Page 2 Monday, December 14, 1964 iiaiiiitiiiiitnifMitiiiif t tiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiitt iitttif i4tiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiif it itiiiiititiitiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiif iiiiiuw Male Or Female? The old saying that "clothes make a man" may or may not be provable. But what about the other sex do clothes make the woman? On this campus the prominant way to dress for social life Is grubby. There is nothing wrong with an informal atmosphere but the girl who spends hours under the hair dryer and making herself beautiful ruins the whole effect by donning the most grubby sweatshirt to be found and a pair of cut-off jeans or wheat jeans that could almost stand by themselves in a corner. Slacks and sweaters or blouses are hidden in the back corners, of her closet. Dates forget that there is a female present and the conversation becomes one that should be restricted to late hour bull sessions. If girls want to be treated like the young ladies they potentially are, they must look feminine, act feminine and be feminine. The trend is beginning to change, there is no longer the fear of putting on a full-length gown for a formal oc casion. When a man wears a tuxedo he deserves a date who is likewise attired. Part of the blame for the grubby dress must be given to the type of parties. At least two out of every three parties demands that the dress be informal. Unless more formal occassions become popular on this campus, the female will continue to look like a male, and the male will continue to look like a grizzly bear. Job Just Begun The Student Council Constitutional Convention should be applauded for passing the district representation. In doing so they looked at the question objectively and chose the. better of the two plans. In order for either plan to work very effectively in fighting apathy, an effective Student Council is needed one which commands the respect and attention of each student on campus. It will be up to the Convention now to act wisely to give the Council the powers it needs to become this effec tive organ and to judiciously limit the power so that no group may gain control at the expense of another. Congrats, Huskers! Congratulations to the Cornbusker 4as4tetbfllMeam in their win Saturday night. Fans who attended to see the highly-touted .Michigan team perform found themselves with a real game to watch. Perhaps it was the presence of the fans that urged the Huskers and gave them the final push needed to de feat the Wolverines. Perhaps it was the initiative of the Nebraska team and perhaps a little of each. It never hurt a team to have a coliseum full of people rooting for them. SUSAN SMITHBERGER The Daily RICH HALRERT. manatfnn editor: FRANK PARTSCH. newi editor I Sl'SIE R UTTER. V1CK1 ELLIOTT. LEE MARSHALL, copy editors. PRISt II.UA Ml'LLINS. MARILYN HOEGEMEYKR, senior staff writers WALLIS LUNDEEN, JIM KORSHOJ, PFVNTY OLSON, junior staff writers: RICH EISER. photog rapher: PEGGY GREECE, worts editor: BOB SAMITXSON. sports assistant; BOB LEDIOYT. BUZZ MADSON. SCOTT RYNEAHSON, business assistants; LYNN RATH.IEN. Circulation manaiier; JIM DICK, subscription manaser. Subscription rstes $3 per semester or 15 per year. . ,m Entered as second class matter t the post office In Lincoln NebrasM. nder the act of August 4, 19U. The Daily Nebraskan is published at Room 51, Nebraska Union, on Monday Wednesday. Thorsday, Friday by fniversity of Nebraska students under t)ie jurisdiction of the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications. Publications shall he fre; from censorship hv ih Subcommittee m any Person outside the University. Members of the Nebraskan are responsible for wnst they cause to be printed. It is printed Monday. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, during the school year with the exception of vacation and examina tion periods. Mm X $V . A. 1200 'O' ISItTtAED JIWILtRl n mm Nebraskan MAY WE HELP YOU SELECT THE PERFECT GIFT? nanny STREET AMERICAN SIM 10CIITV Republican By George Duranske The Republican party must and the Republican party will, take a stronger stand in relation to civil rights. Last week at the gov ernor's conference which was held in Denver, Colo., aside from the general recognition that new leader ship must bo installed in the upper levels, the conclusion was reached that the rights which Negroes are seeking must be recognized as an integral part of Republican philosophy. In 1960 the Republican party polled a very insigni ficant number of votes from the Negro ranks and of course in 1964 with Gold water's vote against t h e Civil Rights Act the per cent of Negro votes tallied by the GOP was practically un noticed. With developments such as these the prac ticality of giving the Negro more say in the Republican party is essential for the parly cannot continue to exist by alienating minority groups. In a sense this situation is a bit like the proverbial stone in the pond and the seemingly never-ending rings. The repercussions are equally great for the GOP. By not actively sup porting one minority t h e conclusion can be drawn by other minority groups striv ing for recognition that Re publicanism barely recog nizes their existence and doesn't even consider their plight. There is however another side to the coin of practi cality ana that is the side of necessity. The reference here is to the need to keep our political parties from becoming racist. This is the more important of the two reasons for stronger civil rights planks in the GOP. The reason this is the more important of the two is obvious. Picture this country split down the mid dle again with Negroes al lied with some whites on one side opposing whites allied with a very few Negroes on the other. The consequences . could vary from nothing to - a racial war. If however the Negro maintains membership in both political parties the chance of a party split along the lines of integration-segregation is highly unlikely. The pathwav is obvious and the Republican party will follow the necessary path to incorporate civil rights in its platform and bring much of the Negro vote into the Republican party. i II ' ''' ' iff 1 -v r " J v 1 , J " J P? MA f ,11 hi V If if " "PORT 0' CALL FOR 1127 LINCOLN, Ffte Political Spemm ijfr "PRINTED Rr THE US SENME JiJ jj ma the horrors are there, Ideas Given Dear Miss Smithberger: After reading your issue of December 7, three things occur to me: 1) You do not make maxi mum utilization of the little space you claim to have for news by continued harping upon the point that your newspaper needs money; 2) Printing less than 6,000, papers when everyone is forced to subscribe as part of their tuition, while living units are favored in the new distribution plan at the ex pense of off-campus inde pendents who may only ob tain the Daily Nebraskan at the Union before 11:30 a.m. and then only if you fight for one; and 3) The paper lost no mon ey last year since its deficit was made up by an appar ent overcharge on the Cornhusker. Since you invite proposals, I would like to propose the things that follow. Have the paper printed by the University of Nebraska Press. Print the paper by the photo-offset method rather than by typesetting as is now done. Print the Nebraskan on tabloid (half-size) paper. Sell the paper. If an in crease in revenue would im prove the Nebraskan as Going formal? . , . then go to the Captain's Walk for a complete selection of formal wear. No need to buy it iust rent it at special prices, tool (Of course, you'll have to provide your own flowers for the date but we can supply everything else) Make the big scene in a big way ... go formal! It's easy at the Captain's Walk. UNIVERSITY MEN" R STREET i NEBRASKA J l!j ja r ' HORROR w the light pon't work." claimed, the demand would permit the paper to be sold from "iron newsboys" and over the counter in the Union. Print more papers. This would put your paper in the hands of more people, so that you would have a great er influence on campus. Print less papers. Caution must be used with this one, however, since only your readers will miss the paper if it disappears entirely. Increase tuition. This could conceivably reduce the costs payed to the Corn husker by several thousand dollars a year, but the probability of that happen ing is rather unlikely. Become an agency of t h e Union, operating at a loss in the interest, convenience, and necessity of the stu dents; or become an agen cy of the School of Journa lism, operating at a ' 1 6 3 S which you can justify by being a training medium. Sincerely, James Ricgcr KNUS Manager NEWLY ARMY IN TIME FOR WjoudhoA. Seen in town, on campus . . . and soon to be seen under the Christmas tree , . . marvelous madras! See our new collection styled of imported cotton . . . sketched, madras wrap skirt $12 with roll-sleeve shirt $5, cardigan $10; madras shorts $12 with ling-sleeved shirt $7. SPORTSWEAR STREET m Udm 1 I p Democratic By Bob Chcrny In this column, and in the next column, I shall briefly examine the history of liberalism in this coun try, in order to lay to rest, once and for all, the story that the United States is basically conservative. American historians often divide American history into three distinct phases, the ages of Jefferson Jackson, of Lincoln and of Franklin Roosevelt. Each of these periods is marked by a vigorous lead er at the beginning, and, except for the last which has yet to run its course, a period of increasing stag nation ending in such pa thetic figures as Buchanan and Hoover. The Jeffersonian - Jack sonian Age began as a pro test against what they con sidered to be the concen tration of power in the hands of a small group. Through faith in the abil ities of the common man, and an extension of t h e democratic processes to larger groups of the pop ulation, Jefferson, Jackson and their successors set the nation on the track of pop ular democracy. With the election of Lin coln came a new stimulus to liberal ideas. Lincoln used the power of the fed eral government to coerce the stales to remain in the union. He even suspended the right of habeus corpus in order to deal more ef fectively with the crisis. In addition, under t h e GOP, acts were passed giv ing free land to home steaders, giving federal aid to institutions of high er learning (the Morrill Act) Don't Rent a tux. We have good tuxes, $3 & up, also formals, party clothes & fur coats. Junior League Thrift Shop 247 0 435-7506 ED! GIFTING! FLOOR and encouraging economic development of the country through such measures as land grants to the railroads. It is a far cry from this concept of an active federal government to Herbert Hoover's concept of govern ment's role in time of cri sis. Yet, in aH this record of stagnation from Grant to Hoover, two bright spots stand out. These are the ad ministrations of Theodore Roosevelt and W o o d r o w Wilson. Under Roosevelt, two im portant departures took place. Domestically, TR's "Square Deal" placed em phasis on government regu lation of business, so that the rapidly increasing in dustrial might of the na tion could yield its bene fits to all the people. Also, under TR, the United States realized that the old power balance of Europe had broken down, and that isolation was no longer feasible. Through, such actions as his media tion of the Russo-Japanese War, for which he won the Nobel Peace Prize, TR set the United States on the road to involvement in world affairs. In the 1912 election the left - of - center candidates gained 76 per cent of the total, and Wilson began a program of progressive lib eralism which both recalled the days of Lincoln and Jefferson and forecast the days of Franklin Roosevelt. .... Guaranteed by a lop Company ....No War Clause .... Exclusive Benefits at Special Rates ....Deposits Deferred until you are out of school. Can You Qualify? 432-0146