Frank Partsch, Editor Mike Jeffrey, business manager Page 2 Monday, March 15, 1965 ailIlIIIllllltllltll1IStlltl411ltitl)lllflllllllltIltl1111tlllf'tlltlIIIillIIIIIIIIIIllltltltllI1lif llllllf DllllttS MRA: A Foot In The Door The Moral Rearmament (MRA) people are trying to bring a speaker to campus. His name is John Sayre, dis tinguished athlete, popular speaker and director of ath letics for last year's MRA conference in Michigan. He has been accepted and cheered across the country, by some of the most vicious college audiences. In the past, including this year, MRA hasn't attracted much attention on this campus. We, in our lack of ac auaintance with the subject, are not too excited about it ourselves. But we do respect the movement, for we recog nize that it is about time that man shaped up, individually and collectively, to meet a few moral and intellectual challenges. Here, at least, are people trying to do this. And for this reason, we believe that we would like to listen to Mr. Sayre's speech. Like all the MRA workers, however, Sayre donates his time, and must have $250 to defer living expenses for his w ife and family during this donation. The Nebraska Union occasionally co-sponsors spur-of-the-moment speakers with interested departments and organizations, and will coop erate with Sayre if someone is found to co-sponsor him. We would like to see this happen, for. as a MRA repre sentative told, us Saturday, "We thinlf he has something to say." We have come to believe that, even in these All-University Convocation-less days, listening to differences of opinion and stimulating or self-inspired speakers are an important part of everyone's education. The Union has taken significant steps in filling what we think is a vacuum at this University, through their own program, which in cluded such well-received speakers as John Howard Griffin and Dick Gregory. We must realize that their funds are limited. We think that most students, whether they agree or not with MRA, would be interested in hearing Mr. Sayre. and we urge any interested departments or organizations to contact the Union, the Daily Nebraskan or the MRA people and offer their support to this speaker. TO THE MEMBERS OF KAPPA SIGMA FRATERNI TY: We are not sure if your window display was commend able or condemnable, but we hope it impressed the par ents, teachers and high school students who visited the campus over the weekend. It certainly did not impress us. FRANK PARTSCH BWii'aiMiiaTllllWMriiii '"- --".-nlillii,iliiMliMMniiMliliMii- nrn.i.ni,irw Convinced By Shepard Dear editor, All right, Mr. Shepard, you've convinced me (you and the man who shot Medgar Evers. the swell guys who bomb churches and club unarmed people over the head). I'll join Friends of SNCC. I've al ready given my money to the cause and now I'll give my precious time. I'll walk with you in your fruitless marches in front of the blind eyes of the U.S. Post Office in Lincoln (of all places), Nebraska. And what will that get me? Well, a lot of nice things things I'd like to have. For in stance, it will deliver me from being called apathetic and bigoted by justly bitter columnists; it will inform the right people that I am a good guy. Because, you know, (and you do know, don't you Mr. Shepard) that where you and I should both be is in Selma Alabama. But we are not there perhaps because we are cowards, perhaps because we are committed to families and friends in Lincoln; probably because our commitment makes us afraid, makes us narrow our concern to one group of people rather than to a 1 1 people. You see, 1 do realize what my commitment should be, so I will lull the guilty, rasping voice within me in to a self-satisfied purr ''I'm a good guy a friend of SNCC." When I march, whom do I impress? Nobo dy but those who are al ready for the cause those who already know why I'm marching. And what am I getting the people of Selma, Ala? Nothing, nothing at all. At tention? They can get their own attention I've never been clubbed on the head for my beliefs. But as I've said, I'll join you, although you had better not let me , in unless you are able to tell ' me why, if things are so ; bad here as implied, we j aren't demonstrating for' the people of Lincoln. Why aren't we picketing i the segregated barbershops, j beer joints, hotels, cafes- or more importantly w h y j aren t we picketing the real tors, that brave band of protectors of the Lincoln status quo? Has the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce been made painfully aware of our problem? I hope you have some answers to these questions, because by your next meet ing you are going to have a member who wants to know. Patsy Campbell Call To Dear Editor; The article "Phase IV," by Blacksheep, is one of the most masterly written calls to action ever pub lished. It has given stu dents of this University de termination to take action to correct the gross mis justices that have disturbed them for so long. By direct action now and. with the knowledge of our. position and responsibility in America, this nation. Rest In Dear editor. An incident that happened this past week makes me sick. The incident that I mean is the moving of the body of a one-month-old Ne gro baby from an all-white section of Wyuka Cemetery to an all-Negro section. How stupid and trivial can we get? We claim that the people in Nebraska are not overly race-conscious and yet something like this turns up. The excuse that was used for moving the body was that the cemetery officials thought that the family would be happier with the grave in a section where there is a heavier concen tration of Negro graves. This fact was brought out in the Lincoln Star of 13 March and I quote: "(Wyuka Cemetery Board Chairman William) Gross man pointed out that the cemetery does not restrict burial areas as to race, but noted that the Negroes usually buy plots where their friends and relatives are buried, which has re sulted in a negro-concentrated area." Is it that the Negroes want to buy their plots in this "Negro" section or that they're allowed to buy them COMMUNITY CONCERT MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN Membership Drive: March 1-20 Coil of Membership., Adults . Il Per.hlnt Municipal Auditorium Room 1M Students . IJ.M Telephone 47MJW I 477-R7 Membership art available wily durint tht campaign. Tlcktfi for tingi conctrli are not available. BontlS CoflfPrt 7". "''nbr Purchase memberships will be entitled to attend this year's wwnv lumen (inal t0ncert on March Jj-olrtlt NIHson, Metropolitan Opera star. FIVE CONCERTS FOR THE 1965-66 SEASON ARTHUR FIFinFR Thi namte conductor of Boston Pops Orchestra fame will appear In a Pop ntwtl Concert with the diitlntulthed Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra of 79 muilclon. SALVATORE Aff ABDfl Th" bm,ann " V0"" virtuoso li on llo lion vlollnlit who po iimiHiMnt MllMftUV ,,, a ravlshlni ton and dunlin technical ability GOLDOVS KYGRAND OPERA THEATER TZ EARL WRIGHTSON and e.snwnijwn mm DE PAUR CHORUS f Dwellers In the larteif metropolitan centers are not the only one who can .ol.land.nt musical , Community Concert Plan brine. ..dim. and distinguished conc.rl t. .vir eM cm In the United ttato. and Conodu, maklnt North America the concert mecca it the wend Work Program Supported Editor's note: The following public work program. It is re article represents an affirina- printed from the Kansas Stale tive case in the debate over a Collegian, Feb. 9. We will Arms this hemisphere, and indeed the world can be ours! With the gallant black sheep to lead us into bat tle against the foes of jus tice, equality and the rights of man, we can suppress the ever-growing evils of ludicrous regulations and restrictive female residence hours. We must take action! Blacksheep's word is our command! But what would he have us do? Whitesheep Peace ONLY in this section? And finally, to add insult to injury, the parents were not even informed of t h i s change. The cemetery offici als excused themselves by blaming the officials of the mortuary, while the morti cians blamed those at the cemetery. Who was right? I say that both were wrong. We were all created equally in the eyes of God, so since many of us claim to be Christians', why can't we let the dead rest in peace? Norman Adlcr CORKers According to diet experts, one bowl of bird's nest soup contains 75 calories. G If you put a morning glory in the closet, it will open the following morning as if it were in the sun, but the second morning it will not open, because it can't be fooled again. How atout that, flower lovers! L lo fl earn v! Join llii': I'MVKRSITY FLYING CLUB 'Ml 4:i2-HH46 cuisito costumint and beautiful stalt,t. LOIS HUNT -.!.h'I ""ln duo and roodwar f tUIJ nun I will brim their outstanding Interpretations of muilc. -Peaturint conductor Leonard do Pour, thli ensemble of 34 male vo" will provide d.llehtful protram of tilth entertainment. THE WHITE MAN'S BUWEM present ttie negative argu- mcnt later in the week. By Sheryl Etling The topic being debated by colleges and universities this year is "Resolved: That t h e Federal Government should establish a National Program of Public Work for the Unemployed." This na tional topic was selected by the American Forensic As sociation. In debating this, or any other topic, an affirmative team has certain duties. The team upholding the question must present some need is sues, show why the present system is inherently unable to solve those problems, and then present a plan which will meet the needs pre sented. Issues this year have cen tered in two areas. First, there is a need for public work projects in such areas as urban renewal, conser vation, and the erection of public service facilities. The second need area is unemployment. While general unemploy ment has been decreasing recently, there are some chronic problem areas such as the long-term unem ployed, heads of families, older workers, youths, Ne groes, and the unskilled. When viewing the present system in relation to the need issues presented, af firmative teams find that all three major areas of ac tion are failing to meet the problems of unemployment. The competitive business sector of the economy, even with the aid of tax cuts, will not be able to expand rapid ly enough in 1965 to keep up with the increase in the la bor force. The problem is one of creating enough jobs to pro vide employment for new workers and for those who are currently unemployed. State and local govern ments do not have the re sources to carry the burden & L will present It stunning ftohsme In Enellsh with ox- alone, and Federal Govern ment programs, mainly re training efforts, have seri ous shortcomings. Some unemployed are not retralhable. while still oth ers find themselves unable to find jobs once they have acquired a skill. Most affirmative teams recognize, however, that re training should be made available to those who can be 'oenefited by it. There fore, affirmative plans pro vide for the continuance of these programs. They go one stey further, however, for they call for public work to be made available for trainees in a work-study program, f o r non-restrainables, and for those who have skills but still cannot find work. Thus the affirmative maintains that since both unemployment and the need for public works remain as significant national p r o b lems, the obvious solution is one of a national program of public work for the un employed. EMIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!: j About Letters Ttt DAILT NFBRASKAN tartlet E read to It for eprmlnnt S "f nptnlon nn current iopfct rcriri Imi of viewpoint Letters mast slrne4. ran tain a verifiable ad 4ieta, and be free of Ilbelntt ma s tertnl. Ten nam mar he to S eluded but leen the rtaanne af publication. Length letters may ba edited or oiniUM, S iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifi 1' - ,, . . " 1 juioiiiies ' ' ' ' ' 'y 4 I U-H ')& f I f ' ' 1 v-i ipy i f, ptwa.wwiin iiim r nrniiniimn n&frA,, I love a man in Van lleiisen "41 7" It's wild, the way his Ion?, lean jrood looks come on strong in that "V-Tapered" fit. Anyone can tell he's top man on my scene when he steps out in the stepped-up styling of authentic Button-Down or smooth Snap-Tabs. And the added attraction of Van Heusen spring fabrics and colors make him my favorite distraction. VAN u V-Taper-for Mascot, Milkman Meet, Avoid Albino Action By E.R. Once there was a g r e t bookless playground, which charged farmer-children money to come and take ad vantage of its facilities. The childrren came and were very happy, because they were all poor and their poverty bred friendship (this was before the days of ways against wars against friendship.) And it came to pass that the children grew up, and they begat others, whom they also sent to enjoy the facilities which their par ents had known. Their par ents had accumulated many sheckels in the meantime. In looking for a way to re lieve their parents of their excess sheckels, one group of students banded to gether to form an exclu sive organization. And a 1 1 was well and good. This was before the days of the ill-fated Duchess and Butch, who delighted the playground with their antics several generations later, but this little group of s h e c k e 1-relievers decided anyway that they should have a mascot. They came up with a rather novel idea (it wasn't really novel as far as ideas go, but it was one of the first ideas they had so the y called it novel) of sending to Sherpasberg for an abominable snowman. Finally the days for the snowman to be delivered were accomplished, and, lo and behold, when the stage coach (conservatism) pull ed up and deposited a large crate beside the water hole, they tore open the crate to greet their new mascot. Surprise strike me to the end of my days . . .Sher pasberg, caught in t h e throes of an unprecedented demand for the snowmen (J. Ghetto Getty, father of his son, was one of the prime demanders of this oddity) had nothing 1 e f t in stock but a vicious albino, with long white claws. Which they named him. Now White Claws had an The Daily Nebraskan Phone 477-8711, Extensions 2588. 2S89 and 2590. LI:E MARSHALL, manazint fdllori Sl'SAN RI'TTKR, news edilor: BOB SA.MIKl.SON. sports editors LVNN CORCORAN, night edilor; PRISC1LI.A MCLLINS, senior stuff wrlteri STEVE JOR DAN, KEITH SINOR. RICH MEIER. WAYNE KRECSCHER, Junior staff writers; ROR GIBSON, snorts assistant; POt.LV KIIVN A1.IS, CAROLE RENO, JIM KOR SHOJ, ropy editors; SCOTT RV NEARSON, A FIN IE PETERSON, MIKE KIRKMAN. PETE LAGE, CONNIE RASMI'SSEN,. business .ssisatnts; JIM DICK, subscription manager! LVNN RATHJEN. rlrru lation manager: LAKKY FIE1IN, photographer. Subscription rates $3 per se mester or $5 per year. Entered as second class matter at the post office in Lincoln, Ne braska, under the act of August 4, 1912. The Daily Nebraskan Is published at Room 51. Nebraska Tnion, on Monday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday during the school year, ex cept during vacation and final ex amination periods, and once during August. It is published by University of Nebraska students under the juris diction of the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publications. Publica tions shall be free from censor ship by the Subcommittee or any person outside the I'niversity. Mem bers of the Nebraskan are respon sible for what they cause to he printed. vM'ASiSMUbi' HEUSEN" the lean trim look. incredibly unfriendly per sonality (he begatted Claws X, the forerunnner of our present Herman X) and im mediately become known as a hater of all playground mascots which were not al bino. Which, in those high and far-off times, was quite un fortunate, because the only other albino In the region was a milk-man whose only love was integrating everything in sight, like it or not. (He went on to in vent hot chocolate, and was sentenced to five years in the State Pen for refusing to move away from the Rosebud Indian Reserva tion.) But I digress. Whitey (as he was affectionately known by his enemies) created so much resentment by spit ting and thumbing his nose at all the other mascots that the playground warden had him shipped away to the pen to join his friend, the milkman. (For convenience, there were other mascots by this point in the narrative.) And the last heard of eith er Whitey or the milkman (you might be interested in knowing that his name was J. Gordon Slobber, who be came an authority on artificiality) was that they escaped from the pen a n d rode away on the stage coach with its new driver, Ralph Schlitzman. CLASSIFIED ADS WANTED Car insurance. Voting driver and Insur ance problems. Call 489-6015. Male upperclassman to share apartment al 16.17 "H" Street. Apt. 3. Call after 6:00 p.m.. at 432-0078. ! Lead or rhythm eultar player for eam ! pus combo. Experience preferred j 477-2M5. j Typing that I can do at home. Calf 477-760?! before or by 1:30 p.m. ! Two riders to Ohio or anywhere enroute weekend of April 2. 3, and 4. Also two riders to Florida at Easter. Call Tom 177-2909. Typing done 489-2784. Here term papers Call FOR RENT j Furnished room for male student near ' agriculture campus, private or double, 1 kitchen privileges, T. V, telephone. Call 434-3654. 324 Grand. 3 minutes to University, 1 bed ; room furnished apartment. 575, lovely ! view of Lincoln air-conditioned, i 432-8222. LOST ', Saint Christopher Medallion necklace. Name ensraved on back, James Ed- waid Kullberg. Contact same. Alpha ; Tau annex 4.12-9405. $5.00 reward. Alpha XI Delta sorority pin of alumna. Reward offered. Meriedith Ballard. 477-9271. A ladies gold Burnett Hall. Bulova wrist watch in Call 423-3673. Reward. Alpha Omlcron PI soiority pin. Paulett Maus, 434-1080 or house. FOR SALE , New 4-barrel carh. off '65 Kord with 289 cu. in., S.10. Phone 763-3048 or write Arnold Essink, Hickman, Nebraska. FAMILY PROTECTOR Unlike the. caveman of old, you don't have to carry a club on your shoulder to safeguard your family's welfare. You can do it the modern way . . . with life Insurance. CML has an all-new insurance plan, the Family Protector, that lets you insure your family as a group, or a combination of members within the group. Why not contact us for more information. HMfa-iMP Coll: 432-3289 Agent Clint Sthiner V. ulTi si) ;i"fV