Page 2 The Daily Nebraskon Monday, Decemoer EDITORIAL OPINION Senators Note: Fires Can Kill "We told you o." This noted phrase might well be in order after the fire In Avery Laboratory Wednesday night. Such a com ment would seem likely to come from the State Fire Marshal's office. An extensive inspection was made last year In most of the University buildings and Avery was one structure which supposedly needed fire protec tion improvements. Now we know. Surely the Unlnverilty officials would be justified In passing the same words on to the state legislature. Last year when the University did not receive its re quested budget, it was common knowledge that the fire hazards In the 50 odd buildings would go unchanged. Now the state senators are reaping what they sowed. Improvements in Avery Lab have been delayed due to a lack of funds, according to Professor Robert Harris of the Chemistry department. It is our impression that this same story holds true in the other buildings which were cited for fire hazards. The state senators can feel fortunate that the fire broke out during the night. Students attending class in Avery could reasonably have been injured had the fire occurred in the daytime. The only real loss is the project student was building for his PhD, the equipment and chemicals in the building, the section of building where the fire occured and Injuries to two firemen. All of these re Insignificant when we consider what could have been lost had the fire broke out during class time. At the next meeting of the Unicameral, the Univer sity administrators must do more than request funds for improvements In all buildings with fire hazards; they must demand them. The state legislative body in turn has a moral obligation to meet the demands no mat ter the sacrifice. It is better to have a bankrupt state treasury than death-dealing fire disaster. Letterip The Bally Nebraeken will pnbllik Taa '7 ea Mbmlttee with a eea will ha prlntee aaoer aea aame Letter chaall aot earee !M a Nehraakaa saserree the Meat Triton view. Parking Letter Draws Comment ' Dear Editor of the Daily Nebraskan. I agree wholeheartedly with Vert L. Hatcn's let ter, "Parking Problem Prompts Letter." Al though it is a humorous letter, it is exactly the situation on campus Mon day through Friday until about 1400 hours. , Until this week I parked at a nearby parking lot t mn r n - i in.. iur 94.au a ween, nus week I have been trying to park on campus, but not always succeeding. Driving around looking for a place to park does not actually save money, 'either. Furthermore I have no other alternative but to drive to the cam pus. ; - The first day I parked on campus I arrived twenty-five minutes before my class, and by the time I found a place to park I was five minutes late to class. I had given up finding a place to park and was on my way home when I found one. This it, of course, not the way it should be, and I know I am not alone with this problem. A time or two since this I have had to park downtown and pay money. The way driving condi tions are and people try ing to get into a parking place, I know the cars are going to get banged up a little. I drive a 1961 end do not care for a scratch I have collected already. When a person pays his tuition he pays for such things as the Union and the newspaper, so why tot the parking? True, not everyone uses the park ing lots, but not everyone uses the Union or the newspaper either. It is a very poor deal when a person has to pay his tui tion, pay for the right to park on his own campus and still pay when he breaks a rule, and he is still not guaranteed a place to park, which is the least he should have. I would not mind having Dailv Nebraskan I . I Member Associated Colleriate Pre, International Frets Rswwentatiire: National AsSvertlstnf Servfe, Incorporated rublifthei at: Room 61, Student Union, Lincoln, Nebraska. S SEVENTY-ONE TEAKS OLD I lltb dV R Telephone HE 1-7631 - . . e hi aMMat -toLwee " " o UKa. Kehraeka, "TTil?y wiStu aUe. ..,, ..,. m- f r ". "n "" pioi. hy f Z,m4mtt a tJHiTft at Nebraska enaer authoriiatloa of the Committee g m Snt Allaire aa an expmuijoa of stiieent opinion Pablleatloa onder the g InUwMfftton a the ttaaeommittee ea Student Publication! ahall he free trooe &?orttl ranaiwhla on the part of the Oulxiommlttee of on the part or any ewfttfeMI OttteiuO trie 1 nsvpfsity. -jine nwnwn w vmtij nrnntwiw naii mww s nMwMMly feermittl o what they y, of da, at came ta he printed. eoraeqr S. Utm. EDITOBIAL r ' I jrfwe Edit t "v . tuort a.u)fc ....... Ac Hms " .-h k.m filiir ... Ismtf ymom. ,... ,wow git Writer ' Kini'f ariti(aDhe(i laalor Stall Writers Weady Ml thou letter which are elcaeC 5 mam or Initial!. However, letters S er laltlali only at the editor' 41a. 3 wore. When ratten exeeea thl U aondeaea Sham. Mtinin tk. s S to buy a parking sticker if I knew I would have a place to park. I believe this is a very, very, poor part of the pol icy of the University of Nebraska, and they should have to do some thing about it. I feel something must be done to provide parking for all. a do-it-yourself shelter build R. Stephen Looney ingi which is n0 program at all. Buckley Answers MMUN Question Dear Norm: The reasons why Nation alist China was chosen are as follows: 1) Nationalist China is a member of the Security Council (There will be a Security Council at the Midwest Model U.N. at St. Louis). 2) Nationalist China thus has a veto, power on the Security Council and thus would be very influ ential at the MMUN. 5) The University has many noted authorities in the field of Far Eastern Policies and history and thus would be ablet to send a very qualified, informed delegation. 4) The question of Chi nese representation would undoubtedly have come up and thus our delegation would have been in the center of the controversy. In other words, the Uni versity would be a central and key figure in the MMUN proceedings. 5) This selection would stir up interest on campus and this interest is vital if we are going to be able to select a qualified delega tion. The choice was made . after I had talked to a few members on the Council. I received encouragement from them. Before I sent in the 'application I re ported the choice to the full Student Council in a regular report of the U.N. section's activities on the Public Issues Committee. The report was accepted and I then sent in the ap plication. Yours truly, Bill Buckley ext. 4225. 4226, 422? mm a ffn tha aailMnle veer. STAf ...... Ner in Britty .Oretehea Sbellberg .... .Ana Mnyer ....Dare WofeKnrth .......Cloy Clark Jim Forreflt miiu, una noioort. im rnrrpei Nancy Whltferd Peal Rrniley Becen. Cindy Hellom, Tern Koteuc. Mike MacUaa, See Heyik jBomb Shelter Program Are Indulging in 4Non Eric Sevareid The fall-out shelter "scare" has already sub sided as the President turns to a program of publicly constructed shel ters for public institutions. Those who sounded "hys terical" about their safe ty and those who sounded hysterical about the hys teria have quieted down, and once again it has been demonstrated to both domestic and European critics that, in the test, the American people near ly always act with stead iness, no matter how un steady many of them talk. It is an old story. When ever the national leader ship is unable to antici pate a crisis with a clear and firm policy we go through a phase of public confusion and excitement, and out of this bable come the ingredients of a na tional policy. Appalling as this process may seem to members of smaller na tions and tidier political systems, there is a cer tain method in the mad ness. This country is a cross section of half the human race in all its eager clamoring diversities, and free to speak his mind. Of ten enough it is simp ly not pos sible for g o vern ment to work out and get broad ac ceptance Sevareid for a peacetime policy on a question involving every individual, in advance of an intellectually and emo tionally chaotic shake down cruise of the kind we have recently wit nessed. In the pro cess, the people generally discover what they don't want, at least, and in this case what they don't want is a program of private, The President is going to have severe troubles putting through his prelim inary shelter program, in spite of this rude educa tion in the subject that the people have been giving themselves. But without this preparation he could hardly move a step. As a contrasting exam ple, the Prime Minister of Great Britain can com mit his country to the grave step of seeking membership in the Eu ropean Common Market a policy that will affect every Englishman alive before his people have been seriously educated in its significance. He can do this because he oper ates in a quite different constitutional system and possess 1 an automatic parliamentary majority which must follow him, save under rare and ex treme conditions. The American President .has no such power. He must precede public enlighten ment by a much shorter distance. Because of the breadth of the American land and the diversity of its peo ple, waves of mass emo tion . here usally involve b:t a fractional part of the population, one rea son such waves are not dangerous. It is tln the smaller, more homogene ous countries of Europe that the mass emotions of this generation have proved disastrous for us all Spain, Hitler's Ger many and Mussolini's Italy are obvious ex amples and European critics might reflect and remember before they ac cuse Americans of "hys teria" in the face of pos sible nuclear war and con gratualte themselves on their own maturity and clam. The teacher and columnist, Max Lerner, is right when he says that Europeans generally have "terribly little awareness" of the atomic facts of liff TCiirnnoan tivetarin ha " j I says, is just below the sur- f and is more likely to be "scratched into expres- . . , . J f , , Slon by the fact that the wrilnrl is ininnnsnJ r m,n Unprepared I Of It. Among our own people who most strongly oppose any kind of shelter pro gram do so for one of two reasons, and sometimes both. They believe that the shelters would give only the illusion of safety because people would not have sufficient warning and because the shelters would not truly protect even if there was ade quate warning. This is something no layman and few scientists can feel . any certainty about, be cause the unknown fac tors in such a life-and-death 'equation are so many and so vital. But many of the objec tors also feel that having shelters would produce a war psychology in the people, a mass feeling of "let's get it over with," and thus reduce the world's chance of avoid ing the catastrophe. This reasoning is hard to cred it. Such people seem to fear American reckless ness as much as or more than they fear Russian belligerence, but the oc casional utterings of in dividual military officers notwithstanding we are simply not a reckless peo ple. And while we have not seen our cities in flames as some Eu ropeans have seen their own, we have been thro outhly sobered by a thous and vivid protrayals of what nuclear war would be to the point where 'Dominican Intervention Hurt US Image' Cronon United States intervention in the Dominican Republic would hurt the U.S. image more in the long run than whatever short run gains might be accomplished, E. David Cronon, professor of history, told members and guests of Spanisn Club. Cronon said he would like to see the U.S. get back to the principles of the "Good Neighbor Policy." Kennedy's "Alliance for Progress Pro gram" would be one step in this direction. Cronon noted key problems such as a population growth rate of about 2.5 per cent as compared to about 1 per cent for the rest of the world. This in turn affects education and food (supply in Latin America, he sjid. He said that since World War II there has been a prob lem "as to whether or not the U.S. should invest in social istic ventures in Latin Amer ica which differ from the basic economic policy of the U.S. He said Elsenhower stressed investment in cap italistic projects which often ended up in luxury apart ICEBOY SffiLsr Mil ,,-i I : 'I- : vi L j: I 10 PRIZES Don Goot '65 4118 Selleck Quod. Willord Grammar '45.2104 Slleck Quod. Richard Hand '64 428 N 3rd Seword, Nebr. Karmit Hoyanga Grade. 2500 R St. I. L. Jenten '62 330 So. 30th. Den nil N. Kevill Grad 300 So. 16th. Georgt Krau.i '63 1510 Vine St. Jack Mundell '63 1202 S. 2 1st. William Rodger. Jr '65 4118 Selleck Quod. Stephen Smarm '62 4631 Cooper. . .. n (plu$ -A carton of Viceroys to all students who got all the winners right, regardless of scores! 70 IT VI OTIOY T ( For games play eel Saturday, Nov. 18) y) v v f I "f I .If? ' ' ,9 111 y . 10 PRIZES OF $10 EACH WON BY D.-u 'HA t fi i u f J vu vnoriei neuer, uraa. 4juu nwiarege. Larry rvaui 5 15 No C. MeClotheley '63 3601 Apple. Edwin Metiner '63 2354 N St. Dave Mignery '63 533 So 22 '63 1201 So. 21. Phil Schenck 63 4215 Selleck Quod. Gene Word '62 5117 Selleck Quad. Allen 3021 Stratford. tpjuS -A carton of Opponents Sequitur' our frightened children ask their heart breaking, plaintive questions. Given the repeated break- , down of genuine American effort for peace through disarmament over a 15 year period, it is impos sible to regard prepara tions defensive as well as offensive as any thing but measures that tend to prevent war, in complete as the guaran tee may be. Soviet policy has forced us to this un happy position, and the only alternative, this side of a Soviet policy change, is peace through surrend er of our power, influence and future as a great na tion. Surely those who sign pe titions demanding that we forgo shelter building and devote the many millions ' of dollars involved to a "positive program for peace" are indulging in a gigantic non sequitur. If they know practical "peace programs" that have not been tried, if they know how to rid the world of the horror that hangs over us all, by the spending of money, they ought to let everyone in on their secret. (Dlitr. 1961, by Hall Syrnl., Inc.) (AU RUhU Reserved) ments and worked to the ad vanatge of- the rich rather than the poor. "A socialistic regime is not necessarily communistic. The real test is whether or not the country maintains a demo cratic structure. It would be a serious mistake to write these countries off as friends just because their economic policy was not the same as ours," he said. SELECT NOW. Have Our nam imprinted GOLDENROD Stationery Store 215 North 14 vnr v "w ' 1? ( For games played Saturday, Nov. 4) 1st Prize $10092 CASH! OF $10 EACH WON BY NIK FOOTBALL CONTEST 1st Prize $10099 CASH! Viceroys to all students who . Today Eloise asks: How are we going to pick a new coach to lead them Cornhuskers (it's not how you play the game, it's whether you win or loose) to victory. So, today, Eloise suggests some methods which could be used. The Old-Coaches-Never-Die Method: Collect Jen nings, Elliot, Glasford, Presnell, Jones et all, bring them to the union for a cup, and let them pick. They, if anyone should realize the prob lem at hand, (no, 15 head coaches is just too many) The Vacancy-Prospects-Picking Method: Collect Harold Lahar, John Ral ston, Hank Foldberg, Jim Meyers et al and let them pick. They if anyone, don't know what they are get ting into, and anyway, it might be better that way. (now fellas, cooperate you gotta pick someone.) The Let-The-Studcnt-Pick-A-Coach-Method: Oh, but the Student Council would never approve of the election methods, and someone might forget to register the election or something. Anyway, any one knows the student body isn't qualified to elect anyone. Maybe an inter mystic Student Council committee could do the job, (no, not him, Beautiful, breathtaking blooms! in orchid colors . in white 5 AU Seasonable Flowers Available We have been designing corsages for the Ball for over 30 years We know how to do the job right. Let us help you. Danielson Floral Go: 1306 N lata jM E. L. JENSEN '62 330 So. 30 . Civil Engineering, Notivt Lincolnit Hobbiai Sportt ( Camping THESE STUDENTS LOUISE EDEN '64 4600 Eden Circle Business Teachers Course Hobbies Photography, Flying" THESE STUDENTS ON nni u.u I . ... got all the'winners right, he's too busy with Build ers and AUF and Red Cross to do a good job, thanks anyway, Council). The Plck-A-Coach-On-The Merits of His Ability - Method: I mean, that's asking a little too much, (yes, this school is a little bigger than the one he's from, but he might grow to like it here. Sure, we can hide some students if the campus looks too big). The Let-the-Coaches-Ap-ply For The Job Method: The volume of mail would Increase, that's right. (WE REPEAT, our address is: Univer sity of Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska). The Let-Thunder-Thorn. ton-Coach-Method: Of all concerned, he's turned in by far the best record this year. The Take-A-Poll-In-The-Union-Method: We could ask all the students in the crib between 10 and 11 a.m. only if they had three spiral notebooks, smoked Rents, and came from a high school under 729. (no, girls, coach fooU ball you u n d e rstand. Teachers College already has a dean). READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS Orchids for the MILITARY BALL t to ea. to ea. 434-7602 $50.00 Roy Lorong '64 1633 "Que" St. $25.00 Kermit T. Hoyenga Grod, 2500 R St. ON CAMPUS! $50.00 Allen Wellmon '62 -3021 Stratford $25.00 John Frobenius '63 519 North 16th CAMPUS! . 16th. David Jack Mundell Allen Wellmon '62 regardless of scores! 6T gtoT II mW- III TK. :J f U 'MI 1ST I