The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 31, 1963, Image 2

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    CXH5EI fflDKHD
Thursday,
PASSED, BUT DEFEATED:
Migrafion Move
And. then sometimes you have to wonder about the
unusual situations that Student Council sometimes wiggles
itself into.
Yesterday, Council "the supreme student governing
body," in the interest of promoting school spirit urged all
students to attend the game at the University of Missouri
this weekend.
In grandiose terminology (the dialect in which most
- resolutions are written) the motion explained that all
students would be admitted who presented themselves at
the fate.
In urging the student body to attend the Missouri game
which is ordinarily called migration by most Nebraskans,
the Council is in efefct supporting or sponsoring migration.
The resolution was capped by a rather interesting
ancedote which came in the form of an amendment made
. by Student Council Vice President Dick Weill.
His amendment read: "This (the resolution) is not to
imply that Student Council is sponsoring an official migra
tion." The resolution though passed, in effect, was defeated.
GARY LACEY
ii mi in I ii iiiuim ill hi Mil i. mm . ii ii mm
Case For Responsibility?
Dear Editor:
. Several articles in the last
few days have mentioned
"responsibility." As far as
the Daily Nebraska's con(
cerned this word has be
come somewhat of a myth.
Does the Nebraskan claim
to be responsible? Respon
sible journalism would
seem to entail accurate and
thorough reporting of af
fairs and events, evaluating
their importance and sig
nificance and placing them
in their proper perspective,
and refraining from pub
lishing articles based on
faulty judgment, lack of
facts and depth of under
standing. As an average student I
do not pretend or claim to
be a newspaper critic. But
I have been misinformed
and misled by news arti
cles, headlines and edito
rials in recent editions. In
citing a few examples I
would ask:
1. Did Lynn Corcoran and
Steve Sydow show mature
and careful thought in ap
praising discrimination on
this campus?
2. Is "Big Iron's" pin
ning of special University
interest?
3. When was the AWS
Activities Mart finally
held?
4. Do we have to be in
formed of the Alpha Lamb
da Delta pledges twice?
5. Was it the final de
cision of the Rally Com
mittee to prohibit the CU
band from playing their
song as was initially report
ed in the Nebraskan?
Students have tolerated
lncompetarcy thus far.
However, after reading the
follow-up on Homecoming I
for one can take it no long
er. The coverage of the
Homecoming Queen was
not only a regretful farce
but a disgrace to our de
serving Queen. Human in
terest is one thing but isn't
Lhk carrying it a little too
far?
Couldn't the reporter
think of anything more in
teresting than a new dress,
a sore foot and Sunday
The Daily Nebraskan
JOHN MORRIS, managing editor;
SUE HOVIK, news editor; STEVE
SYDOW 6TTSIE SMITHBEKGER.
GRANT' PETERSON, senior staff
writers; LARRY ASMAN. MAJtV
McNEFT. CrARY MILLER FRANK
PART9CH, 6HARJ JOHNSON, junior
tH writer; PATTY KNAPP. AKNIE
CARSON, cow editors; HAL FOSTER,
photographer MIKE ROOD, sports
editor; MIKE JEFFREY, irenlation
manager, JIM DICK, aubncription
manager; BILL GUNLICK6, BOB
CUNNINGHAM, PETE LAGE. buai.
am awflwtRtita.
6ubscripti-jns rate S3 per semester
tm S swr realf.
Entered aa second clam matter lit
the mat office in Lincoln, Netiraaka,
antler the act of Aiuruat 4, via.
The Dally Nebraskan is published
t Room fl, Nebraska Union, on Mon
day, Watinesdar. Thursday. Friday
by University of Nebraska students
under the jurisdiction of the Faculty
Kuboommitte3 on Student Publica
tions. Publications shall be free from
censorship br the Subcommittee or
smr person outside the University.
MiWaiirg of the Nebraskan are re
pamtMs for what they cause to be
printed.
II in I "Will
temi rag
Oct. 31, 1963
laundry? Students who
have not had the opportunity
to meet our Homecoming
Queen still know little about
her now. Were there any
attendants this year? As
suming the girl in the pic
ture on the front page of
Monday's Nebraskan is the
Queen, who is standing be
side her? Did anyone at
tend the Homecoming
Dance?
Turning to the editorial
page, other questions come
to mind. Do the columnists
have a sincere interest in
expressing their views or
are they merely trying to
create issues?
To err is human but there
have been too many mis
takes, omissions and mis
representations. Think what
the University community
wants and needs to read,
Nebraskan staff. Are you
failing in your responsibili
ty to reflect and report ac
curately campus events and
opinions?
Respectfully submitted,
Susie Pierce
EDITOR'S NOTE: The
staff thanks you for your
criticisms, but believes the
majority of them to be ill
taken. Dorm Rates
The news of the ten per
cent increases in dorm rates
was brought to my attention
about 11:20 Monday morn
ing. That whispered conver
sation in class proved two
points: 1) The only way to
stay awake in my eleven
o'clock class is to read the
Nebraskan. 2) The idea of
raised dorm rates isn't go
ing to go over very big. It
will be interesting to note
the students' reactions. (The
first comment I heard was
... "If that's the way they
want it, they can keep their
. dorms."")
Monday night I called six
teen organized mens' Louses
to compare monthly house
bills. The new dorm rates
will be around $92 per
month. The average among
the sixteen houses was about
$89. I think the figures are
close enough to question the
truth of the statement that
living in a University dorm
is less expensive than living
in an organized house. Let's
face it, anything over $90.00
per month for room and
board is a large s t a c k of
money. Maybe we should
ask where it is all going.
More unofficial statistics:
Monthly house bills: Delta
Sigma Phi,$82; Delta Sigma
Pi, $75; Brown Palace Co-op,
$56. These figures are no
where near the dorm rates!
Makes you doubt the ef
ficiency of somebody some
where. Any comments?
A Student
I jS'n JtI
A W&tWwA v
V """l ,.. - ..... ... .. A:
The Right Way
Promises, promises! Dur
' the 1960 Presidential
Campaign, Senator John F.
Kennedy made many prom
ises. President John F. Ken
nedy has not kept a great
number of these promises.
"I value the American
belief that the checks and
balances required by our
system were written into
the Constitution.' So said
JFK on August 24 while
campaigning in Alexand
ria, Va. Kennedy since has
called the Constitution a
document written for an
other age,, and his aides re
fer to it as "archaic." His
advisors call Congress a
stumbling block and raise
questions about the desir
ability of having Congress
control spending as the Con
stitution directs.
On Sept. 1, JFK said that
the members of the House
should decide what the
House rules should be. How
ever, Kennedy has used
threats, patronage, and
promises to expand the
House rules committee
with members favorable to
his program.
Kennedy assailed the high
interest rate policy in home
financing and suggested the
adoption of fiscal policies to
stimulate growth. Sept. '5
Since then the Kennedy Ad
ministration has raised the
FHA interest rate, extended
mortgage terms so that a
taxpayer buying a home will
pay more than the original
purchase price in interest
payments.
In my judment, an ef
fective Attorney General
with the present laws that
we now have on the books-
JA4 POOmED.' ONE LITTLE
SLIP LIKE THAT CAN CXV5E
THE FVMPKIN"
TO PASS YOU W.
STilikAlTiNSl HAVE Vol' 8M 1
fCKMKATlOLTFOR7Rl5 1
T' ? TR 1 , I
ftM.ieCTA 1 THANK VOy..'
iMLE 6A6 OF 1 IF THE "6AT
JDNK..D0 rW TfWWN'CWK
iiANT AN APPlf?) I'LL PUJ IN A '
T"ag-Mt woo WORD FOR
'Vx- y VOL
jZT f I MEANT?
Fyj WHEN"
aft
Words And Action
can remove Mr. Hoffa from
office." (Sept. 23) After
Robert Kennedy's repeated
efforts to nail Hoffa in court,
he still reigps as head of
the Teamsters Union.
On Oct. 12, JFK said that
our balance of payments
will be strong and that, "we
can cease to worry about the
outflow of gold." Under Ken
nedy, our balance of pay
ments has steadily wors
ened, the outflow of gold has
accelerated to such a dan
gerous point that other na
tions are worried about the
value of the U.S. dollar.
Also on Oct. 12, while dis
of troops at Little Rock, JFK
said, "There is more power
in the'Presidency than to let
things drift and then sudden
ly to call out the troops."
Kennedy allowed things to
drift at "Ole Miss", then
suddenly rushed troops into
Oxford, who violated the
civil rights of many Ameri
cans in the vicinity.
At Miami Beach, on Oct.
18, Kennedy stated that we
should not appoint ambas
sadors and others just be
cause they have contribuged
to a political campaign.
WE NEVER CLOSE
lilsiijls p
lllliiill i
LADIES
SEAMLESS
NYLONS
DIVIDEND BONDED GAS
16th Cr
Downtown
6 Steve Stastny
However, nearly half of the
"non-career" appointees to
high Foreign Service posts
aboard are big Democrat
contributors. Typical is
. Matthew McCloskey, Am
bassador to Ireland, who as
treasurer of the Democrat
Party grew fat on Federal
. building contracts.
"I am not promising ac
tion in the first 100 days
aline I am promising you
one thousand days of exact
ing Presidential leadership.
I want to be a President who
believes in working full
time." (Nov. 5) In his first
two years of office along,
JFK had been away from
the White House 215 days, al
most one-third of the time,
vacationing, yachting, etc.
at Hyannisport, Palm
Beach, Newport, Glen Ora,
and elsewhere.
These are only a small
number of the approximate
ly 500 major campaign
promises which Kennedy
made in his 1960 campaign.
Since he has kept but a frac
tion of these pledges, it ap
pears that promises mean
one thing and performance
another!
'THE BEST"
WITH
CAS
PURCHASE
P Sts.
Lincoln
Dialogue
By Roy Carson
Versicle (chanted).
0 Lord, open Thou my
lips. And my mouth shall
show forth Thy praise.
O, come let us worship the
Lord, for He is Our Maker.
Response (spoken)
1 am a self-made man.
V. God created m a n in
His own image.
R. Clothes make the man,
and the best clothes are seen
in "Playboy."
V. We are His Workman
ship, created in Christ Je
sus unto Good Works.
R. "Cover Girl" "make-up
will give you a lovely cover
girl face.
V. All things were created
by Him.
R. A. General Motors engi
neer can create a solution
to any of your pour prob-
lems-
V. The sea is His, and He
made it.
R. Wherever you find wa
ter, you usually find Sea
gram's V.O.
V. God created the heav
ens and the earth.
R. Now is the time to act,
to take longer strides, time
for a great new American
enterprise, time for this na
tion to take a clearly lead
ing role in space achieve
ment. V. By Him all things were
created.
R. Have you heard about
that bunch of eggheads out
in California that can create
life in a test tube?
V. Be filled with the
knowledge of His will.
R. This year these are
the colors ,to crave.
V. Thou shall not covet
anything that is Thy neigh
bors. R. Be the first to have a
'64 Pontiac, and be the envy
of your friends.
V. Let us love one anoth
er for love is of God, God is
love.
R. Love is lovelier with
Arpege.
Q3
I WAS A TEEN-AGE SLIDE RULE
In a recent lenmed journal (Playlxty) the r!itinrui1ipd board
chairman (Ralph "Hot Lips'' Sipafoos) of top of our mot
important American industrial corporations (the Arf Mechan
ical Mop Co.) wrote a trenchant article in which he pinpointed
our single mort neriou-; national prolJem: the lack of culture
among science praduat.
I-iet me hasten to state that Mr. SiirafoosV article was in do
tense derogatory. He Kaid emphatically that the science grad
uate, .what with his gruelling curriculum in physics, math, and
chemistry, can hardly lie exjiected to find time to study the
arts too. What distresses Mr. Sipafoos and. indeed, all of us
is the lopsided result of today'? science courses; graduates
who can build a skyscrajier hut can't compose a concerto: who
Inow Newton's Third Law hut not Beethoven's Fourth Svm-
WW
ImJea 'mlt
phony; who are familiar with Fraunhofer's lines but not with
Hhelley'is.
Mr. Kigafoos can find no solution to this lamentable imbal
ance. I, however, believe there is oue-and a very simple one
It is this: if students of science don't have time to come to
the arts, then the arts must come to students of science.
For example, it would be a very easy thing to teach jtnetrr
and music right along with physics. Students, instead of being
called upon merely to recite, would instead be required to
rhyme their answers and set them to familiar tunes-like, for
instance, the stirring Cokmd Bogey March. Thus recitation,
would not only be chock-a-block with important fact but
would, at the same time, expose the students to the aesthetic
delights of great poetry and music. Here, try it yourself. Von
all know Th Cvhmi bogey March. Come, sing along with me:
Phytic
It vfud we lmrn in dam,
Eituttfiti
SaiA rriergy u mass.
SnaUm
1 M-gh-foJvUn'
Aid Pwcaft rased. ,V Boyle.
Do you see how much more Lroadening, how much more up
hftii!? it is to learn physics this way? Of course you do. Whatf
lou want another chorus? By all meant:
Leydeii
lie made Leyden jeir.
Trolley
He made Due. Trolley car.
Curie
Rode in a currey
And bietsd'i a wtxuel. So'i Boyle.
Once the student has mastered TV C'oW Bogey March,
he can go on to more complicated melodies like Death aid Trans
Jtaiiratum, SiMrm Tom. and Boo-Hoo.
Axid when the student, loaded not only with science but
with culture, leaves his classroom and light bis Marlboro
Cigarette, how- much more he will enjoy that filter, that flavor,
that pack or box! Because there wiU do longer be a little voio
within him repeating that h is culturally a dolt. He will know
-know joyously-that he is wmpfcte man, a fulfill m.,
and he will bask and revel in the pleasure of hie Marlboro as a
colt rolls in new grass-exultant and triumphant- trul
educated human person-a credit to hie college, to himself, and
to his tobacconist !
"',"' moJr of Marlboro, end sponsor of this column.
, t..roU tW-" it U vou ure carrying
lr7l or Marlboro, In your pocket. If. however, you
Z, mn" Ht eruth-Proof box and weigh Ue$ than 209
pounds, M,ej,
For Vespers
V. Whatever you do, do
all to the glory of God.
Amen.
Glory be to the Father, to
His Son Jesus Christ the
Lord, to the Spirit who
dwells among us, to the One
God, forever. Amen.
R.i Our Fathers, who art
in M a d i s o n Avenue, hal
lowed be thy names.
V. Our Father, who art in
heaven, hallowed be Thy
name.
R. May Thy work and in
fluence flourish, and may
Thy will be done in Lincoln
as well as Manhattan.
V. Thy kingdom come,
Thy will be done, on earth
as it is in heaven.
R. Give us this day our
daily bread, and forgive us
our trespasses, as we for
give those who trespass
against us.
R. And for heaven's sake,
our Lords, lead us into
temptation, and deliver us
from the Puritans.
V. And lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us
from evil.
R. For Thine is the King
dom, the Power, and the
Glory if not forever
at least .until someone
sharper, than you comes
along. Amen and Amen.
V. For Thine is the King
dom, and the power, and
the glory, forever and ever.
Amen.
V. Let us pray.
Our Father show us who
we are. Let us see the world
and our place in it. Forgive
our preoccupation with stat
us, style, and popularity,
and make us conscious of
how we can serve You and
help others. Keep the H o I y
Spirit with us to give us
identity. In the name of Thy
human Son. Amen.
Glory be to the Father,
to His Son Jesus Christ the
Lord, to the Spirit who
dwells among us, to the One
God, forever. Amen.
Motive Magazine
(.4 utbnr of "Ra'!i Rnuml thr Flaq, Bout!"
and "Barefoot Boy With Chml:")
''(( Whence