r. i f Wednesday, January 15, 1964 FOR THE ECONOMY: Smoke Another The result Is about what everyone expected it to be. The government authorized a committee to study the medical effects of smoking; it studied and last Saturday announced the results: Smoking is casually related to lung cancer. Smoking is one of the most imporatnt causes of chronic bronchitis in the United States. Smoking is a significant factor in causing cancer of the larynx (voice box). Smoking is associated with a 70 per cent greater risk in heart attack. Smoking generally causes pregnant women to deliver underweight babies. With all this astounding scientific data, students at the University, socially chauvanistic in their smoking hab it, accepted the evidence with a cold shoulder. The atti tude was the same over most of the United States even though the stock market showed a slight drop in cigarette company stock. Granted, all must realize that if cigarettes are a def finitive cause of cancer and other health problems, the public must be informed and concerned. The fact still remains that the cigarette industry is an $3 billion operation and a major segment of our econ omy. Americans smoked 523 billion cigarettes, 7.2 billion cig ars and cigarillos and chawed 65 million pounds of chew ing tobacco. Some 750,000 farmers in the South annually grow 2.3 billion pounds of tobacco, worth $1.3 billion dollars. Ex ports of tobacco leaves and cigarettes in 1963 brought , $510 million into our economy. The tobacco industry buys flax for cigarette paper in South Dakota, Minnesota and Texas and wraps its yearly output in 71 million pounds of aluminum foil, 35 million pounds of cellophane, and 27 billion printed packs. Cig arettes are distributed in 1.5 million retail outlets. More than 3 million people are directly involved in the production and distribution of cigarettes, and more than $150 million dollars is spent yearly by the industry to advertise its products. These facts and figures show how a habit has grown Into an extremely important item in the gross national product. If the government passes restrictive legislation, as has been suggested by some, the nation's economy would be seriously hampered and unemployment would increase explosively. On the other hand, if the education of the nation's young people against the hazards of smoking is used as a deterrent to smoking, the result would be a slow but prog ressive decrease in the number of smokers. Unemploy ment, because of a loss of smokers, would of course, in crease, but not so fast that they could not be absorbed by other job opportunities. Two important points are virtually unanswerable: Who can say for sure that education will necessarily cause a decrease in youthful or die-hard smokers, and what other industries could absorb jobless cigarette workers? For economic reasons we had better light up another one I GARY LACEY The Daily Nebraskan JOHN MORRIS, managing editor; SUE HOVTK. news editor; SUSAN SMITH BERGER. GRANT PETERSON. FRANK PARTSCH, senior ataff writers; LARRY ASMAN. MABV McNEFF. JERRI O'NEILL, JERRY HOFFERBER, junior staff writers; PATTY KNAPP, ARN1E GARSON. CAY LEITSCHUCK, copy editors; HAL FOSTER, photographer; MICK ROOD, sports editor; MIKE JEFFREY, circulation manager; JIM DICK, subscription manager: BILL GUNL1CKS. BOB CUNNINGHAM, PETE LAGE, business assistants. Subscription rates $3 per semester or IS per year. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Lincoln, Nebraska, under toe act ot August 4, 1912. The Dail Nebraskan ifl published at room 51, Student Union, on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday by University of Nebraska students under the jurisdiction of the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications. Publications shall be free from censorship by the Subcommittee or any person outside the University. Members of the Nebraskan era responsible for what they causa to be printed. ,4 , ' arir New Concepts of Design 1200 'O- STREET IHIITlaiB UWUtlta AMlltlCAN 0(11 aoCIITV t 1 7 immrr XV5 yf, - ... . .'V RHAPSODY Dear Editor Bob Weaver's The New Guard in Thursday's Daily Nebraskan (January 9th) seems to represent scant knowledge of the position of many professors and in structors concerning the goals and aims of education as well as the status quo of pupil-teacher relationships. I cannot profess to speak for the entire faculty, but having observed the actions of colleagues in Teachers College, I can express the opinion that much thought and time is given to the is sues of (1) the goals of education, and (2) pupil teacher relationships, as well as a number of other important issues Certainly in the classes which I teach, I try to de velop within students an awareness of the crucial Here To Dear Editor: I was reading the usual "football letter" in last Friday's paper. I'm sure every editor receives about three or four of these let ters at the end of each season. Although I agree with some of the points brought up in""Disgusted's" letter, I also think football is not just a passing phase. I think it's here to stay. The reason football Is here to stay is because peo ple will drive all morning to get to the game, and mothers will contact baby sitters weeks in advance so they can go to the games. Football has the support of the public. But there is something new this year. For the first time on the NU campus people can do more than just write a letter to the editor once a year. They can get out and sup port scholastic competition. The Union and Student Council have biven us the opportunity to support a match of the m!nds in Quiz Bowl. Quiz Bow! k the first .IMIIIMKIIIIIIIf III IIIIMMtllllflSIf IIIIIMteillllllll llllllllllllllillllMMMMIIItlltllf llMMMIIIMIMIIirillllllllllll Itf JUNIOR INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL ( Presents 1 I The Junior I.F.C. Ball Friday, January 17, 1964 j Featuring Bud Holloway 8:00 to 12 p.m. i Lincoln Hotel Ballroom iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittf iiiitiiitiiiiifiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiifiiriiiiitiiif itiiitiif iiiiiiiiitiiiiiittiiiiiffitisitaiifii'tiiititiiiiin Use Nebraskafi Want Ids Prof Questions Columnist need for critical thinking, perception of self, an aware ness of one's contributory role in society, and an awareness of the unique value of each individual. I am sure that I am not alone in this pursuit there are others, certainly, who discharge this obligation to their students more effec tively than I. Much time is spent by the members of the teaching staff in counseling for mally or informally with students. Professors do not begrudge the time spent in such fashion; indeed, they consider this activity to be an essential part of the roles they play as educators. Certainly any student who wishes to discuss is sues with an instructor has the opportunity to do so without fear of condemna tion or refusal Stay scholastic competition that has invited the whole cam pus to participate. Quiz Bowl is the first opportunity for the whole campus to support a battle of the minds by attend ing matches. Questions in the matches cover a wide range of sub jects, and the audience can answer mentally right along with the competitors. There is entertainment for everyone attending the com- ! petitions. Later Quiz Bowl might ! even get enough supporfto ! go further than trophies and I help those people working their way through school. I don't believe the Uni- j versity is faced with a j choice of either athletics or i scholarship. With a Univer- ! sity the size of Nebraska, it j seems likely that both will survive. However, I do believe the University is faced with an ! opportunity. The opportun ity to support a different kind of competition scho lastic competition. The op portunity to support Quiz Bowl every Wednesday night. Cuz Guenzel . $1.00 per person Semi-formal The discharge of the re sponsibilities of the educa tor to students does not end with counseling and class lectures. Many educa tors devote much time to student groups by serving as sponsors of organiza tions, by serving at student functions, and by lending their support to student acti vities. - Fortunately, it does ' not appear that the University community is so bleak and disinterested a population as Mr. Weaver proposes. Dr. Barbara Grothe ' -SMS. V f''1 '- iH f . IIESs " -' LC ! " ' ' ,..,. K ..;i. ..... Just listen to their Capitol album, "New Directions In Folk Music! You'll hear the rocking, driving way the Journeymen aing "Someday BgfcjT a low down blues out of Chicago. The fun they have with "Stackolee," the wfld song about a legendary terror of New Orleans. Their quiet and moving version of "All the Pretty Little Horses? one of the most beautiful lullabies ever written. 'Iheir spirited ragtime rendition of "San Francisco Bay!' Then you'll know what's new in folk songs. And what's best. Look for-ask for-the The Right Way. Those Who Hate . . . fly Steve Stastny . . . are those who have long bred distrust and con fusion in the public mind to create an ever widening split between liberals and conservatives a primary goal of the international Communist conspiracy. Whom do they hate? Do they hate those radicals who seek to destroy the American way of life? Do they hate those pseudo-intellectuals who preach so cialism and collectivism? Do they hate those leftist columnists and commenta tors who blacken conserva tives with charges of "fa naticism?" Do they hate the unelected bureaucrats who strive to increase the centralization of federal power? No! They hate those Americans who believe in the Constitution and in per sonal freedom; who Insist that "the state was made for the individual and not the individual for the state." These hate-mongers vili fy those who promote the private enterprise system and reject the collective "interdependence" under the United Nations. They hate those who believe that man should be guided by an objective standard of values, and not by useless expediency. A very real example of this hatred was shown to us last year when Lee Har vey Oswald, a known Com munist, assassinated the president of the United States. Oswald committed this tragic act while a mem ber of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, a known Communist front organiza tion. While I believe that the assassination was not a po litical, but a personal act; the President would be alive today if the demands of the Conservatives for a strong anti-Communist po licy had been met A group of Liberals have unknowlingly fostered this campaign of hate. Let us ask the question why lib erals who consider them selves "moderates" have chosen to call Senator Gold water "insane" for his Con servative policies. This trend is evident even here on our campus. These accusations, desper ately manufactured by lib erals, are hysterical at tempts to discredit the Sen ator and his supporters. As THEY SING HONEST FOLK IN A WILD, DRIVING, SPIRITED, EXCITING, AND SOMETIMES QUIET NEW WAY. X Journeymen in concert on your campus. Goldwater said, "Those Lib erals are forward looking all right . . . they're looking forward to getting more votes for liberal, politi cians." Typical liberal techniques are to smear the Senator with the labels of "extrem ism" and "inconsistency." An example of this lib eral device Is found in a recent issue of The New Republic (a leftist maga zine) which attacks Gold water for supposedly chang ing his previous position on the income tax. The truth is that he has always be lieved that the progressive tax is confiscatory and a curb on incentive and in vestment. But Senator Gold water has never advocated repealing the income tax! The New Frontier, in ita tax cut proposal, appears to be moving toward Gold water's view on the In equity of the graduated rates. 17 loom to the) A6VN? IT SEEMS LfKE VOO 6010 THE SHOP EVERY UE8C. VOUR HAIR MOST 6RO0) FAST.. SONGS. a c a a f VOUR HAIR MUST ) ( I HAVE A JPEW HEAP? J fTTti .. .. , t 1 .1