1311 1 ill ! Ml W.Ym-j Page 2 IFC FORUM: Attendance A Must Evidence of the last year or so would seem to indi cate a breakdown of communication between elected col lege representatives to Student Council and the student body. Last spring the Union talks and topics committee scheduled a forum at which the student body would havp a chance to question candidates for Student Council. Lack of support from the student body forced the program to fold. Last fall Council representatives tried to hold period ic meetings at which students in the various colleges could talk Informally with their representatives. Again lack of interest folded the program. Now, the IFC has scheduled a forum for next Tues day at which all IFC backed candidates will be present to present a short platform statement and answer ques tions. For the chronic complainers, for the students who wonder what Student Council does for them, for those who wonder why Council doesn't do more and for students who care anything at all about the University thev at tend, forums of this type are a must. Anyone who does not attend plain about anything Council does or does not do next year. Intelligent voting is an impossibility if the voter doesn't know the ideals and platform of the candidates And voting unintelligently is worse than not voting at all. mmm mmui 'Stone-Age' Dear Editor: Students of human na ture have frequently re marked with amazement how two persons, after hav ing observed an event, describe it so differently. A good example of this phenonenon was found in the Campus Opinion col umn of last Friday's DAILY NEBRASKAN where a so called "Stone-Age States man" described last Tues day's campus talk by Hom er Jack, Executive Direc tor of SANE. According to Stone-Age,. Dr. Jack's talk "showed the stand of the ultra-left on a fanatic binge," and Dr. Jack, "re lied on emotionalism, n o t facts and reasons." Also Dr. Jack "saw the world through the fog of this emotionalism" and "chose to remain blind to reality." Furthermore, ' Stone - Age Statesman, by means of his supernatural clairvoyance, perhaps, perceived that "certain faculty members held Dr. Jack's words as if they were the Ten Com mandments" and he as serts, "only fanatics could listen and believe (Dr. Jack)." Clearly then, the speak er, Homer Jack, is an irra tional, emotional fanatic on V tl H h I I t Monday, April 27, 1964 Emotional? a binge. Furthermore, cer tain members of the faculty accepted everything that Dr. Jack said without reser vation, and hence they also are fanatics. We wonder who is really being "emotional" here? We came away from t h e meeting with entirely differ ent impressions. It seemed to us that the meeting re flected a variety of opin ions expressed by the speaker and members of the audience and represent ing a wide spectrum of po litical thought. During a lengthy question and an swer period, these opinions were discussed in an at mosphere of free and in tellectual debate. Does this sound irrational? It doesn't to us. Lloyd R. Cooper Thomas A. Glass Allen P. Gerlach gMIHIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllljj About Letters The DAILY NEBRASKA Invito 2 reader to ne It (or exprenalnna S of opinion on current Inplra regard- Iran of viewpoint. Letlern muat be j H ftlirnrd, contain a verifiable ad- 5 drras, and be free of llbeloua ma- terlal. I'm namei may be In- s eluded and will be releawed u p o n written reauext. H Brevllr and leflblllly Inereaae the rbaneea of publication. I.entlhr letter ma be edited or omitted. 3 s Absolutely none will be returned, s nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll(p V '...HE LOVES Snstgkt fblsewh 'Where did Among the many oddities exhibited in the southern part of this country is a state capital which flies above it the Confederate flag in place of the flag of the U.S. It is much to the liking of Alabama Governor George Wallace that it be this way; and, since he is the elected Governor of these people, we can but assume that it is much to the liking of at least a majority of Alabam ans. This sort of thing strikes boldly at the roots of many Americans' political beliefs and arouses strong feelings on both sides. For all of these feelings, however, no one really thinks it a great surprise when It happens in one of the dominant states of the old Confederacy, one of the states of today's South. We do not think it a great surprise because such Is our view of the South. Well it might have stayed this way. We could have all continued to compartment alize our ideas and notions of good and bad according to our country's geography. That is we could have until some time ago there began to appear in many of our northern cities what we commonly call race riots. ME, HE LOVES ere- he come from As these spread through the North in places such as New York and Cincinnati, it became rather apparent that our old categories were not only inadequate to deal with the situation, but also grossly incorrect. It became possible to han dle these incidents several ways for political advant age, the choice of ways be ing governed by the side one was on. The northerners found it somehow possible to pass these riots off as "isolated incident s", happenings which did not reflect the feelings of the general citi zenry, uncalled for ex plosions incited by meddling southerners. Citizens of the southland were equally able to start building some cases of varying reliability and sub stance to the point that the Negro in the southern part of our country was really better off than his northern ' counterpart. At this juncture northern whites began an all out in tellectual attack on these claims on the part of the southern whites. Outside of the fact that many thought it odd that this give and take was being conducted almost entirely by whites both in the North and the South and many thought it unusual that neither in the North nor in the South was the Negro asked for his opinion or feelings outside of these little flies in the ointment all seemed to be going rather smoothly tak ing into account the topic under argument. After the North hud begun to attack the arguments from the South, all that seemed to be needed was for the South to expose Northern sentiment. But that seemed rather unlikely. It continued to seem un likely that such should hap pen until just a few weeks ago.. Then it did happen, and it happened in the purpose of that very Governor whose name started this column, Alabaman George Wallace, Wallace decided to run for the Presidency; and, amidst laughs and various and sun dry derogatory comments, he began his campaign for that office. He entered his first primary just some weeks ago. When it was ov er, so were the laughs. Na tional observers stated that one hundred and twenty-five . thousand votes would be not only substantial, but JOHN MORRIg. editor! ARNIK (MR BON, manaainii edllon SDH AN SMITH' KERCH R. newt editor: FRANK PARTNCH, MU'K ROOD, aenlor rtajf wrtlerai KAY ROOD. J I Ml PKTERHON, BARBARA BKBHKT. PRISI'ILIA MtTIXINft, VALLta IX'NOEKN, TRAVIH HINTiB. Junior Uff writer! RICHARD HAXBKRT. DALE BAJF.K. CAT LKITKCHIICK, cony dltorai DENNIS Del' RAIN, photoara phen PEGGV IPEKCK. Porte aclltari JOHN HAMOREN, Militant porta edi tor, PRKNTON LOVE circulation manner i JIM DICK, tubarrlptlon manaiert JOHN ZEILINOER. bualnen manaatri BILL OUNLICKR. BOB CUNNINGHAM, PETE LAOC. buainaa aealatanta. RuhacriDtlon rate V per wmeater or ID per rear. Entered aa aecond clue natter t Um Boat office In Unoolo, Nebraeka, under the act of AuKual 4. MIX The Dally Nebrakin I ptibllehed at room II, Student Union, nn Mondav, Wednexla.v, Thuraday, Friday by I'nlveririly of Nebraaka atudenla under the jurladlrtlon of th faculty subcommittee on Student Publication. Pub llctalton ehall he free frim cenanrahlp by tho Subcommittee or any peraiin outalrte .he ('nlverally. Member of the Nebrankan are reeponalbl for what they eaua to be ornied ME NoT..." . . and why? by kenneth tabor surprising. Governor Wal lace's campaign yielded just about double that num ber of votes. He has not kicked off his campaign for the Indiana primary where he promises to do even better. First of all, there will be the begin nings of the old band-wagon phenomenon. In addition to that his opponent will be Governor Matt Welsh, a Lyndon Johnson favorite son stand-in, w hose popular ity has slipped a healthy notch over a taxation bill that he signed into law and who cannot legally run again for Governor. Governor Welsh was still making with the derogatory comments, but the laughs and smiles were gone. He has charged Wallace with being responsible for the death of southern children in Sunday School bombings. Wallace answered the charges at Butler College, saying that he was not a racist that all he was fight ing was inter-racial marri age which he feels would be the result of integration. Student reaction to the speech was enthusiastic. At this point, we should realize that the fireworks have just started. More than that we should realize that "truth, right, and justice" are not the sole property of either side. If Wallace's campaign en lightens the North as to the condition of their own back yard, he will have done the North a service. If the entire "debate" reaches a deadlock, then, perhaps, the Negro himself will be given the opportunity to express opinions and work for a sol ution. If the South will lis ten to the charges made by the North, then they too may benefit. What we all must recog nize, both North and South, black and white, is that ov-: er and above the question of civil rights, is the ques tion of the just and due processes of government. What we must be aware of is the virtue of the AmerK can system in ailowinir change without the coup ! a eiais we nave oeen read ing so much about of late. We must be aware of this, not only - that we may use our system to accomplish ends, but also that in work ing for this accomplishment we know how far to - go at what time. And this entails listening even to Governor George, Wallace.' ; , ERIC Sf VAREID- North Dakota Sioux Mark Last Vestige Of 'America' By ERIC SEVAREID Mi not, N.D. - Eighty years ago reservation Sioux or a wandering Blackfoot would ride their tired ponies up to a U.S. Army fort10 . .rf-1 s c a v e n- f ge any bits of leat her '. or a trying 4 nan n fpw AJ m a tches, or a piece of f 1 i n t. Forty vpars aeo. in the time Sevareid of my childhood a few miles down river from here, an occasional Indian family passed through town in a wagon. They might pick up a sack of beans or a pail of lard. They would head out again over the prairie, visible a long way off, a dot on this inland ocean of grasses, nothing between them and the sky but the darting flicker and the gliding hawk. Let me tell you what happens now where boys used to snare the gophers, chase up the prairie chic kens and long for the sight of an airplane like the one that fluttered in for the county fair and drew the farmers in their buggies from miles around. As you drive out from Minot now, the horizon moves up to re veal an endless complex of towers and flat topped buildings. There is a new city on the prairie where there was only the stubble and the cactus just three years ago. It is an air de fense and missile control center, and more men in the federal pay work there al ready than the total of all the state's employees. Short ly there will be more than sixteen thousand people in the complex, more than the popultaion of Minot itself when I was a boy. The age of the atom and the intercontinental missile has arrived on these plains, almost before their people had accustomed themselves to the age of the diesel loco motive and the airplane. At another air base in North Dakota there is more con crete, In the form of run ways, than in all the high ways of the state. But the Sioux, who lost his will and his civilization when Sitting Bull fled to the border he remains in the same relative position to the world imposed upon h i m. Now his representative drives a pick-up truck from the reservation. He pauses at the gate of the missile center for inspection by the trim air force sentry in his snappy white neck scarf. Then he drives inside t h e complex to a fenced-off sec tion of land not far from warehouse - like computer raj WE NEVER CLOSE Cigarettes DIVIDEND BONDED GAS 16th & P Srs. Downtown Lincoln installation. There he can acquire an old cot, a stove, a bathroom tub, discarded by the Great White Father. North Dakota's motto is "Strength from the Soil." In my father's time it was the topsoil that gave life to the people here. It gave strength, no doubt, but it nN so absorbed, broke and de voured a man's strength. But it is not the top soil alone that the people thnk of these days. Great re serves of crude oil lie deep down in this soil. So do an estimated 350 billion tons of coal, which in another generation may supply pow er for half the Great Plains states. A vast, deep lake, which man and federal mo ney made, covers a consid erable fraction of the state's surface now; and one day pipes will mingle the waters of the great Missouri with those of the winding Red River of the North to the east, on the borders of Min nesota. And there is something else new, many feet below the topsoil, down in the shale and the gumbo the trim, erect capsule of metal with its terrible power. They lie several miles apart, these missiles, in a great arc from this command center. One acre of land, bought, rented or got by easement, for each of these vertical fox holes. These acres, God's little acres, each neatly fenced, all electronically connected by hidden cable, spread over a total of 10.000 square miles. Save for the taciturn, indigent Sioux, the life we once knew in that quiet, once distant and isolated part of America is gone or going fast. There is money now; there is stir and bustle in the cool spring air. Con crete is spread, schools and colleges go up and every other family now is ac quainted with New York and Europe. In their collec tive life, two contrary move ments may be perceived a swing toward liberal, Democratic politics and the slow rise of a social caste system based on money, even among the farmers. This is something we never knew in those distant days of hardship, Bible reading and the purest of pure democracies. Clinic Offers Services The Dental Clinic, located on third floor, Andrews Hall, is designed to give experi ence to dental students and to provide services for those in need of dental care. Any one on or off campus may take advantage of the serv ices. The Clinic is closed during all University vaca tions and during finals. Ap pointments must be obtained for services. ,. V , . , fjl ' '