of the Tribunal, but rather an example of why any student who sits as a judge should become completely familiar with all University regulations dealing with student infractions. Hello Dance Will See 1st Royalty The first royalty of the year will be selected Saturday night at the Hello-Girl-Hello Boy Dance in the Student Un ion Ballroom. Candidates for Hello Girl are Kay Stute, Gaylean Wells, Sheryl Knapp, Kay Green and Vivian Reppert. Don Bruegman, Jim Glath er, Fred Rickers, Ron Mc Knight and Allen Well man are the candidates for the Hello Boy crown. Admission is 75 cents. Tick ets can be purchased from any IWA or RAM coun cil member. All University students are invited to attend the dance. Wait Till Next Year, You Bums Now that the World Series is over stu- fans are hoping that they won't have dents can start attending afternoon classes to wait another 40 years to see their again, and the crowd in front of the tele- team play in the Rose Bowl of baseball, vision sets throughout the Student Union Chances are they won't since White will dwindle back to normal. Sox Vice President Chuck Comiskey has predicted that his club will be pennant The pocHts of Dodger fans on the contenders for several seasons to come, campus are probably a little greener as a result of the outcome, while Chicago It was quite a comeback for the Dodg ers, who last year finished in seventh place in the National League. Even after mi 1 TVf the first game of the Series, when the 1 lieV J; lippeCL lUail Sox drubbed the old "Bums of Brook- J 1 lyn" 11-0, it looked as if the 1959 World Kai finally did it Went absolutely, to- Championships would be a runaway for tally, unforgiveably wild. Crazy. Insane. Chicago. The whole biz staff flipped its collective L Apparently, however, the opening game lid. Even they are embarrassed about it. - trouncing was just what the West Coast Actually, the major reason for this adver- boys needed to shake them to their tising monster is the gung-ho spirit which senses- is presently infecting the campus. always Mter tQ but ago ....... players if not the bettors probably Seems like everybody and their brothers aren-t t00 uruiappy th the financial out wanted to buy a booster ad for Saturday's come 0f the Series. The record crowds game. in the Los Angeles Coliseum provided a gate that should net the White Sox play To which we can only add, so solly for ers somewhere in the vicinity of $7,000. all the adds and GO BIG RED! Not bad for six days work. Daily Nebraskan SIXTY-NTXE YEARS OLD TSSLSS ZtTX Member: Associated Collegiate Press, Inter- o, or hum b prints. rhruary s. ism. collegiate Press 8nh.mPti. rates ar. $3 per mmw or ts for u Representative: National Advertising Serf- fcnVeV'swxma mm ntm at the pt etfie Ice, Incorporated ta Lincoln, Nebraska. nneVr the w ! Aavut 4. 1S1. Published at: Room 20, Student Union EdlUw 7. Maxwen Lincoln, Nebraska ManasW'tMitoV ..carrou ' Telephone 2-7631, ext. 4225. 4226, 4227 SZttFMi"V.V.V."V"V."V.Hb ProbT" The DaJly Nebraska ta published Monday, TursdaT, Copy Editor i HooTae, 8sadm Laeker, Vednesen? an Friday turlac the ehool year, except . arln( vacation and exam periods, by student of tho Staff Writer Jeeoa; ianeeek, Kam Urn. lMvrlty of Nebraska nnder the authorization of the ' McCartney Committee ea Stadent Attain, as an expression of ta- Jr. Staff Writers ........... .MlkeMUroy. Ana Moyer dm opinion. Publication under the Jurisdiction of the BUSINESS SI Air rtaheommittm on Stadent Publication shall be tree Business Maaater .J Katmaa front editorial censorship on the part of the Bnheom- assistant stasia Mauafen Doa Perruson. tU tnlttee or on the part of any member of the faculty of Orady, Charlene Groa the University, or on tho part of any person outside Circulation Rfanager Don- Vounxdatal t : at1 .-e-rf yv c " - U'r , , - A-,,..' . . ,. , - m. :-4 'jff ELEANOR BRADLEY (PLAYBOY'S MISS FEBRUARY) Your Februory PLAYMATE will be your hostess in Simon's University Shop, Sot urday, 10-12 A.M., prior to the KU-Nebr. game. Everyone 1$ Welcome r IT. Cl u men s umvcrsiiy nop i i 1 I I I 2nd Floor EaaS 9 Sr--tf J4---P- i 'Waterfront' Is Sunday Movie' The Academy Award winning movie, "On the Wat erfront," starring Marlon Brando, will be shown Sun day night in the Student Un ion. "East of Eden" originally was scheduled to be shown but was replaqed, according to Jane Mahoney, assistant chairman of the Union film committee. "Waterfront" will begin at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Ball room. The Friday find Saturday night movies will be "Way Out West" with Laurel and Hardy and "A Day at the Races" starring the Marx Brothers. The movies will be shown in the Union Auditorium start ing at 7 p.m. i OPEN BOWLING SATURDAY ALL DAY SUNDAY UNTIL 6:30 - . Week Day Ml :I0 Incept Wednesstoy NORTHEAST LANES NORTH ON HIGHWAY 77 4S1S No. So Ph. -4J7 Aunt Maude Lucianetti's Woke will be held at th Mozzarelli Funeral Parlor, 601 Ko. 16 SaveBrtOJ TROPICAL FISH Start or Restock Aquarium larrest assortment com plete supplies Sunday Specials. 2580 Woodsdole 3-4579 -ef-i.ji $ PEI9WAY MOTORS 1719 N St. LINCOLN, NEBR. Speed Eq;'pment Hollywood Mufflers TURNPIKE Saturday 9 to 1 STACY GARNER COMING Fri., Oct. .23rd GLEN MILLER ORCHESTRA 0 A column of ineidtnid inrWKgence by JOCktlf brand HOLLYWOOD BOWL Open Bowling Weekdays Till 5 Sat. All Day, Sundays Till 5 24 Lanes- Automatic Pintertert Restaurant . . . Barber Shop 920 IV. 48th PnONE C-I911 jjll I13TH fir M LINDELL HOTEL r A a . aa. - . I 1 1 I 1 I I I I 1 1 1 I t "BIT! THI HAND" Edmund Burke first noted that tome men will bite "the hand that fed them". But Mark Twain, in "Pudd'nhead Wilion", refined the observation and made It biting: "II you pict up a starving dog and mote him prosper out, he will not bil you. Thi$ it the principal difference between a dog and a man." "PRAISI THI LORD AND ETC Perhaps the most popular remark to come out of World War II it this exhortation made at Pearl Harbor by It. Comm. Howell M. fargy, a Navy chaplain: "Praii the lord end pin the ammunition." "lONORANCI IS BLISS" h was Thomas Gray who coined this comforting generalization in behalf of all "0" students. See his "On a Distant Prospect of Eton College") "...where ignorane is bliss, 'Tis lolly to be we." . Jockeii SKANTS' striped brief "Merely sensational" that's the judgment of college men who have seen the new Jockey Striped SKANTS. Jockey stylists have taken their own original 100 stretch nylon bikini-style brief (already a national favorite). ..added candy stripes.,. and produced a garment you'll really enjoy wearing. SKANTS is cut high on the sides with a low waistband and comes in a choice of red, block, green, rust or blue stripes. Look for SKANTS in stripes, or solids in the Jockey department ot your campus store. fashioned by the house of r ; J -tPo 9fbt HERE NOW ARE SOYS 16 SUPERLATIVE NEW CHEVROLETS FOR 1960! JiiMiW.. an A f. (ZT mmkmr"""0 arj ir t'- - ,. jay nimi- " ''lias 4MPALAS All the car you ever yearned for! Each embodiea dis tinctive treatment inside and out, with triple-unit rear lights, fingertip door releases and safety-reflector armrests. Impala sport sedan above. 4 BEL AIRS Priced Just above Chevy's thriftiest models! Like all Chevies, they give you the famed Hi-Thrift 6 or a new Economy Turbo-Fire V8 as standard equipment. 4-door Bel Air sedan above. sWsBB'TOW'PW CHEVRQirrA Nearest to perfection hw-prced car ever camel Tw its KT-TV-rst 8 BISCAYNES These (honest to gosh) are the lowest priced of tht '60 Chevrolets. They bring you the same basic beauty and relaxing roominess as the other models. 4-door Biscayne sedan above. 77 5 STATION WAGONS-Styled to carry you away, with the kind of ""LfP to carry away most anything you want to take with youl Thrifty 2-door Brookwood above. . . ' - ' ' " -' " Csswy Stwsrasai WeaU? MC-TV-Ba IheWee Cam teectal Frtdet, atebf , Cgj. See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer