UNIVERSITY OF NEBR. t r Vol. 77, No. 41 The Daily Nebraskan Wednesday, December 18, 1963 '.f Governor Attends Floor Dedication SIlfY ' tV . Hl i, Y V w V' f fin DORMITORY DEDI CATION Dormitories Erovide "opportunity to ve together as young men and women to ac quire knowledge," said Gov. Frank B. Morrison at the dedication of Gov ernor's House, 12th floor of Cather Hall, Sunday. More than 100 persons at tended a dedication for Gov ernor's House, the 12th floor of Cather Hall Sunday after noon. Guest speaker, Gov. Frank B. Morrison, credited the University atmosphere with making it possible for youth and any human being to learn faster, to become better stim ulated through association shoulder to shoulder and spir it to spirit. Such an atmos phere fosters improvement of the human being and the broadening and extension of human personality. Floors such as these in dor mitories provide the oppor tunity to live together as young men and women and to acquire knowledge. There is something else which is infinitely more important and that is to live together successfully as social beings in the give and take thus developing mutual respect for each other, he Governor said. Other speakers at the dedi cation included Chancellor Clifford M. Hardin, Dean Roy Martin, Frank Hallgren and Clare Harper. Bill Rog ers was master of cere monies. Gary "Chip" Statler from Sidney unveiled a pic ture of Governor Morrison donated by Mrs. Morrison. Annua Sing Set Tonight In one of the final displays of Christmas spirit before va cation, University students will assemble tonight at the Carillon Tower for the second annual All University Christ mas Sing, to be held at the Tower and the main Union Lounge from 6:45-7:30. From the Tower, the pro cession will move along 16th to R Street and through the north entrance of the Union, where there will be more caroling. Members of the music de partment will furnish music for the songs and Sinfonia members will lead the carol ing. Jerry DeFrance will be the song leader. The Christmas Sine this year is sponsored by an anonymous group known as "Santa and his four Rein-dears." The entire student body is invited to attend, as well as families, friends and guests of the students and anyone connected with the University. A Professors Conduct Forum Quiz Bowl Forms Duo Today is the deadline for Quiz Bowl applications. The Quiz Bowl committee has re quested that the applications be made to enable it to com plete pairings before Christ mas. Evaluation Form To Aid Employers The Student Employment Service has developed an evaluation form to provide better service for students and employers. Employers are now asked to complete the evaluation form at the conclusion of a student's employment. The form also may be completed periodically while a student is employed. Completed forms are kept on file in the office of Scholarships and Financial Aids, according to Robert Scott, financial aids advisor. The evaluation forms in clude such areas as knowl edge of job, dependability, judgment, initiative, coopera tion, quality of work, personal appearance, attitude, integri ty and honesty, overall eval uation, and supervisory abili ty. Robert M. Barnes, assistant director, Student Union, who has used the new forms, says that "the student employment evaluation sheet becomes an invaluable aid to the informal education of the student. One of the reasons students attend the University is to learn how to adapt to our working soci ety. Much of this can be learned while going to school by taking a part-time job." Campus Police Summoned; Fight Pop Bottles, Echoes By JERRY HOFFERBER Senior Staff Writer Both girls were asleep when suddenly a loud noise started one girl to awakeness. She quickly awakened the other girl and said, "there is someone in the room." Another loud crash in the room gave the girls enough in centive to hastily leave the room. They rushed "down the hall and roused their sorority president who, after hearing the girls' .story, got the house mother up. She promptly called the city, police. They iir turn notified the campus police who went right over to the house to investigate. When they arrived, they entered the room where the noises had occurred. They found not a person, bnt broken pop bottles. The bottles had been set with care (in keeping with the Christmas spirit) on the window ledge. The in tense cold had frozen the contents solid thus causing the bottles to explode and create the loud noises that the girls had mistaken for a prowler. This story and others were related by Captain Eugene Masters, head of the campus police, to show that the cam pus police have their light side as do other people. In thumbing through the reports for the past months, Masters .extracted a few gems that involved the campus police. Masters told of a can received by the campus police that reported a disturbance by the coliseum. When the police arrived they found a boy and girl who had been yelling and listening for their echoes. He also told of an unwanted student helper. The cam pus police discovered that a student with a flashlight was directing traffic at 16th and R streets. The student left after the campus police told him that Ms help in directing traffic was not vitally needed. da lb The assassination of the late President John F. Kennedy was a double edged sword, ac cording to Dr. Herman Turk, associate professor of sociol ogy. The first part, being a great tragedy, caused the up heaval of normal life, but the second part caused society to come closer together, he ex plained. , i Dr. Turk addressed a forum concerning the political, eco nomic and social aspects of the assassination. Dr. Carl Schneider, professor political science and Dr. Wallace C. Peterson, professor of econom ics also spoke at the forum which was sponsored by the Union Forum Committee. Turk said that in American life today nearly everyone specializes and that it is dif- Swirdl flcult to become close when so many things pull the nation apart. But the death of the President revealed the "com mon core of values" that most Americans have. He cited the fact that political leaders of opposite parties were praising each other, and that practically all Americans felt the same way when they learned of the President's death as examples. Peterson said he didn't know the immediate effects of the assassination on the country, buS the problems of unemploy ment and inadequate econom ic growth which have been persistent problems since 1958 are still with us. He noted that six to seven per cent of the labor force is currently unemployed. Peterson said the Kennedy administration proposed a tax cut in order to reduce this problem, but that it has not been passed yet. Peterson also doubted that President John son could get this tax bill through Congress this year even though several econom ists have said that the cut is needed now more than ever. "Actually the tax cut is con servative in nature," Peterson said. The approach is to get money in the hands of private consumers rather than in crease government spending, Elthough some other econ omists feel that there should be more government spend ing. The increased spending program is not the Kennedy Johnson program. He pointed out, however, that government III M : I nb " . .. .rt..:'' .... ! . . . " I GOP LIBRARY Mark Anderson, Young Republican vice president, stamps the check-out card for a book from the new Young Republican Library located in 345 Stu dent Union. YR Library Opens In Union The new Young Republican Library, a collection of works on political and economic philosophy, opened this week in 345 Student Union. The books will be available to interested students between 2-4 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 1-3 p.m. Sun day. Such authors as William I Buckley Jr., Frank Meyer and Russell Kirk are repre sented by their works, accord ing to Mark Anderson, YR vice president The books are valued at uvo To n Student parking area two will be relocated during the Christmas holidays to make way for construction of the new dormitory for men north of 17th and Vine. When students return to the campus in January, area two permit holders will be able to park in either: A new lot south of Vine and east of twin towers, accessible from Vine at about 18th Street, or The 17th and Northside Avenue lot which is being re-designated for area two permit holders. Capt. Eugene Masters of the University police said the new lot, leased from the Rock Island railraod, will be readied during the holidays and probably will be ample to serve virtually all of the area two permit holders. He explained that the lot at 17th and Northside has been used by a small number of general permit holders for whom space is available in other general permit areas. After the first of the year the 17th and Northside lot will be open only to area two cars. Both the 17th and Northside lot and the new area on the Rock Island property are a little closer to the main section of the City campus than the present area two lot. . .r.v . . t - . - v--.. .. . ! . . i ! i..jCj S ' i . - ! ! i i i S I.J ! " .:. 1.1 I j I I X 1 Vs. 17th Street MFW PARKTIMP, AREA TWO Area Two narklne will tie relocated during the Christmas holidays to a lot at Vine and 18th Street and 17th and Northside Avenue. The t.-v SITJV TCMEKS old Area Two lot will be the site for the new men's dormitory. about $400 and were donated by a California organization called "Books for Students." Chuck Peek, YR president, said that most of the books in the collection were unavail able in Love Library. ; NU Exchange Student To Return To Mexico Ann Williams, who has just returned from a year in Mexi co, said she is enthusiastic about studying there and plans to start work on a masters de gree at the National Univer sity of Mexico after she re ceives her bachelor's degree here at the mid-year com mencement. Miss Williams went to Mexi co City in February of this year. She majored in Spanish with a minor in history and political science. Now she plans to obtain an M.S. degree in diplomatic relations and hopes to go into foreign rela tions work. During the past year Miss Williams had a Ful bright grant which covered tuition and living expenses. Although she found the stu dents very friendly at the in stitution with 80,000 enrolled, Miss Williams noted that they do not have .the student ac tivities common in U.S. col leges and universities. Many of the students live at home, so university enrollment rep resents a continuation of ed ucation after high school. There are no all-university convocations and no student union, but each building has its own cafe and cultural events. There is no student council, but each school has its own student officers and board. Elections for the of fices are very spirited, Miss Williams noted. Mexican students find it dif ficult to understand the wide range of campus activities carried on at U.S. colleges and universities. In fact, cam pus life is more formal in Mexico. There is a cosmopoli tan atmosphere partly be cause the university is located in a large city. "I wore tennis shoes to class on a rainy day and several student asked if I planned to go out for volleyball," Miss Williams stated. "After that I wore hose and heels to class like the other students." Teaching is a service, not the main profession of univer sity professors in Mexico. More than 90 percent of the instructors have other occupa tions which come first. Stu dents specialize in a particu lar field of work as soon as they enroll at the University, since the high schools provide broad educational back ground . Miss Williams was in Mexi co at the time of the death of President John F. Kenned and noted a tremendous reac tion because "they loved him. Grown people cried and said that they had lost a good friend. The government de clared a three-day period of mourning which had never been done before for a non Mexican. "The Mexicans are current ly investigating the activities of Lee Harvey 6swald when he was in Mexico." spending will increase because of normal economic growth. Schneider asserted that this assassination was hot a politi cal assassination, and the act was preceded by acts of vio lence all over the country, such as those in Birmingham, and the contempt shown for Stevenson id Dallas. Schneider asked about the growing acceptance of vio lence in communities, not only in the South, but in all parts of the country. He said that Kennedy stood for the "com mon core of values" that Turk had referred to. He asked what the role of the citizenery was when these values had been disregarded. Peterson, Turk, and Schneid er speculated about the 1964 presidential election. They seemed to agree that although Johnson has not had enough time to develop a style of his own, he was thoroughly com mitted to the Kennedy pro gram and was also more ap pealing to the conservatives than Kennedy. Schneider thought that the Republican problem now was to find a middle-of-the-roader instead of a rock-bound Con servative such as Senator Barry Goldwater. When a s k e d if President Kennedy was a martyr for civ il rights, Schneider said that although he didn't think this was the reason for Kennedy's death there would probably be myths to that effect in later years. Lincoln Will Host Foreign Students Most students will go homo for Christmas, but students whose homes are half way around the world are planning special holiday activities in Lincoln. The festivities will begin Friday, Dec. 20, with a Christmas party in the Stu dent Union sponsored by two campus groups, Nebraska In ternational Association and People to People. A special family reunion will be the highlight of the holiday season for a Korean student, Charles Chai. His sister, Soo Wake Chai, whom he has not seen for eight years, is planning to spend Christmas in Lincoln. Chinese students will meet twice during vacation at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Yien and Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Tao, University faculty mem bers. Two students from Korea, David Juhn and Don Jung, will attend the 19th Ecumeni cal Student Council on the Christian World Mission at Akron," Ohio, during the holi days. Juhn and Jung will rep resent Methodist and Baptist student groups. The Indian Association at the University will hold a New Year's dinner on Dec. 29. Spanish Club Slates Fiesta de Navidad Fiesta de Navidad, the an nual Spanish Club Christmas Party, will be held Thursday in the Student Union. Connie Wallin and Linda Reed, exchange students from the University to El Co legio de Mexico, will speak on their experiences in Mex ico. After the formal program there will be refreshments and carol singing. The meet ing will begin at 7 p.m. and will meet in 232 Student Union. just G shopping; rAVC TIL CHRISTMAS V lQ f V V-T urn 1 '.V i in !7i !- :j T c if 3' V i V A - K f l Yt-:- v X