i 1 v.? fl .''if t ft bo ft vV 0 $ ' f 'J q - 4 4 Page 2 The Daily Nebraskan Friday, September 14, 19621 YOUR RAG 72 and Still Kicking Seventy-two years old and still growing! The Daily Nebraskan, to day, begins its 72nd year of consecutive publication and service to the Univer sity. The paper was begun as an official organ of the student body and voice of student opinion. Its respons ibilities to the University community has grown and continues to grow today as the influx of students swells. In 1962, as well as in 1890, the Nebraskan is your paper. The news columns are filled each day with the events and influences that effect you or that you cause to effect others. Its editorial columns are ex pressions of your opinions and the opinions of your fel low students and faculty. If hot, you are obligated to Inform us as your staff where we are wrong, what we overlooked and how your opinion differs from that Expressed by the Ne braskan. For this reason, the door of the Nebraskan office is always open as are the columns and letters-to-the-editor to student and faculty contributions your contributions. This semester brings a new staff together to pub lish your Nebraskan daily. We pledge ourselves to make the Nebraskan inter esting, informative, contra versial and entertaining. Making the big switch from the sports department is Dave Wohlfarth, who only answers to the call of Bullet, as this semester's managing editor. Bullet is responsible for the physical appearance of the paper and must exercise a great deal of news judgment in each issue. Last year this very talented fellow was sports editor and before that was staff writer for two years. Rapidly gaining control of the news desk is another very capable and talented Nebraskan veteran, Wendy Rogers, news editor. This girl will have the demand ing task of seeing that all the news of student activi ties and interest is gathered daily. This means a daily canvassing of the campus from top to bottom, from administration to activity s u b-committee. You can have confidence in this lit tle lady and her crew of reporters. Sports editor this semest er is Rick Akin, another veteran of this paper and Nebraska sports coverage. His job will be to cover one of the most hopeful years of University sports. Copy editors are Linda Jensen, a veteran, and Rose- mary (Pixie) Smallwood I and Susan Rutter, both new to the staff but ex- tremely capable in their I jobs of editing stories and writing headlines. Staff writers Karen Gun- licks, Gary Lacey and Sue 1 Hovik are all veterans. They I will be assisted by junior staff writers Jim Morgan, Al Spore and Jim Moore. f All are products of last se- mester's fine worker-train- ing program. Covering the Ag campus will be Larry Wadell, another newcomer to the staff. In the adjacent business office is tall, slim, John Zeilinger as business man- ager for the Nebraskan. His "legmen" this semester I are Bill Gunlicks, Bob Cun- ningham and Tom Fitchett. In a lonely corner of the business office sits quietly the sole person responsible for the delivery of the Ne- E braskan and the mailing of subscriptions, our circula- I tion manager, Jim Trester. I His is a hard job and if you do not think so, try put- ting 5,000 copies of the Ne- braskan in a Volkswagon. That is your staff, this is f your newspaper. Enjoy it. Read it. Contribute to it. I Above all, take issue with I it. A 01 II t W t 1 SSI lift i .;! - .-. -. . -V wiflriL .. .-,.-."-:.":.; '" Coloring RaT-L- I am a college student . , , color me ivy. Notice my pipe. It looks good. It tastes awful . . , color it prominent. Notice my sunglasses. They keep the rain out of my eyes . . . color them use ful. These are my parents. They pay for my education . . , color them poor. They thought college could make me a better man . . . color them disillu sioned. This is my cigarette pack. Everybody borrows it . , , color it empty. This is my advisor. He sees that I get the right classes . . . color him blind. He is happy when I get good grades . . . color him sad. These are my tennis shoes. They are my status sym. bols. I am a big wheel . . color the toes out . . . color the laces broken . . . color one lost under my bed. SPECTATOR, Seattle University :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiitniiiii;iiiiiiiiiinu 1 About Letters H Thf Daily ntWMkm invltei 3 reftdpm t an It for expression S of nlnion on rarrrnt topics regnri rs of viewpoint Letter matt be fffiied contain a verifiable add : rrt. and be free of libelous ma terlal Pen names ma? be in- j eluded and will be tvleased upon written refloett. r VNI AM WoRM'Mfi THRbusH THE RANK?. I'M STARTING WITH THE SENATE. S Brevity and lerlblllty increase s the rhanci1 of (publication Lenxtby S letters mas be edited r emitted Absolutely nose will be returned. FitlllllllllllllMMIIIIIIIIIItlllinihlllimillllHI" A University What Is . . the peculiar property of evei-y university, properly so called, must al ways be found on the highest depart ments of intellectual culture. It is not, primarily, a society for the diffusion of useful knowledge, nor a common school system for the education of the masses, however important a supplementary part it may take in both of these directions. Its distinctive work is in the higher realms of thought, there building upon the highest attainments of the past to reach upward to still higher, and thus enlarge the boundaries of human knowl fldgc by discovery of new truths and by new applications of the old. Not quantity but quality of work is the ultimate test of a university's success. To educate one man thoroughly, to carry him above this standard of his times, to make him one of those who stand first, leading, not following the world's movements, confers mors honor than to graduate a thousand upon the usual dead level of moderate scholarship. Nay, in these respect and rightly considered, quality of results in cludes quantity, and one man educated to do first rate work weighs more and 'Survival Biscuits' counts more than many who are only competent to deal in secondhand ideas and to follow the beaten tracks. One best is more than many good. The man who looks a little further than his contem poraries discovers a new continent. The man who thinks a little more profoundly invents the telegraph or reveals the laws of light. To train one such man, or to clear his way before him, adds more to the world's wealth, and gives a greater impetus to the world's civilization than numerical figures ean compute. "Therefore it is, that the University should be supplied with all the needful facilities for giving the best education to the few, as well as a good education to the many. The number may be small of those who are by nature capable of re ceiving the best gifts, but the best gifts should be kept ready, and no one, hon estly seeking for then, should be turned away." From the 1871 inaugural address of William Greenleaf Eliot, President of the Washington University Corporation, 1854 1887, Chancellor of Washington Univer sity, 1871-1887. INazi Predicts It? I'lron Curtain' Ilri 1945 Book Who . coined the phrase "Iron Curtain?" I According to the Iowa State Daily, you are wrong if you guessed Winston Churchill, who used the term in his speech at Ful- ton; Mo., in March, 1946. I According to William R. Underhill, ISC speech pro- fes'sor, Joseph Goebels, the Nazi " propaganda minister, f wrote in a German editorial in. 1945 about an ''Iron b Curtain' Titled "The year 2,000," the . book said an I "Iron Curtain" would fall over eastern Europe if Rus- sia were not defeated in the war, Where To Put Them Now Last year when the sim mering Berlin controversy was threatening to boil over into World War III, President Kennedy called for a national fallout shelt er program. The response was immed iate and dramatic. All over the country do-it-yourselfers started diging holes in back yards and basements. The manufacturers of prefabri cated home shelters sud denly found themselves with more orders than they could fili. And the office of Civil Defense, with congres- AtfARFARF Here's What We Need Most During tlic Crnclal 60s!9 mjMIt V ! ' ' V--"" ' sional approval, launched an ambitious program intended to provide, by 19G7, protec- I tion against radioactive fall- out for millions of Ameri- 1 cans. I But the new enthusiasm g for civil defense cooled off as rapidly as the Berlin crisis did. The amateur excavators have put away their shovels, the prefabri- cated shelter business is 1 back in the doldrums, and the other day the House Appropriations Committee pulled the rug from under the President's program by refusing a $568 million re- quest for the first phase of 1 the mass shelter construe- tion program. 1 Which seems to bring up anew the question of what's to become of the $20 mil- lion worth of "survival bis- 1 cuitb" the nation's major cracker manufacturers are I baking to stock the federal shelters which it now ap- pears won't be built after 1 all. That's a lot of biscuits, I and congressmen do hate bureaucratic waste. Maybe they will end up in school lunch programs. The Oregonian ( UiHV DO DOSS CHASE CARS? J VOBI OPS... J TOTRV TO f?EA0 THE LETTERlNS ON THE (KB CAPS.' v -to (Ed. Note: It seems that the University's and state's I version of the survival bis- s cult, the "Nebraskit," may L'n down In nnniihiritv with flip fprirl Povprnmpnt It B"',mp 11,8 'epresaniative (or me ieciLrai government. 11 0rh0.Ve(l, SprinR-step Shoes mot 8 health was H top selling item last shoe) on your campus. More than 270 styles Spring and early summer.) for men, women nd children, ail lully illus- ,, ,ui M j 1 ,1 l"wu tuv pagc VU1U1 VOIOH Daily Nebraskan SEVENTY-SECOND YEAR OF PUBLICATION 14th &R y Telephone 432-7531 ext. 4225, 4226, 4227 Member Associated Collegiate Press, International Press Representative, Na tional Advertising Service. Incorporated. Published at: Room 51, Student Union, Lincoln 8, Nebraska. Ealnd trcwd rla-i, maltr. Mtafe paid, at the ! afflm In Llnnoln. Nrbraaka. Thf Dally Wr.Hrsakm Is publlihrd Monday, Wednesday, Thaid?y ad Vri'lt.y -luln the chnil ja-. Mpcnt (''irltij? ar tj n-d '" am irr td . rnre rt-ri-.R ;t)i , b lwdrn' lf Ihf ?'ii-i :'ly of Nrhrr'ka r d-r (h- author' -n. Utm el to Cammlltea m siudrnt Affair, m an Mpreaaioo S No experience or investment needed. Sim. ply show Ortho-Vent's quality (election to g classmates, fraternity brothers or sorority sisters. You collect immediate cash com. S miss'onson every sale at the time of the sale. f atadent eninloa. Puhllratlon under he Jurlsdlctlan of All orders filled promptly. Satisfaction the auhcommlUne on Ktudent Publication shall be free guaranteed. from editorial ceniomhtn on the part of the Htthcommlltoe A cuick easv wav for vnti tn hi ttr r on the nart tt any peraon oul.ide the I'nlyenlty. The ,.,ndiBo mftna lLnt hlLl h.ML! member, of the Dll Net.ra.kan ataff are peraonnllv Spending money Without having to hold down responsible for rhat they say. or do. or cause to be printed. regular part-time job. Work your own FenroarT l, iss S hours. Earn up to $10 on one sale. Easy to rt ll'Ts'iI) f A f fit A Ctrl " . rn re i nr. . ' . v,...ii Dt.irr maKe 43U. iiuu or mtirp BKira eh mnntn The Church ... For A Fuller Life ... For You CALENDAR OF CHURCH SERVICES UNITED CAMPUS CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP (Presbyterian, Unttod Church of Christ, Evangelical United Brethren (V Disciples of Christ) Alon J. Pickering, Ralph Hays, Dennis W. Patterson, Pastors 9:30 a.m. Crossroads Seminor 10:45 a.m. Corporate Worship , 5:30 p.m. Fellowship Forum 6:30 p.m. Forum Discussion ST. MARKS ON-THE-CAMPLS (EPISCOPAL) 13th and R Sts. Goargt H. Pock, Vicar 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 10:30 a.m. Holy Communion UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL (The luthoran Church Missouri Synod) 15th t Q Sts. A. J. Nordon, Pastor A. P. Vasconcellot, Vicar 9:30 a.m. Worship 1 1 : 30 a.m. Worship 5:30 p.m. Gammo Delta ST. THOMAS AQUINAS CHURCH (Catholic Student Center) 16th t "Q" Sts. Robert F. Sheeky, J. Rowley Meyers, Thomas M. Puclik, Chaplains Masses: 8:00 a.m., 9:30 p.m., 11:00 o.m., 12:15 p.m. Saturday Confessions: 4:30-5:30 p.m. 7:30-8:30 p.m. BAPTIST STUDENT FELLOWSHIP Arthur L. Slalkeu, Pastor H. M. Burner, Director of Student Work 9:30 a.m. Bible Study 10:45 a.m. Morning Worship 6:00 p.m. Fellowship Hour 7:00 p.m. Evening Worship 8:00 p.m. After-Church Fellowship Groups Meeting First Baptist Church 14th & K Sts. WESLEY FOUNDAHON (Methodist) 640 No. 16th St. WHIIom B. Gould, Duane Hutchinson, Ministers C. Richard Morris, Lay Associate 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship, followed by discussion 11:00 a.m. Morning Worship 5:00 p.m. Fellowship Supper 6:00 p.m. Vespers 6:15 p.m. Religious Roundtables LUTHERAN STUDENT FOUNDATION (National Lutheran Council) I3S Ne. 16th Atvin Petersen, Pastor Gwen Jacobean, Assistant. 10:30 a.m. Worship 1 1 :30 o.m. Discussion 5:30 p.m. Lutheran Student Association TIFERETH ISRAEL SYNAGOGUE 3219 Sheridan Rabbi Maurice A. Pomerantz Services: Fri., 8:00 p.m.: Sat., 9:00 a.m. Hillel Meetings Monday .NTVUvt. 4 ou remember? - Y.6 M.naeinr Kditc " n wJh?TSh Qualify for free shoes for yourself. r.rwa r.niMr . Wendy Roreraf mo" tompoh rooor ror yowr compwro Perrobfe Shoo Store. No obfiof Jon of ooy afod. IT, H O-V Tn"5 H0EC0"" "" """""" 331209 Brand Read, Salem, Virginia Knorta r.dlloi ., Kick Akin A- News Kdltor Larry Hadell Copy Editors Linda Jensen. Nuwun. Hntter. .. Rosemary Smallwood Rtaff Writers (toe Hovik, Gary Laeey, Ivaren Ounlirkn Junior Staff WHtero Jim Morran, Al Hsore, Urn Mro-T1 Bi'HINKSK KTM'V B'.'-'npsw .ilnnaK. . Ast:'atnit IJui-lncs Manasera Circulation anarer John c'll'tver Bill ttunllckt, Pob Clinnlnx ham. ' m "'itihelt Jim Treater K I wsat to make atrtrs monty with OrthaVsot. Plosso c rufllt ma atitolulely FREE, wllheut any bllaatlea. r rylhlny i of m lo tt suned immaoialaiy. Addrsss . g Clty Do yn:i renumber the first time you liHtened to a sea shell? Ajui uhtu you watched u sunflower turn to ward thu sun? And when you tried to guess where the pot of gold was at the end of the rainbow? Life is full of sweet mysteries for the young. Do you remember? In fact, life reveals even more sweet mysteries as we STow older. When we think of these things, the mysteries of life, of God's care of us, of the wonders of the uni verse yon know, that's a way lot praying! Yes just thinking: about God. Fortunately, too, we have the Church your church a place to contemplate Buch things, to pray, to ask questions, and give thanks to Almighty God. Go to the church of your choice this Sunday. There you will find some of the answero o . . to gome of these wondrous mysteries. a " r " - A wjk aKt'-' n..- . ":::n?ts -'.b "' :. Mk i " in- wi THt CHurtcH eon all . . . ALL FOR THI CHURCH funiay Psalms Monday Deuteronomy 6:2W6 Tuosday Job Wednotday Matthew UilU.17 Thuradav I Cerinthiaas Friday Iphesianl Copyright 190J, Eeltter Adrartuing Scrrlct, Ine., Brratburg, Vt. Kslunlay JspheAlans Tlx Churdi is the frealast lacast on aarlh (or Uh boiUiac of eliaf aclar aad goad aitisoaihip. It se sioreham of aairisaal oaless. WHb oai a strong Outre, atiou eW asoctuy oar amiiaattap esc ear m Tirs. Tnara an leer soawi ssasaes M why aatry earaasi tbaavi atkrad i arrises raiiiUrfy ead anaaarl t Qnrch. Thar atet (I) Far Ma ow sakt. (2) For bis eUieWe aka. (3) For Uta take ef bis eem. auraiiy and eatiea. W Far the sake of the Chens batlf. wfctdi rsdj hu moral asd auarrial sep rl. Plan sa go to ehatrjl togaw larly aad read year Bible daily.