Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963 GREEKS: And A Sand Fight r Greeks are funny people. -And sometimes they are hard to understand. Negroes are people too, and during the last year, even more than in the past, they have been working for equal rights. They know what they want, and no matter what means they use, they deserve to be heard. Their plea is easy to understand. The Negro move Is underway for equal rights In em ployment, housing, and education. As almost every Greek will tell you, social life is an important active ingredient in 'the educational process. Greek houses organize, to a large extent, to provide members with social life. Their members reap the bene fits. The Greeks have built a legitimate, purposeful and powerful structure especially in midwestern universities. Strong organizations maintain their stature, in the business world as well as the social world, because they are able to meet problems face to face, evaluate them and eventually adapt whether it be on an economic or personal level. If they do not adapt-4Jiey die. These organizations are realistic. On the front naffe of the Dailv Nebrnskan tnHav f story which points up the fact that Greeks have been caught with thier proverbial heads in the sand. Nine West Coast national sororities have been excommunicated from their counterparts because they discriminate. And who's to say that this trend will not continue . . . Continue into the Midwest, where the strong, laughing and boisterous Greeks are playing the same game. Kick sand in the faces of the Negroes. They throw sand because they have not been willing to take the first step toward adaptation that of taking their heads out of the sand. They cannot see the impor tance of understanding. A move is underway, so I'm told, that Negroes are attempting to organize their own fraternity at the Univer sity, but why should they have to? If they are equal on the gridiron, and in the class room, then why kick sand at them during Rush Week. If studies have been made on the discrimination prob lem at the National Interfraternity Conference then why haven't the results been put to some practical use. Or could it be that Greeks are hypocrites, laughing on the in side and solemn and even sore on the out. GARY LACEY Yankee In Mexico By Susie Rutter EDITOR'S NOTE: This It the flrat In a series af articles written by Salle Ratter, ene of seven Univer sity students stodylnr thli year at El Coleal. 4a Mexico In Mexico Cltr. Five hours late, I w a s among seven travel weary Cornhuskers to stumble off the plane at the Mexico City airport to begin our junior year as exchange students. The Mexico exchange pro gram initiated this year is financed by the United States State Department and is open to University of Nebraska students interest ed in attending El Colegio de Mexico in Mexico City, Requirements include the ability to speak Spanish and follow courses taught exclu sively in Spanish, soph omore standing, an a b o v e average grade ranking and an Interest in the program. El Colegio Is divided Into three centers or schools: In ternational Relations, His tory and Linguistics and Lit erature. It is a graduate school with an enrollment of eighty whose faculty is composed of visiting protes tors from some of the finest institutions in the world. The library contains over 70,000 volumes which in clude complete collections of the major scientific mag azines, both national and foreign, in the fields of his tory, literature, economics, sociology, law, international organization and politics. It is the only library in Mex ico City which contains a complete file of current cor respondence and documents of diplomatic agents station ed in Mexico and principal countries of Latin America. An example of the level of courses offered at el Colegio is the first semester curri culum for students in Inter national Relations which consisted of five required subjects: Soviet Union For eign Policy, Modern Indian Politics, Communist China, Contemporary Latin Amer ican problems and the Unit ed States and the Western World in the twentieth cen tury. An average of thirty-s i x hours per week is devoted to ' lecture periods and sem inars. Students are divided into seminar groups of from ten to twelve and each week have a different topic to pre pare and present. After the presentation of the papers Hit floor is open for f r e e 033 S33STt asm discussion and exchange of opinions between the profes sor and the students. No basic textbooks are provided for the courses and the students must de pend on their class notes and individual research work in the library. Thus from the first day the stu dent becomes the active and principal element of his own education and discovers a personal manner of investi gation and treatment of facts, their significance and interpretation. The educational system is quite different from that of universities in the United States and in some senses better. Each aspect of the course is probed and dis cussed and a deeper under standing of the "whys" of actions is arrived at in stead of merely memorizing dates and facts for an ex amination. Each student is stimulat ed and encouraged to in vestigate further fields which interest him and his education becomes a chal lenge in learning and un derstanding instead of a boring grind of assignments which must be completed and hour exams which must be passed. The education has more meaning than a diploma at the end of four years and the security of a good pay ing J6b. It does not involve pulling high grades to gain admittance to school hon oraries or winning awards for your fraternity or soror ity. It does not mean eligi bility for activities or a black mask on Ivy Day. Education is still a means to an end, but for students at El Colegio the end is dif ferent than to most stu dents at the University and to the majority of you now reading this article. To these few dedicated stu dents, education is the tool with which they can help their countries achieve new goals in the future. Education is the learning and understanding of past situations which may be ap plied to the present and fu ture to better international, relations, to equalize the standard of living and to promote universal under standing and friendship. Ed ucation is the key to world peace. Through the opportunity Singing Dear Men of Gather Hall: It seems the Kappa Kappa Gammas had four serenades Monday night. We loved it, but if ever there was a rea son for you to complain, it was Monday night. How ever, not one yell, screech or electric guitar was heard from your halls. For this we thank you, Cather Hall. We realize that it was only a few individuals that were given me to study in an foreign country I have been able to realize and appreci ate the meaning of educa tion and its importance in the future relations of the world and in the mainten ance of peace. I am sure that this year abroad will mean more to us than any other year in our university life. ' It is an honor for us to be able to participate in such a program and a goal to which you students at Nebraska can strive to ward. Hasta luego-Susita CHEMISTS IF you are dedicated to research, come to an expanding organization where basic research provides a solid foundation for the program; where recog nition for accomplishments brings opportunities for new projects and pro grams to challenge the future; and where you have the opportunity to pursue fundamental discoveries or follow their expansion info more applied fields. IF you desire to be associated with a research center internationally rec nized, small enough to give attention to individual growth and advance ment and at the same time part of a large organization offering many bene fits, such as diverse research projects appealing to particular interests, free dom to exchange ideas and results, and recurring opportunities for higher positions either here or elsewhere: IF your objective is one or all of these: To specialize in a chosen field and to build scientific status for yourself To grow professionally through your work and study, stimulating semi nars, and advanced lecture courses by visiting professors and other leading scientists To advance vertically in the same line of work as fast and as far as your ability will take you To present papers before national and international scientific meetings To enjoy the advantages of freedom to publish IF these are your goals, then join us and advance your career in challeng ing basic and applied research on the derivatives, reactions, structure, and general physical and chemical properties of organic chemical raw materials. Sign up for interview with ear representative cn October 18, 1963 Af Your Placement Office ef Or Write to NORTHERN REGIONAL RESEARCH LABORATORY AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH SERVICE US. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 1815 North University Street Peoria, Illinois 61604 News causing the disturbances at our serenades. It took all of you to put a stop to it. We have been told that Cather Hall is.making a sin cere effort to start out on the right foot and forget some of the less desirable customs already firmly established in other halls. Your ability to work out this problem demonstrates a cohesiveness within your organization and a real de sire to work together. If this trend continues, you will really have accomp lished your goal. You are off to a great start. Con gratulations! Some Kappas ainiHiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiig I About Letters 1 Tka Dally Nekraakaa fsvttea readers la aaa M far era relet a S el aaialea aa earreat toatea reaareV las si viewpoint. Latter meet he 5 5 limed, cantata a verifiable ee 5 E dress, and aa free af llbelotte aaa- 2 lerlal Pea aainea near fee lav s elatee) and will ka released aaaa ss written reaaee. s Brevity ead lealMUty taa cfeaaee af tohllestioa. Lengthy 5 lettert tnai be edited ar emitted g Asaetatalr aaaa will fee retailed. ftllWIIIHIIIIIIIIIII!!llllll!!lllllllllllllllll!lllllllllll1 - B. S. M.S. Bookstore Profiteers (ACP) Vytautas J. Bieli auskas, chairman of the de partment of psychology at Xavier University, Cincin nati, Ohio, has written a book. It is a good book, says the News, campus news paper. It's a technical work on psychological diagnostic techniques with the bewild ering title of "The House-Tree-Person -Research Re view." The 49-page paperbound book will be used as sup plementary reading in an advanced graduate course in projective techniques of fered at Xaxier. Therefore, it is on sale at Xavier Book store. There's just one trouble: The Bookstore sells the text for $5. Everywhere else it retails for $4 the pub lisher's recommended price. Xavier students probably won't be surprised that the Bookstore, which bills itself as a "student service," is reaping a tidy 25 per cent profit on the volume in ex cess of the usual 30 per cent profit that is standard in the trade. Indeed it has become al most a campus tradition that the Bookstore relieve the profusely wealth stu dents of their copious ex change each semester after they have paid their mod erate tuition tabs. & Ph. D. Theater Lab Plays Not Getting Praise At the risk of exposing myself to more bitter invec tive, I will once again point out an enterprise that I feel is not getting the praise it deserves. This weekend the first two plays in a series of Labora tory Theater productions will be presented by the University Theatre. This program is designed with two purposes in mind. The first is to provide an opportunity for students of the University to see living theater at no cost to them. The second and more important purpose is to give drama students a chance to stage productions on their own, with a minimum of faculty assistance. Ideally, this program will prepare actors and crews for the greater responsibili ty of regular University Theatre productions. It is an activity giving practical experience In an area which otherwise would remain open to only a chosen few. This weekend we will have the chance to see a play, in the one act series which has fulfilled these ob jectives admirably. "Beyond", by Pat Keat ing is an original play writ ten for this program. This play represents a step be yond the regular outlines of the program. Ordinarily, a director chooses a one act play or cuts a three act play to suitable length for a lab production. For this director Keating wrote his own script and then began the long hours of work in preparing it for presenta- BOOM! Today, foregoing levity, let us turn our keen young minds to the principal problem facing American colleges today: tht population explosion. Only last week four people exploded m Cleveland, Ohio one of them while carrying a plate of soup. In case you're thinking such a thing couldn't happen anywhere but in Cleveland, let me tell you about two other cases last week a 45-year-old man in Provo, Utah, and a 19-year-old girl in Northfield, Minnesota. And, in addition, there was a near miss in High Point, North Carolina an eight-year-old boy who was saved only by the quick thinking of his cat, Fred.who pushed the phone off the hook with his muzzle and dialed the department of weights and measures. (It would, perhaps, have been more logical for Fred to dial the fire department, but one can hardly expect a cat to summon a fire engine which is fol lowed by a Dalmatian, can one?) But I digress. The population explosion, I say, is upon us. It is, of course, cause for concern but not for alarm, localise I leel sure that science will ultimately find an answer. After all, fajt has not science in recent years brought us such marvel as the maser, the bevatron, and the Marlboro filter? Oh, what a saga of science was the discovery of the Marlboro filter I Oh, what a heart-rending epic of trial and error, of dedication and perse verance! And, in the end, what a triumph it was when the MarlU.ro research team, after years of testing and discarding one filter material after another-iron, nickel, tin, antimony, olwidian, poundcake-finally emerged, tired but happy, from their laboratory, carrying in their hands the perfect filter cigarette! Indeed, what rejoicing there still is whenever we light up a Marlboro which comes to us in soft pack and Flip Top Box in all fifty states and Cleveland! Yes, science will ultimately solve the problems arising from the iiopulatirm explosion, but meanwhile America's colleges are in dire strait, Where can we find classrooms and teachers lor today's gigantic influx of students? Well sir, some say the solution is to adopt the trimester sys tem. This system, already in use at many colleges, eliminates summer vacations, has three semesters per annum instead of two, and compresses a four-year-course into three years. This is, of course, good, but is it good enough? Even under the trimester system the student has occasional days off. More over his nights are utterly wasted in sleeping. Is this the kind of all-out attack that is indicated? I say no. I say desperate situations call for desperate reme dies. I say that partial measures will not solve this crisis. I say we must do no less than go to school every single day of the year. But that is not all. I say we must go to school H howt of every day! The benefits of such a program are, as you can see, obvious. , rst of all, the classroom shortage will disappear because all the dormitories can be converted into classrooms. Second, the teacher shortage will disappear because all the night watchmen an be put to i work teaching solid state physics and Restoration flrama. And finally, overcrowding will disappear because every, ody will quit school. Anv further miMlim. 'n2 tlu , qm'thni tht nu,kert r Marlboro, who trMa Marlboro Jatety. If, th. niter cigarette with man's ofaavor.SetthbackandsnJoyonsn. """"" By Gary Pokorny tion to the University au dience. After weeks of rehearsal and untold hours of labor by all concerned with "Be. yond" the show will go on the boards this Saturday and S u n d a y at 8:00 p.m. This play, an Interesting look at one individual's' com promise with society, is well worth seeing. Considering the time and effort put into this produc tion by the University The atre personnel, the time re quired to see it is a small investment on our part for the rewards received. Show up at the Temple Building either Saturday or Sunday for "Beyond" at 8 p.m. and a cutting from "Of Mice and Men" at 8:30 p.m. Stop by long enough to see what a positive attitude coupled with hard work can produce. The Daily Nebraskan JOHN MORRIS, managing editor: SUE HOV1K. newt editor! STEVE SYDOW SUSIE SMITHBERGER, GRANT PETERSON, aenlor staff writers; LARRY ASMAN, MARV McNEFF, GARY MILLER TRANK PARTSCH, SHARI JOHNSON, Junior ataff writers; PATTY KNAPP, ARNIE CARSON, copy editors; HAL FOSTER, photographer MIKE ROOD, sports editor! MIKE JEFFREY, circulation manager, JIM DICK, subscription manlier: BILL GUNLICKS, BOB CUNNINGHAM, PETE LAGE. busi ness assistants. Subscriptions rates $1 per semester or $5 per year. Entered as second class matter at the post office In Lincoln, Nebraska, under the act of Ausiut 4, 1912. The Daily Nebraskan Is published at Room SI, Nebraska Union, on Mon day, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday by University of Nebraska students under the jurisdiction of the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publica tions. Publications shall be free from censorship by the -Subcommittee or any person outside the University. Members of the Nebraskan are re sponsible for what they cause to be printed. with (By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boyt!" and, "Barefoot Boy With Cheek.") 1 lassMai