f 1 Pone 2 EDITORIAL DOWN FOR COUNT . TNE: Dead or Sleeping? Dean Ross said in his appearance the Campus Forum program of KXUS radio station that the University hopes that they have seen the last of the sub rosas. The dean was referring to a prom ise he had received from the active members before Thanksgiving vacation to dissolve TNE. On Nov. 16th he said: "To the best of my judgement Theta Nu Epsilon has been disolved." The active members he said, were cooperating completely with the dean and they are now proceeding in duscussions with TNE alums. The University is aware of the prob lems of insuring the disolution of a sub rosa. It is like the Russians agreeing to stop all nuclear bomb testing but will not agree to having inspection teams in their country. How can we be sure? What guarantee do we have that the sub rosa will never appear again? Dean Ross said himself in Wednesday's broad cast that in the last decade Chancellor Gustafson disorganized the TNE's and ten years later "we find ourselves deal ing with the same group." In addition, two other sub-rosas have been organized. In 1951 the Chancellor announced that TNE has agreed to disolve now and forever," We are sure that the Administration must be taking greater and more defin ite steps to see that the promises made by these sub-rosas to disolve and turn over membership lists, manuals and rit uals are kept But the problem is more complex. In examining Nebraskans that date back to the turn of the century, one was brought to our attention that bannered a headline similar to the ones that appeared in 1951 and again this year on Nov. 15th: 'TXETs Consent To Dissolve." It w as dated 1915. In the Red Sunset In Europe For Jong years after World War II, the United States was deeply con cerned at the p o p u 1 a r strength of the Communist parties in France and It aly, They were corraling from 30 to 40 per cent of the vote in major elec tions. Knowledgeable students of these countries has tened to explain that this appearance of strength was always misleading, that much of the Red's popular support was "pro test voting." Censorship In Spain The suspension of cen sorship of the Spanish press, which now has been in effect for more than a month, sheds some revelatory sidelights on the nature of government control of expression. Ever since Francisco Franco took charge, the Spanish press had been raider the repression that is so familiar in totali tarian countries. Above all, this means no criti cism of the man on horse back, nor any suggestion that Ms way of doing things is not the best of" all possible ways. Thor oughgoing press censor ship is more pervasive than this, however. It means that news from the outer world can no longer be objectively re ported, lest the citizenry be led to disadvantageous comparisons with condi tions elsewhere, ana lest it should be thus inspired to question the final wis dom of the Leader. It seems fairly obvious that freedom of expres sion and an autocratic form of government are incompatible, Just as de mocracy is impossible without a free press A truly free press will soon er or later criticize the most beneficent of gov ernments. If the criticism appeals to the public as valid, the government may fall,, or at least be endangered. No dictator wo tolerate this as long as he is interested in re taining power (and none of them ever show any willingness to relinquish it). Nevertheless, f r e s n breezes are blowing on Spain, and the ostensible relaxation of censorship is one evidence of them. We would not say that Franco is growing more tolerant More likely Ik is feeling pressure that he cannot resist, just as the masters of Russia are. The base of power is be ing broadened. These changes amount to very little, to be sure, but at least, from our point of view, they are in the Tight .direction. Pasa dena. Calif.) Star-News. . . story about the promised dissolution the Nebraskan reported that TNE's had agreed to dissolve even prior to this date. It said that in 1896 the sub-rosa made the same promise it has made at least three times since. This is the problem that the Ad ministration faces and is one case in point why sub rosas are out lawed. We, too, hope that the Nebraskan's Nov. 16th headline will be the last time it appears, or one like it. Again TNE has gone down for the count. Time alone will tell whether it will rise again. The Daily Nebraskan is willing to back the apparent winner of the fight, the University. If Theta Nu Epsilon, or oth er sub rosas, stage a drunken come back, there will be cause for action. Un til then, the matter is closed. We Are Not Alone In a pre-Thanksgiving vacation is sue of the Iowa State Daily, State Univer sity of Iowa, Iowa City, la., there ap peared on the editorial page a cartoon by a staff artist It depicted a campus police car with a Pi Xi symbol painted on the car door. Two police officers were looking at it when one said, "Maybe Elliot Ness Would Know What to Do." The Nebraskan also received a phone call from the Michigan Daily, Michigan University, Ann Arbor, Mich., with the question: "How did we do it?" Referring to the University's crack down on sub rosas and promise for disolution from TNE. Many Frenchmen and Italians, surrounded by the chaos of war's after math, evidently felt there was no other way they could effectively voice their distress. Experts said large numbers of these would have been stunned had the Commu nist party actually gained power. Today trained observers looting at France and It aly see a vastly different situation. The fantastic economic booms in these lands have reduced the "protest" sharply. Com munist parties are being pared to their hard core. Western Europe's brand of socialism is said by many to be reaching "end of the road." Most gov ernments bave adopted the moderate portions of it long since, and there seems little market among the voters for the nationalism of industry. Inevitably this tends to discredit the even greater extremes of communism. The old slogans sound tired and empty espe cially when set beside the rousing figures of econom ic progress. Hi 't- - jzgj HAS FICWW S JPAHOJ 116FIFXS AWAY K- (ontkary id popular r&k BEUEfJ&BABPIPEStVERE t & &m,jT jiariwEfirED BfTHB w'rXlm ffslAjr SCOTCH-. THEY WEBB J Z& jTJ fXjT Itlif Hill- - '' ---i: '& H, a"ilifa-.-'--'' '.M ffiu ayjNTKY f&BDS txJinTHE peecARtaus hqpxdih which n& live. SOU CAM HEIP BY fSaULAB PURCHASES OfU.5. WS BONDS. T5 A PRIVILEGE OTHER PEOPLE WISH THEY HAD. ytXiOoyoUKSELF ahd your ccxMnw-A mm 1QOBUY US. SAVIN&S SONDS. Daily Nebraskan SEVENTY-SECOND TEAR OF PIJELICATION Telephone 4r-7f.:i evL 45. r5C, Member AsBociated CoBegiate Press, International rress Eepreneirtative, National Advertising Service, In cmpi'a1d. Published at: Rom SI, Student Union, Lin- coin 8, Nebraska. ;mmful wieoiid oUhh maUor. iHMtuire vuitt. af 41w wat fuRkoe fa tiUuidln, UetoriHika The tialiy "fcetn-uHkyn 'ht iiiltil)hfld mmtdnii' VnatiKflin'. ThurMdav mni fduy diivinft: hf itrthiMii ynm. tkmhim duriiia viii!HtiniHi and meant nwliidH. and onnr during- Auirmu tv -fltiidnnkk nf thr Innvtmiity irt Mnhrwika undw ihr m Ihitrhiutiiiti ni lb- iflimtmlttNr on Mtudnid ltftHir a .an rxurMMhin nf -aludnnt uuinlnn. I'lllillnniiun uiulm- iUr iurlHdi'fiiin ut tur anlMiniiimUtm -mi fUudniU fua Jinutinn) IihII Iw Irw Irom ndUnrtnl ri?iMmHhi on th- Hurt o1 ,,- 'tt.-r nr on ItiR ait m mm Hrnn uutMidr 'Itit- ilinWnrHltv. li ne -mamhr" iif lnr Vallt Meliram hii tnr arp anrmiiiHlly remMiiauiiui ttur waat iliuv mt m u ar hmuhh) to iN mliitad. i Uruur , m . Friday, November 30, 1962 Furthermore, a new generation is growing up which does not remember those Communists who were widely admired in France and Italy for then bold roles in the war time underground. To add the Red's woes, they are suffering severe ly from internal rifts. Premier Khrushchev's de Stalinwation program has rocked many Western European Communists who no longer know what to believe. Confirmed Stal inists are pitted against vounger, professedly more "liberal" Reds. All of this represents heavy reversal for Mos cow, which once thought it was well on the way to eommunizing aU Europe. It spells smashing triumph for the free Western ways of life. We in the free world dare not relax our vigil ance against the eternal militancy of communism. But we can find im mense satisfaction in the clear decline of the French and Italian Com munist parties. P o s t Register i Idaho Falls, Idaho.') cn ALOXE fjfe awsmrEiNiHB us. ace which NO FORB16N FLAG .has Flaw is IDAHO ! THE HORSE -I I DKE'jJJ NO ARTtSTiC UORKTD FOR MINUTES PSA&SNS THAT HORSS 1 1 a Club Tale of How Roses Are Sub I Rosas that have sub- Jected to the Marshall A new fraternity cub With yellow paint as call- lug card of proof. Stencil in hand, late s At night as everyone I sleeps (Or studies for hour ex I ams The laborers work On hard cement slate. Splish. splosh,, splash 1 Designs being made 1 In an instant flash While wet the painters fade i Into the doomed dark. Flash? A red light Appears from out of no- where s Screaming destruction and I Mating rationalizations Iiuiiiiiiuiu!niHiuiii:uiiui!iiiiiimuiun!nrr II About Letters 1 fat taltf rnaam aa mm ar tuiirin ; - nt .mvhriaa a tfwiwat anaic rr4 : Im of vamxitat. Unn out toe . : -fMciMiO, tfwmats a vnrifxatile a : : 4rfc. amd fee ansa mJ libtuoos ox ' fen- am :r ihr .tihw ml pntibratum. ajfmcttar n-trr am t a)tMa m aailmt 25 lhaiilaMr aaac will fee wnt 5 IfuiiitiiiiiiiHHiiiiiiiniiiiiuuniiiuiiiiiiimiuiituf trruii m uom aa ac a. riiiora an vfl aa cawta) aa iiiawniniiiuHiiiuiMiiiiimn mm mm mmj-mrpg mmm iiiKiiiipipipwiMuiiii:yafc'i'''iwwuMiHii iiiu.jn ijiimm nuiniimi.ii.ii mum ,Mtf:'. v;!-: - . r: .-;t.,.. . ,y - - i Jl B j' "ir-r y i lilG? , ..... v-m: Pmify : : 'kmPPPP' ' " '; Jtypr-yjmyp?- ' :J:PMyWy-? ' :': : J f t ' ' ' " . j 21 Great Macccs make 29 Ycnderfd Saolces! CHSTEF.ia0 KING lastes great, smoks mSL Yob set 21 vintage tobaccos frown iruld, zgei iriild and iblendefl m5t and made to teste even milder through its Jonger length. - EST Tolaxcos iao to !2terf I TORE IT UP BcCAUSE IT HAD NO ARTISTIC VALUE.. "It VALUE? I FORTY-RYE ATtfJEUaKOFART TAKES AT LEAST AN HOUR ! WD S&6 1 Ik At an innocent few. A stencil and yellow paint Wet designs being made at Night by sneaky saint Denying while bat Tling the causes of fate. Rosas that are sub Or more boldly, stated Sub-Rosas are sneaky And here to stay in the club Even with those who hated. Sincerely yours, cj.w. Niemantfs WHERE DMiNG IS A PLEASURE 620 No. 4Srk pltucre too food lo mul ERF ELD 0 m For that extra special date! Make a date with I Mm CasT? Om tew fee aactules ttfl. , oil mmi MiwiMTe Have wmtoafiil time! JOE COLLEGE WEEK-END SPECIAL From 4 P.M. Friday to 9 AM. Monday $12 PLUS 10c PER MILE Call 432-5403 1313 M Street 432-3625 Municipal Airport l3TTl fT ti VT".'? CilGPSTTES , A' tA On Other Campuses . At 1 e a s t 7,000 stay awake pill's are consumed annually during exam pe riods by Iowa State Uni versity (Ames) students. This estimate is the re sult of a campus drug store survey by the Iowa State Daily, which dis covered some of the us ers end up in the hospital to "sleep it off." The newspaper quoted Dr. John Grant of the University Hospital as saying a student with an overdose is usually hyper-excitable, jumpy and can't stay quiet. Girls may cry a lot when suffering from an over dosage, he says. Grant pointed out that although the stay-awake pills' instructions say one pill equals one cup of cof fee, the concentration formed by one pill does offer more stimulation. "I'd suggest that some students just drink black coffee when they want to stay awake," Dr. Grant said. RENT'8-0AR 1 "1 i Lonfijr length moani mA&m ttHm The smoke tt t OhwerJinld tifj mrmlliuvf arijl fjhatrtt M S float through ranBr lenpth beoomii ...mi mi,oth n fiB'tflu to yout IDfUu