wvrrsfTY of NEBR. FEB 251965 f f ml. f V7 Wjr ; " If DICK GREGORY , . night club comedian and Civil Rights speaker relaxes at an Interv iew with KFMQ before his appearance at the Student Union yesterday afternoon. Vol. 80, No. 89 By Priscilla Mullins Senior Staff Writer Eob Kerrey will not be re moved from the Student Council, nor will he be asked to return to the Council the money he made from the Stu dent Discount Cards. The report of the Judiciary Committee yesterday stated that the committee "has not found due cause to remove Kerrey." The vote was four to one, with Jhn Klein dis senting. The fact that Council offi cials from last year and this year did not know Kerrey was making profits on the cards was "not enough in it self to warrant removing Kerrey from the Council," according to the report, given by JoAnn Stratemann, chair man of the Judicfary Commit tee. The issue "hinged rather on the motives behind h i fr actions," the statement read. "To the majority of the Com mittee, it would have to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt that Bob Kerrey had deliberately concealed from the Council the profits he was making in order to avoid having to turn these profits over to the Council. Will Keni Skirting Other Campuses California Chancellor Dances Watusi like One Of Gang1 CBS News recently discov ered Dr. Franklin Murphy, chancellor of the University of California at Los Angeles, do ing the Watusi at a fashion able party in Bel-Air, accord ing to the Forty-Niner, Cali fornia State College, Long Beach. The Forty-Niner looks for ward to the chancellor's first album, "Watusi with Frank lin," and suggested that the dean of students, the dean of housing and the dean of wom en join him in that effort. "When the students are con vinced that Dr. Murphy is just like one of the gang, they'll be more docile In accept ing his administrative de crees." A guide to sports language compiled by Ervin Wolff, col umnist for the Iowa State Daily, informs 'us as to what football sportcasters really mean when they use the stock phrases of their trade: "Well, Bob, what do you think of these two teams we'll din "This, we feel, has not been done." me (jommntee ... was unable to disprove Kerrey's assertion of his original good faith ... no proof has been found that he at anv time ceased to act in good faith." The report went on, "Bob Kerrey made money by vir tue of his position in student government s o m e t h ing which is at best debatable under any circumstances. A person in the position of re sponsibility which Kerrey oc cupied ought to know better than to assume such an action proper without prior Council approval. "Whatever his intentions at the outset of the program, Kerrey was guilty of extreme ly poor judgment in failing to inform the rest of the Council when he learned of the profits to be made from the card." Presenting a dissenting re port, John Klein said, "In the opinion of the majority they condemn all actions of (Kerrey), hold him responsi ble" for his actions, but then take no action against him. be watching today?" Or, "Why do they send us out so early?" "the fans are really en thused about today's game." Or, "They've been on t h e sauce all morning." "Now we'll send you down to the field to hear a little of that music from the band." Or, "I just gotta go." "Maybe we'll get a chance to bring you some of the scores from around the coun try and give the statistics of these two teams playing to day." Or, "I think the second half is going to be dull, too." "These boys are really play ing football this afternoon, aren't they?" Or, "I was right." "Well, folks, that's the game. We've got some fig ures for you now." Or, "The sponsor paid for 17 minutes more." Harry Hooper, columnist for the Auburn Plainsman at Au burn University, wondered The Daily Nebraskan p Profits; "I cannot join in such ir rationality." Klein said he felt the in fluence of the senior honorar ies at the University had an effect on the outcome of the committee's decision. Discussing the Committee's decision, Miss Stratemann quoted William Pharis, advis or to Council. "We can't undo the pasi tout we can learn from it." She told the Council that the committee made a suggestion that an ad hoc committee be formed to discern future fi nancing of the Student Dis count Card program. "As far as we're concernpd this is a closed case," she said. In a Student Opinion Com mittee report, John Cosier told the Council that his com mittee is considering a stu dent poll concerning how much the Student Discount Cards are used by students. President John Lydick told the Council in a prepared statement that "My final con clusion and decision as I sta ted it to the Judiciary Com mittee was that I would rath about a claim that the av- erage college-educated Ameri can male secretly wishes to be a truck-driver because he is the ultimate in manliness. Hooper interviewed a truck er, the owner of a genuine "big rig", but himself old, grey haired and small of stat ture. He had quite a song to sing about the Teamsters Union. "I have had a steady job since I joined, he said, and I have built up enough senior ity so that I don't have to worry about being laid off until I retire: If I get s i c k the union pays the medical bills. If I lose my job I get unemployment compensation from the union. When I retire the union will take care of me. I get all this for $7 a month." When asked why college-educated American males want ed to be truck drivers, he re plied, "I guess things just work that way sometimes. A lot of Teamsters would like to be college-educated males." : Gregory Entertains (Full House A comedian or a Civil Rights leader? Dick Gregory proved yesterday in his hour and a half talk to nearly a thousand people in the Student Union Ball room that he is both. As a comic, Gregory, in the first half of his speech, mixed jokes and satire on everything from Civil Rights and capital punishment to politics. The last half of Gregory's speech was completely that of a Civil Rights leader and had nothing comic in it. "We have a great social problem in America," he said. "If we dont solve it, it will solve us." He said that America has the means to solve this problem of civil rights, but that instead of solving it "we lie about it, involve emotion and blame everything 1. real thing." "This problem is not one of black against white, but right against wrong," he stressed. He said that telling the Negro to wait for his civil rights and to give it all time is like someone telling a man that he shouldn't choke him, but that it will take time to stop choking him because he can't stop at once. Gregory said that the Constitution must be carried out to its fullest for all Americans and that the Civil Rights Bill is weak and "doesn't see to it that justice is done." "The Civil Rights Bill gives freedom on the install ment pltin,' he said. "It doesn't give the Negro the rights that the Constitution insures him, but only a weak promise that often isnt enforced." He said tJiat the Negro's education level can no long er be used as an excuse. He pointed out that if we don't question Viet Nam's education level before we send sol diers to free them, we likewise can't fairly question the Negro's education. "Martin Luther King and many other Negro leaders are educated enough to be President of the United States, but the country isn't integrated enough," he said. Religion, he said, is another example of where Civil Rights have failed. Ninety-nine percent of the whites go to church and never see a Negro there and likewise the same number of Negroes never see a white person in church. He said that in many churches a Negro would be yon a er be in doubt as to the pos sibility of having sacrificed a principle than to be in doubt as to the possibility of having sacrificed a human being." Lydick said that his first conclusion "was that Bob was guilty of extremely poor judg ment and neglect of duty. I have stated this appraisal openly, and I have explained my feelings to Bob personally in detail. We were to determine whether or not these viola tions were grounds for remov al from Student Council. At this point we became con cerned with the amount of confusion surrounding the case and the possibility of guilt on the part of others in failing to carry out thpir duty "As the ex-officio member of the Judiciary Committee, it was my duty and theirs to pass judgment in light of these aspects. It was also no ted by the committee that in passing judgment a contribu ting factor is the ramifications of that judgment. "I concur with the decision of the Judiciary Committee and commend each of them for having performed a very difficult job to the best of their ability." Lydick said he had directed the Student Welfare Commit tee to find an organization to handle the Student Discount Card program. In other action, the Council adopted a resolution by John Kenagy endorsing the pro posed increase in the Univer sity budget. The resolution called on Council members, "as constitutents of the Ne braska state senators, strong ly urge the adoption of the full ten and one half million dollars increase from the State General Fund." In a statement' after the meeting, Kenagy said, "Stu dent Council as the student governing body of the Univer sity has unanimously agreed to accept this resolution. I feel personally that this is in dicative of the general opinion of all 13,000 students attending the University and is an ex ample of the strong feeling the students . . . have toward the proposed budget." Activities Committee chair man Susie Segrist told the Council that a list of the new officers of all student organi zations must be turned in to the Student Activities Office as soon as possible, so they Continued on Page 2. Thursday, February 25, 1965 Students' Incomes Taxable Students cannot expect any special favors from the De partment of Revenue this March, simply because they are students, according to Richard Peebles, CPA and as sistant to the dean of the Col lege of Business Administra tion at the University of Iowa. "None of the expenses of the typical undergraduate books or tuition are gener ally deductible," said Peebles, "whether or not the student is paying his own way. Any scholarship, however, is n o t usually taxable income." In order to be claimed as a dependent or in order to claim dependency status a student must prove that another per son provides more than 50 per cent of his support and that there is a relationship between the claimer and the claimee, said Peebles. "In all cases," said Peebles, "you cannot earn more than $600 per year unless you are a full time college student." Peebles said that full time would mean four to five months or more of the year. "The student can make two or t ft r e e thousand dollars without loss of a dependent status if the parents still con tribute more than half of his support," Peebles said. The student mav find that prizes which involve specific effort on hjs part can be counted as taxable income said Peebles. If the nature of the prize is a scholarship then it may not be taxable. Peebles noted that, scholar ships awarded by companies may be taxable "where the company expects future serv ice from the recipient." "Teaching fellowships and assistantships are generally taxable as income. Many re search grants are also taxa ble unless it is research re quired of all candidates for a particular degree," Peebles said. "Certain educational expen ditures such as books, tuition and fees may be deducted by a taxpayer whose employer requires such educational measures." A student's income is his own, said Peebles, and there is nothing about his status to prevent lum from being taxed. . . . With Humor, Straight Talk thrown out If he ever tried to enter the dw, Young Americans have a "heck of a responsibllityw In solving the problems that the older generations have cre ated for them, he said. These have to be solved, he add ed, or America will crumble from within the same as the Roman Empire did. Before his speech in the Union, Gregory explained hi humor and the part it plays in the Civil Rights movement. "Humor cant solve the problems of Civil Rights as far as projecting the people," he said, "but it can help the people who are involved in the problems." "Football," he began, "is a great sport. Where else could a Negro chase a white man and have 40 thousand people cheer him?" , Other. Civil Rights satire disguised as jokes concerned Brotherhood Week where he described a white family breaking the dishes after inviting him to supper and the fact that although there may not be a Negro in the White House, at least LBJ sounds like one. He also made fun of the common reaction f a white neighborhood when a Negro buys a house there. "We pay $75,000 for a $12,000 house in a white neigh borhood and then they accuse us of depreciating the neighborhood," he said. He also pointed out through jokes that the Negro really doesn't have to be warned of yell ing or making trouble in a white neighborhood. "My wife knows I wont beat her in a white neighbor hood, like I will in a black one," he said satirically. Gregory made his own political views known when he said, "If Barry Goldwater had been elected, there would have been no reason for me to worry about public ac commodations in a fox hole." He also made his own aversion to capital punishment clear when he jokingly suggested that there should be a "mass day of executions." Gregory said that he had a plan for putting a "nigger" in everybody's home. He explained that a new book he has written called "nigger" could give every American the chance to buy a "nigger" for $4.95. JC JyL JC "Selma, Alabama is the present battle ground of the Civil Rights fight." So spoke Dick Gregory, noted Civil Rights leader and comedian, at a news conference in Lincoln yesterday be fore his speech in the Student Union. Gregory said that the Negro's fight in Selma for the rights insured all Americans in the Constitution not only concerns Alabama, but the whole United States. He stressed that this fight must remain non-violent for both the Negro and the white man. In Selma. Gregory said, the Negroes are now fighting for their right to register to vote. Gregory, who has been helping to lead the non-violent demonstrations in Selma and was arrested last week, said his own trial planned for yesterday had been cancelled until a later time. He also said that he wasn't sure exactly what it was, but that Malcolm X's assassination involves something international, much larger than just a dispute between Ne groes. Many things about Malcolm's death, he said, are sus picious. He pointed out that the papers first mentioned that three men were arrested, but that only one name was announced and that many other factors suggested that something big was involved. He said that someone other than the FBI needs to in vestigate this murder. "The world knows J. Edgar Hoov er is right wing and we will get no support from him in any investigating," he explained. WThen asked about the Klu Klux Klan, he said that it was extremely strong in the South and that in many areas white men didn't dare not join. "We're almost to the point now where the white man is the slave and the Negro is the master,'" he said. "Any Negro can loan his home to a white man, but no white man can dare sell or even loan his house to a Negro with out causing himself trouble." Gregory pointed out that the Student Non-violent Co ordinating Committee (SNCC) is one of the most power ful organizations in the Civil Rights movement and has helped to "wake up the conscience of America." Council Jurisdiction Recognized ffy IK By Wayne Kreuscher junior Staff Writer The Interfraternity Council (IFC) passed a resolution last night accepting the Student Council s new constitution and recognizing Student Council as the supreme student gov ernment on the University campus. John Luckasen, Phi Delta Theta, presented the resolu tion and said that with the new constitution the IFC, like all other student organiza tions, is under the Student Council's jurisdiction. "This means," said Lucka sen, that Mudent Council must approve or disapprove the form of our constitution. It has nothing to do with the fraternities, only with the or ganization of IFC and its con stitution. Buzz Madson.IFC president, said he could find no reason why IFC shouldn't be under the Student Council. He too emphasized that this gives Student Council only the pow- Lecture Rescheduled For Tomorrow Night The public lecture by Ral ston Crawford, New York art ist, has been re-scheduled for 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Shel don Art Gallery. It was orig inally scheduled for Tuesday. Crawford will discuss "The Artist and Communication," according to Norman Geske, director of the Gallery. The New York artist Is spending the month of February in res idence at the Gallery under auspices of the Ford Founda tion and the American Feder ation of Arts. Crawford's paintings and graphics will be on display at the Gallery through Mar. 14. ed to judge the constitu tion and it does not give it any authority over the fratern ities. IFC also seriously consid ered extending rush week from three to four days at the meeting. Stan Miller, IFC vice presi dent, said that it was neces sary to extend rush week a day in order for small houses to be able to accommodate the increasing number of rushees during rush week. Last year there were 457 rushees and 700 are expected next fall. Miller said that by ex tending rush week a day, the first parties could be smaller and the smaller houses could have someone talking to each rushee at every party. IFC will vote on whether or not to extend rush week next week. Madson reminded the fra ternity representatives that in rushing, houses today have to emphasize scholarship and tha social graces. "We must be aware," he said, "that the scholastic en vironment of universities is changing and becoming more and more Important all t h time." He also said that during rush, fraternities must sell the fraternity system first and the individual fraternity second. A fraternity should point out its own values without tearing down those of another house, he added. IFC interviews for the Pub lic Relations, Pledge Educa tion, Scholarship, Rush and Food Management Commit tees will be held Sunday.