iMiniiamnihijnininmiiraiiniiiiii I '. tL. mm 6 Vol. 79, No. 66 The Daily Nebraskan Friday, December 4, 1964 B REVIEW CAMPUS NO. 6 RANKED Nebraska Cornhuskers placed five team members on the United Press International and Associated Press All-Big Eight Confer ence teams this week. Hon ored were Kent McCloughan, Lyle Sittler, Larry Kramer, Tony Jeter and Freeman White. KRAMER was chosen to All-Amercia teams by AP, UPI. Look Magazine and the Football Coaches. He was honored on several national television shows last week. DR. HAROLD WISE, dean of the University's Graduate College, died Saturday after being hospitalized for surg- try. Wise 62 had heei It fS'iTn, ?,' It at 01""c VAL PETERSON, former I th?S6 pMt r0Using hornS governor and ambassador to j A booster horn can be pur Denmark and current Regent) chased from any Corn Cob. of the University, Wednesday: The Tassels are also offer told the University Y o u n g j ing the student body a means Republicans (YR's) the GOP I of showing team spirit, must find acceptable pro-; grams to win support in fu-1 The-V are selling "Cotton ture elections. The ideal con- i Bowl Booster Badges" for a servative. he said, is not anti everything, but has a touch of progressivism. CITY MAYOR DEAN PETERSEN this week called a meeting for Dec. 17 to organize commu nity reaction to the closing of the Lincoln Air Force Base. The group will be composed of various officials and will try to make the best use of the facility after its closing in 1966. CONSTRI CTION in the city this year has been recorded as the second highest in his tory. A total of $25.5 million in building permits have been issued, $21.1 of them during the month of November. A R E W A R D of $200 has been offered for information resulting in the arrest and prosecution of parties who took $7000 worth of electri cal supplies from the con struction site of a county con valescent unit at Lincoln Gen eral Hospital Wednesday. STATE ., CONTRIBUTIONS to g i v e Nebraska a large float in the Cotton Bowl parade in Dallas Jan. 1 are falling far short of the $5,000 goal originally set by the State Centennial Com mission. Centennial Director Don Shriner said about $500 had been received to this week, but said he hoped the drive was "just getting off the ground." STATE SEN. MARVIN STROMER announced a study of the Nebraska liquor laws. A proposal to change the liq uor control policy would allow the state and its political sub divisions to dispense legal liquor. FOUR NEBRASKA COL LEGES have applied for a to tal of $1,234,566 in Federal grants for construction pur poses. They are Kearney and Chadron State Colleges, Mid land College at Fremont and the College of St. Mary at Omaha. LIEUTENANT GENERAL JOHN D. RYAN became the fourth commander of the Strategic Air Command Tues day. He follows Gen. Thomas Power, who retired. NATION SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL celebrated his ninetieth birth day Monday with brandy toasts, and a champagne and oyster dinner topped off with a cigar. MARINER 4, the U.S. space craft on its way to Mars, is being raced by a Soviet spacecraft which was launched Monday. FORMER AMBASSADOR MATTHEW McCLOSKEY de nied Wednesday that be took part in a deal to kick back $35,000 from one of his Gov ernment contracts to help fi nance the 1960 Kennedy-Johnson campaign. He replied to testimony given by insurance agent Don Reynolds before the Senate Rules Committee. 'Win' Buttons, Spirit Horns Support Team Two organizations on cam pus, the Corn Cobs and the Tassels, are offering students an easy way to display their support of Big Red. The Corn Cobs are selling booster horns. Thev are about three feet long and are made of red plastic with the words, "Go Big Red, Cotton Bowl 65" in white letters on t h e side. They cost a dollar with the money going for the sup- port of the Corn Cobs The idea for these horns j comes from Kansas where they were first encountered by Husker fans, Tha , , . The goaI ot the Corn Cobs is to equip every Cotton Bowl bound Nebraskan with one of quarter. Ft is a rounded met al badge with the word "Win in white letters. RdH Cfrt cqIIai Tin rAiw!nTA summed up the purpose of the j badges by saying, "The boost er badges will create high Cornhusker spirit and keep it there." The booster badges can be purchased from any Tassel. The badges as compared to the Corn Cob horns are de signed for wearing from the time of purchase right up to the game itself, while the horns are designed primarily for use at pre-game rallies and at the game. Both organizations are of fering these items to the stu dents more as a service than as a money raising drive. Campaign Starts For Dallas Float Gamma Phi Beta and Chi Phi arp Knnnsnrinu a ctafo wide camnaien tn rpriopm trading stamps to help raise me .uuu necessary to con-1 struct the Nebraska Cotton Bowl float Kent Gerlack suggested the idea to his fraternity brothers and they asked the Gamma Phi Betas for support in the endeavor. The idea was presented to Gov. Frank Morrison, w h o is promoting the float as a symbol of Nebraska spirit and i also as state publicity. The) Governor was reportedly j very enthusiastic about the! fund raising project and the student's interest in the float. They should have all the publicity they need, the Gov ernor said. A UPI-AP press conference has been called for today at 11 a.m. in the Lincoln Hotel. Ann Capesius, chairman of the Gamma Phi-Chi Phi pro ject said that some of the Lin coln and Omaha television and radio stations have al ready promised free spots in promotion of the fund raising project. Posters donated by Graves Printing Company are going to be put in the downtown stores, encouraging people to place green and blue stamps in boxes provided in the stores. The posters will be plcaed throughout the city, Miss Capesius said. The national office of blue stamps was contacted and of fered to redeem the blue stamp books for $2.50 instead of the customary $2. Tower Goes Up Despite Snow Construction crews worked through blowing snow and be low freezing temperatures Wednesday to assemble the 874-foot tower for KUON-TV at the site of the new trans mitter near Mead. William Ramsay, director of engineering for the Ne braska Educational Televi sion Commission, said the first 35-foot section of the tow er was set in place late Tues day afternoon. The Mead facility is t h e ' first phase in the construction Nebraska educational televi sion network utilizing KUON- TV, the University station. Subsequent transmitters are slated for Omaha, Lexington, North Platte, Alliance, Bas sett and Albion. i - . 1 i 1 mmm- 1 1 in ip , x- rv '- m .. &m:.7K .... . i i i i SNOWFALL PART II The aftermath of yesterday's picturesque snowfall is often bruised anatomies, spilled books and damaged pride. Susie Parks made this painful discovery, along with many other students . on the w ell trodden solid ice paths leading to the Student Union. P7P Provides Opportunity For Students To See Europe The opportunity to live with ' families in EuroDe and travel 1 abroad will be available to suicems wno quaiuy lor me People-to-People "student am - bassador" programs. Students interested in this program should contact Sally! Morrow, chairman of the Uni-; versity PTP student abroad committee. They must pay a national membership fee of 52.o0 by Dec. lo in order to qualify. Five hundred college stu dents will travel to 28 coun tries in Europe and the Mid dle East during the coming summer as PTP "student am bassadors." It will be t h e fourth summer that PTP has sponsored the trips. "The objective .of the ten week program is to improve international relations through face-to-face contact between students and their counter parts in the countries which they visit," said Gary Rich-1 ards, University tTP pro-! gram director. "This opportunity to serve 1 900 Student Sit-in Staged In California The University of Californ ia administration building overlooked the scene of a 900 student sit-in mass defiance of campus authorities Thursday. A force of 410 helmeted po lice officers, consisting of uni versity, county ' and state agencies, loaded demonstrat ors into nine buses for trans portation to the county pri son farm at Rita in the ear ly morning hours. University Chancellor Ed ward W. Strong had earlier warned the students that they must disperse or be taken into custody. Chants of "free dom now" greeted the Chan cellor. Officers then began carrying them out. The students are part of a so-called "free speech move ment," which began the sit in Wednesday after univer sity officials refused their demands that no disciplinary action be taken against move ment leaders for previous demonstrations. The group spent Wednesday night in Sproul Hall. They were locked there by police This 'Snow Fall' Not n L I ah r "' v&'-l if I ! as student ambassadors in ivi-oim, ,,ntioc ;c i ta oualifici m nh r f - 1 camPus chaPter of PTP- AP - pucants must also De recom - mended by the campus chair - man of each PTP chapter, he added " Participles may choose any one o three plans offered : by the I niversity student abroad program: the home- stay, three visits of approxi mately five days each with Ihost families in Western Europe, followed by free travel; independent travel, provided in order that t h e student may attend school at a foreign university, take a job, or pursue some other ac tivity which requires more time than is allowed on the homestay portion; and for the first time this year, ex cursion, a group travel pro gram. One excursion group will visit Yugoslavia, another the Middle East, including Cairo, Beirut. Haifi. and Tel Aviv, after having been told to get out. University President Clark Kerr said recently that de mands of the movement lead ers were incompatible with orderly operation of the uni versity. The action followed an early-morning statement by Gov. Edmund G. Brown calling for arrests, to uphold "The rule of law in California. Reported as the first per son arrested was Robert True haft, husband of Jessica Mit ford, author of "The High Cost of Dying." Truehaft, a non-students, was arrested after refusing the policemen's order to leave. Dr. Drews To Speak Tuesday, Wednesday Dr. Elizabeth Drews, pro fessor of education at Michi gan State University and au thority on gifted persons, will visit at the University Tues day and Wednesday. She will speak to the Nebraska Career Scholars. So Nice ' , SB J - PIIOTO BV RICH EISVR and another to Eastern Eur - one. which inclndps Pnlann ' Russia, and others. i unaer me nomestay pro gram. students will live with , families Ln one of the follow- md oe V0luls aeiegaies. 1 ing five areas: Belgium- j F r a n c e. Scanduiavia, the!.. lh": P,,rPose of the conven- 1 British Isles. Greece and Ger-! llon 1S ejct of'lcers- KP"- ; many. Students choosing the , f g: sa!!V . convention is ; excursion plan will have the' opportunity to live in homes of English-speaking Universi ty students during some parts of their travels. Prior to the first flight de parture, now scheduled June 18. all students participating ' in the program will receive orientation in Washington, D.C. Last summer 317 students visited Western Europe and Israel under PTP auspices. Following their selection, students here at the Univer sity will participate in a 10 week orientation progrma, which will include travel in formation, and studies of pol itics, cultural and general in formation about the countries they will visit. Booklets with full details of the program, including costs of the different plans, may be obtained from Miss Mor row, or by writing to Student Abroad Program, People-to-People. 2401 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Mo.. 64141. Four students from the Uni versity traveled to England, Germany and France under the program last summer. Anthropologist To Discuss Race Myth And Man Dr. Ashley Montagu, world famous anthropologist, will lecture at the University in the annual Montgomery lect ure series. He will speak at 3:30 p.m. next Monday and Wednesday in the Love Library Audito rium. He will also speak at the Unitarian Church at 6300 A at 8 p.m. Sunday. His topic there will be "The New Image of Man." His subjects at the Univer sity will be on the 1 0 p i c of "The Myth of Race." Montagu, a native of Lon don, studied at the universi ties of London and Florence, and received his Ph.D from Columbia University in 1936. His first book, a master University Called 'Center Of Sin' By State The general image of the University among other Ne braska colleges is that of "the sin center of Nebraska," ac cording to Bill Hansmire, Uni versity delegate to the Ne braska Student Government Association convention. Reporting to the S t u d e n t Council Wednesday. Hans mire said that drinking does not seem to be too great a problem on the other cam puses," but it seems to be a larger sin than at the Uni versity." Hansmire and three other University delegates attend ed the convention at Chadron Nov. 20-21. TheM rLebaska stu,deJ!,,i ' would like the power of dis-l cipline over fellow students.! I rather than having the admin- istration hold this power." he w . , - r . sajl r Joseph McGuire. Dean of , the School of Business at Kan- . . .'sas University, will sneak at i hp sain Tim in inptimric ni selecting representatives to --.u i. i " -ii schools use the college repre sentative and living unit rep resentative systems. Some schools have tried to have representatives selected bv ; their vear in college, such as ! freshman and sophomore, but this has proved to be too com- McGuire will also speak on ; plicated. ; '"Economics: Its Contribution to Understanding Business Hansmire said the schools Behavior' on Tuesday after did like the system of having noon. This presenta'ion will h o I d-o v e r representatives be held in room 205 of the from the vear before. Social Sciences Building at ; " 2:30 p.m. The main problem in this McGuire is nationally area, ne saia. is :ne great cut - ference in the power of the student governing bodies. The six colleges which at - tended the convention includ- ed: Chadron. Hastings. Wayne. Scottsbluff. Peru, and the University. ! John Ke ne-v- reporting on the Association's constitution saia eacn scnool may send five delegates and a faculty ! advisPr- Txvo of the students ted president year. the following A news letter is sent out by the Association with news of each member school. Annual dues for the Association are $15. Kenegy said. The amendment and ratifi- j ecutive ability, the women are cation process for the Asso-j commissioned as second lieu ciation's constitution consists ! tenants, and assume full of sending proposed amend- j managerial and leadership re ments to the Executive Com- sponsibility. mittee four weeks before the! Salaries are in the $375 to convention is to be held. Two $400 a month range, with a thirds of the member schools, raise to $425 to $450 after 18 must then sign the petition to 1 months, ratify the amendment. ! Women selected by the in- Heine said that Hastings j terview team must take and requires that girls not aDnearl in slacks in the library be- fore 7 p.m. Several of t h e schools insisted that students dress up .for every meal, ac cording to Heine. The library hours at sever al of the schools extend until 1 or 2 a.m., he said. The Student Senate has much more power in some of the other schools, he said. It has charge of many campus activities, thus taking t b e place of the many campus or- piece in the field, was "Com ing into Being Among Aus tralian Aborigines." Montagu began a continu ous stream of writing and research on the history of man in 1937. He was respon sible for writing the UNESCO statement of raceior the Uni ted Nations. His "One World or None," a post World War II documen tary, was well received. One of his most famous books, "Man's Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race," is on book stands in its fourth edition this year. While at the University he will speak with the staff and graduate students at the De partment of Anthropology. Colleges ganizations as they are known here, he said. Communication is a prob lem on other campuses, Heine told the Council. He said that some of the schools have a newspaper which comes out only once a week, or even every two weeks. He said a newsletter supplements t h e school paper in some of the schools. The communications be tween the students and the ad ministration is also a problem for some Nebraska schools, he said. Some schools have no student representatives on the faculty senate, according to Heine. KU Business Dean T- J-... iJJCuriiiwiluuy .. . ' elmbCf' . m T'3 day nis ht. The Round Table, which is open to all students and fac ulty, will ba held in room 232 234 at 7:30 p.m. He will speak on "The Responsibility ' of ,he Corporation." ' known for his scholarly work on business behavior and the , relationship of business to so- :""' He is ,the author of a volume on the role of busi ness in modern society en titled '-Business and Society." He has also written two other books concerning business be havior and has conducted a television series on business and society. Army To Interview senior "wOeds Mere A U.S. Arm v selection team will be on campus to inter- vjew graduatins senior worn- en on Thrusday. The team, composed of re cent college graduates who are now U.S. Army officers, is looking for women to fill "junior executive" positions in the Army. After receiving their train ing, aimed at developing ex- score well in written exami- nations administered in Oma- ha before a final determina tion is made. Any graduating senior who feels she can qualify should arrange for an interview with the U.S. Army selection team. Information will also be avial able for young men. Openings Available For Un'on Ski Trip Openings are still available for anyone wishing to go on the Union Ski Trip, Feb. 3-7. Approximately 40 open ings remain, and interested students may sign up in the Union Program Office. Total cost for the trip k $75, with a $35 deposit required at sign up time. The trip will be to Winter Park, Colo, and the group will stay at the Hoclandhof Ski Lodge. ooo0 3 . B jcoreooara Cimmi Phi Beta U IS, CklPM M Braia Buitrra Ui, Pki Fti kUmx iri FarmboMc I US, Alafca Gtmma Klrmi I OMi K, DUa Gamma n M Tkrta XI Dtlta Tbeta XI II U, Alpha XI Drlta M Brta Tkria Ft II li. Alpka Delta PI II M Kappa Mama A 150, Bela Theta PI II IS