I1 DIVERSITY OF NCBRi j LIBRARY nmiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinitiiiiiiiuintHidiiiimiva ! ! Vol. 77, No. 24 The Doily Nebraskan Friday, Nov. 1, 1963 VVLLIl IN l REVIEW CAMPUS . . . REGENTS HIKE ROOM AND BOARD charges for the University dormitories by ten per cent. The increases from $660 to $725 per regular ses sion 'and from $145 to $160 per summer session, are nec essary to meet revenue bond financing requirements for the construction of a 1,056 student dormitory unit. STUDENT NAACP CHAP TER will hold an organiza tional tonight for interested students from the University, Union College and Nebraska Wesleyan. The meeting will be held to get Lincoln NAACP. chapter officers acquainted with the interested students and begin paving the way for organization of such a chapter if sufficient student support is showed. "MUSIC MAN" PEFORM ANCES at the University Theater for this weekend are sold out and due to the ex ceptional demand, there will be an additional Monday night performance. CITY VFW POST OFFICE and General Services Administra tion (GSA) building for feder al offices will be built in Lin coln for $2 million and $10-$11 million respectively. To be built in the next two years, the post office, not officially confirmed, may be in the two block area between R and T, 7th to 8th. No site has yet been chosen for the GSA building. JUDGE BLOCKS EN FORCEMENT of Sunday clos ing law against two Lincoln firms. County Atty. Paul Douglas said no prosecution would be made on the charges until further order of the court. The offense carries a penalty of a fine from $50 to $100 on each commodity sold. STATE . . . DRIVER EDUCATION BILL remained alive when the Education commit tee nixed a move to repeal the law -enacted during the regular 1963 legislative ses sion. Sen. Cecil Craft of North Platte had supported the repeal move because of the estimated expense of $7 million to the state in the next eight years and because of statistics which show that the teen-age driver accident rate has not decreased in several states with driver training programs. NEW COMPROMISE PRO POSAL was introduced by Sen. Terry Carpenter of Scottsbluff this week in an attempt to solve the time sales problem confronting the special legislative session. The Carpenter proposal urges creation of three interest rate classifications. It also pro vides that the same penalty forfeiture of double interest be levied against violators of any o! the three statutes. COMMITTEE KILLS MEASURE which would em power the Legislature to se cure advisory constitutional opinions from the State Su preme Court. Sen. Terry Car penter of Scottsbluff spon sored the b i 1 1 to avoid trou ble and save money. It was placed on the special session call at the request of the in t e r i m legislative credit fi nance committee. NATION . . . REVISED CIVIL RIGHTS bill got approval by the House judiciary committee which al o carried the support of President Kennedy and House Republican leaders. The measure includes a Fair Em ployment Practices Commis sion, a ban on segregation in restaurants and other places of public accommodation, and new steps against school seg regation. U.S. ORDERS THREE men In the Soviet United Nations delegation to leave the coun try by this afternoon on grounds that they had taken part in a spy plot. They were linked with another Rus sian and an American elec tronics engineer arrested ear lier in the week on spy charges. THREE AMERICAN SOL DIERS were missing and pre sumed captured in battle by the Communist Viet Cong. They were believed to have been seized by the Commu nist forces that over ran Gov ernment troops in a battle earlier this week. The three are also believed to be the only United States soldiers in Communist hands in Viet Nam at this time. Tji r "7' i ri " - Wit i (fry f ' I 1 "' I ' , ill A I ' 4 C 4 1 I tv V J Ma 4. ! MIGRATION RUSH These University left to right, Sonnie Meistrell, Pegi Bry coeds got the jump on the rest of the ans, Carol Carr, Charlotte Kharas and crowd on their way to Missouri. Pictured, Linda Muff. IZZOU OUfl tudenfs liases, xams By Mark Platner Staff Reporter Classes, exams and money will become secondary in terests of students migrating to Missouri this weekend. According to a Daily Ne braskan telephone poll, about seven hundred migratory Ne- Staff Will Migrate; Paper Set Tuesday "There will be no Daily Nebraskan on Monday be cause many of the staff members are going to Mis souri on migration over the week-end," stated Gary Lacey, editor. There will be an edition published Tuesday. braskans are setting their sights on Columbia, Mo. The student enthusiasm is very strong following a great Homecoming victory. The Uni versity ticket office has re ported that thirty-three hun dred tickets have been sold for student and alumni use. This is a larger number of tickets sold than for most other out-of-town gamns, ac cording to James Pittenger, athletic ticket manager. In the past years more students have gone to the mi grations at Colorado than to Missouri. Last year over one thousand students left the confines of the Lincoln cam pus to travel to Boulder. Two years ago the Universi ty ticket office sold only 1,000 tickets for the NU-MU tilt at Columbia. But with the Miami fever running throughout the campus, many students want to see Nebraska battle the first of the "Big Three" on their schedule. Linklefter Hoofenanny Slated For Pershing Jack Linkletter, host of tele vision's "Hootenany" pro gram, will present four at tractions from the world of folk music in his Folk Festi val at Pershing Municipal Auditorium at 8 p.m. Friday Nov. 8. Featured on the oroirram will be the Big 3, whose nu merous aonearancefi on John ny Carson's "Tonight" show, as well as on the Jack Paar Program, have made them nationally popular. Joe and Eddie, second of the featured attractions, have won a wide following on the west coast for their spirited, rapid-fire delivery of folk mu sic, and are featured in the current MGM feature, "Hoot enany Hoot." Les Baxter s Balladeers, a quartet organized and trained by arranger-composer Les Baxter, brings a new approach to the folk scene, accenting the popular aspects of the folk music idiom. Featured in their repertoire is a highly popular audience sing-along segment. Raun MacKinnon, fourth of the featured artists, has been a performer along the eastern coast, playing the college and night club circuit. Her special ties are British and American ballads and gospel music. The downtown ticket sale for the Lincoln appearance of the Jack Linkletter Folk Festi val is being conducted at Gold's record department and at the Pershing Auditorium box office. Advance tickets are $2, tickets at the door are $2.50. According to Pershing Audi torium officials, the show will not be televised. ! ' 4 J- 4 ) , t 4 - ' ' if : 'V JACK UNKLETTER Migration Policy Set Last Year Wednesday's Student Coun cil motion encouraging stu dents to attend the Nebraska- Missouri game but not ap proving an "official migra tion" was based on existing policy concerning migration which was determined last fall by G. Robert Ross, Dean of Student Affairs, and the Student Council migration committee. The purpose of the commit tee was to find some mutally agreeable arrangement with the Administration on the mi gration issue. According to the final re port submitted by Dennis Christie, then chairman of the committee, "Dean Ross emphasized the Administra tion's policy regarding the missing- of classes and the regulations that would be in volved if an official migra tion could be established. Other schools in the Big Eight have expressed the be lief that academic work should take precedence to athletic and other extra-curricular events." The migration committee, after some research regard ing the possibilities of an offi cial migration; decided to support past Administration policy on this issue. The fol lowing reasons were cited: "An official migration would require that tran sportation and housing be under the general supervision of the University. This would mean that all students at tending the game would either be required to travel by some means under Uni versity sponsorship or get ap proval to travel another way. Secondly, all students would be required to stay in an offi cial university housing unit under the sanction of the host school." The University cannot justi fy an official migration, ac cording to the committee, as it would contradict its high academic standards and ideals. Since at least 1,000 students attended the football game at Boulder last fall, it was felt that students should decide for themselves wheth er to attend the game. The Student Council finally passed a resolution last year supporting the policy of an unofficial migration for the 19G3-64 football season. Bumey TelBs YWs & in n a n n mm mm By FRANK PARTSCH Senior Staff Writer Efficient state financing of various projects is a struggle to find a happy medium be tween the wishes of the ideal ists and those of the realists, according to Lt. Gov. Dwight Burney. Burney, speaking to the Young Republicans last night, included the Universi ty budget and the state high way program in this cate gory. "The Chancellor and the Board of Regents are ideal ists," he said. "They have to be. And the budget commit tee are the realists. The ideal ists will probably never get as much money as they ask for, . . . but we should take care of our University." An announced candidate for the Republican nomination for governor next year, Bur ney, as lieutenant governor, held the office for four months after the death of Gov. Brooks in 1960. He said that the Republican party, whose state organization and policies he defended, has failed only one area that of electing a governor. "I want to cnange that," he added. Burney was critical of the state of the nation's finances. "I am hunting for a banker," he said, "who believes one hundred per cent in the pres ent fiscal policy of our coun try. If I find him, I want to open an account with him because he will allow me to draw out more money every year than I deposit." "This generation has re fused to live on its income; it has borrowed and borrowed and thrown the debt against future generations. For these reasons we are 'facing the loss of our freedoms; to pre vent this, we must take an active interest in govern ment." In discussing Nebraska's problems of taxation, Burney said that, as governor, he sug gested a 2 per cent sales tax, which, at that time, would have supported state government "with a little to spare." Since then, he con tinued, although it would today take much more than 2 per cent, he still advocates a sales tax as a means of making the tax scale fairer to all the citizens of the state. An income tax, however, would be overly burdensome, because income tax is already "sewed up" on the federal level. Yale Students Arrested k Mississippi Campaign Jackson, Miss (CPS) The Freedom Vote and the Cam paign to Elect Aaron Henry Governor needs more money to be able to function at peak efficiency, according to Al lard Lowenstien, a professor on leave from North Carolina State who is working for the campaign. Lowenstein said that money is still needed to post bond and to pay for campaign ex penditures. In an interview with CPS, he said that the conditions have become ex tremely bad and that arrests are almost "commonplace." - In Atlanta, the office of the Student Nonviolent Coordi nating Committee (SNCC) re ported that there had been more than 45 arrests of stu dents and that at least 100 cases of police intimidation were known to them. Several of the Yale students were ar rested more than once on varying charges, SNCC said. Steve Bingham, one of the Yale studenrs arrested in Clarksdale and editor of the Yale Daily News, said that the infringements upon freedom that are currently occurring in Mississippi have been ignored by a large por tion of the American press. Echoing Lowenstein, Bing ham said that the arrests and intimidation the Yale students are suffering are drastic even in an area where intimida tion is the norm. Stanford University stu dents arriving in Mississippi will be on hand to re place Yale students returning to New Haven after a week of work. For two Yale stu dents arrival dates in New Haven are still uncertain. They ' are in jail at Clarks dale where- they are being held incommunicado by po lice chief Ben Collings. Two additional Yale stu dents were arrested yester day in Hattiesburg on charges of assault and battery but were later released. Frank Heintz, Yale sophomore, was jailed three days ago in Clarksdale on charges of reck less driving. Heintz had en gaged in a running feud with police chief Collins since his arrival in that city Monday. Legal action may soon be taken against Mississippi po lice guilty of criminal abuses, sources at Jackson report. The NAACP legal defense and education fund is prepar ing a concerted attack against police brutality. The NAACP legal effort, spearheaded by Marion Wright, 1963 Yale law graduate, is expected to be gin preliminary action over the weekend. Sweetheart, Prince Finalists Announced yj kjr .' - mm in"""-iitijnr- -mnn urn ., -r-y.rr,,--Jgp,rl- , PHOTO BV JACK HIGGLE NEBRASKA SWEETHEART FINAL- Kappa Alpha Theta; Sally Larsdn, Delta ISTS Ten coeds will vie for title of Ne- Gamma; Judy Birney, Alpha Phi. Sitting, braska Sweetheart which will be voted (left to right), Pixie Smallwood, Alpha upon at the Kosmet Klub Fall Show Nov. Delta Pi; Sandra "Snookie" Janike, Pi 23. They are, (left to right), standing, Beta Phi; Jam; Barnoske, Alpha Omlcron Mary Sue Hiskcy, Chi Omega; Cindy Tin- Pi; Suzie Walburn, Alpha Chi Omega; and an, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Kit Thompson, Vicki Cline, Love Memorial Hall. 5 i rr i I v 4 I a J 1? 4 s''i ti' l :A-.rh V it :a 'if Vt. if' rriuiu bit rftiK HllHiLtt PRINCE KOSMET FINALISTS Ten Uni versity men were chosen In Interviews recently as Prince Kosmet Finalists. They are, (left to right), standing, Dennie Chris tie, Phi Delta Theta; Dick Callahan, Sig ma Chi; Wayne Howlett, Theta Xi; Gary Feglcy, Sigma Phi Epsilon; John Lonn quist, Beta Theta Pi. Sitting, (left to right), Gary Lacey, Delta Tau Delta; Jerry DeFrance, Sigma Nu; Bob Kerry, Phi Gamma Delta; Denny Swanstrom, Tarm House; and John Morris, Alpha Tau Omega. Prince Kosmet will be chosen by stuihnfs 8t(nding the Kosmet Klub Fall Show Nov. 23.