M I I J ,l Vf Marilyn Hoegemeycr, Page 2 It's bleacher seats for 600 University freshmen at Sat urday's game with Texas ChristianUniversity. The east stadium is over flowing with upperclassmen. Some had to be shifted to the south stadium sending the freshmen to the bleach er section. The problem is not that Ticket Manager James Pit tenger failed to allow seats for this year's freshman class, because he did allow 12.400 stadium seats for the estimated enrollment of 14, 500. This estimated figure al lowed an 11.8 percent in- Movie Review Basil 'What's New Pussycat?7 Said Lively, Grotesque By Diaper Sandoe Editor's Note: Mr. San doc is back with us again this year after incurring much wrath for his disas trous review of "One Pota to, Two Potato" last spring, Sandoe spent last summer touring Europe paying his way as he went with re views of "Nancy", "Hen ry", "Captain Marvel" and other comic strips. Once again this venerable old sage dips quill in ink, puts quill to parchment, and launches a new year of per ceptive and enlightening mo tion picture reviews. After a highly successful summer season in Europe, I feel uniquely adolescent about the beginning of my As the Jolly Green Grape vine comes upon the cam pus scene and thoughts turn to those things significant, one wonders most often about the Cult of Sex. On deeper examination the Cult of Sex turns into a freshmen social circle, that for upperclassmen holds on ly the poignant memories of love's sweet blunders. When one reaches the up per level of COOL, the sur face satisfaction of the Cult of Sex loses it's appeal, forcing those who care, to join the more sophisticated Cult of PLAYBOY. The benefits to be derived from belonging to the Cult are in themselves immense. One may subscribe to the monthly publication without any feeling of guilt, assume the attitude of an expert On A I! i V Vlf I J r- s v'aU' 7 p V'j J tfji editor To Bleachers crease in the number of stu dents purchasing tickets, bringing the buying rate to 85 percent. Anyone who has a product that sells 85 percent would be unwise and unduly opti mistic to believe the pur chase rate could go higher. But, the product Pitteng er sells is pretty good stuff. It's Saturday afternoons in a newly remodeled sta dium with a golden girl, a marching band and flags. AND, it's watching t h e team rated number one in the nation playing the pig skin game to the tune of "There Is No Place". You can't beat that. fourteenth semester at t h e old University. The sight of red every where on Saturdays, the sound of bubbly voices, and the smell of Honda carbon monoxide (ugfh!) all tell this wizened old philosopher that fall is here. And the movies ! Well, Lincolnland is a ver itable oasis of motion pic turesmost of the plots don't hold water. "Shenandoah" is the worst offender with a cliche-filled script, unimaginative direc tion, implausible plot, and squishy sentimentalism suc ceeding in destroying a val ient, but too-little-too-1 ate attempt by James Stewart to give some value to the show. A happy exception to a when in an argument on the virtues or vices of campus coeds, and know that all frustrations, both temporal and spiritual, can be re solved after a twenty min ute session with the Advis er. Momentious as these bene fits may be, they are all over-shadowed by the great satisfaction" one can derive from knowing that when someone, asks 'what sort of man reads PLAYBOY?' you can rise to your full height, thumb your chest, and in unison with every man on campus speak those holy words "I DO". As a disillusioned member of the Cult, I'm tired of having someone else ap prove my sox and under wear, ties and shaving lo- The IMPEACH LADY BIRD Mlce Jeffrey, business manager Friday, September 17, 1965 There was a time when empty beer cans rattled down the stadium steps to no tune at all. There was no spirit then and certain ly 85 percent of the students were not present. But, that time is passed. The future is tomorrow. Pittenger failed to feel the growing Cornhusker spirit and to know what an impetus a first raling can be. We're not sure we would have. But we suspect that even those 600 bleacher-sent freshmen will find their way over to cheer our Corn huskers. MARILYN HOEGEMEYER large proportion of bad mo tion pictures is "What's New Pussycat?". Woody Allen wrote the script for this lively, irreverant. grotesque and immensely funny pic ture. Some of the gags are difficult to "get with", and some of them miss the mark of humor completely. Still Peter Sellers. Peter 6'Toole and Romy Schnieder, not to mention Woody Allen him self provide the talent which makes the show a "don't miss". You'll either love this one or hate it. One thing to the incom ing freshmen. Don't miss the foreign film society's exceptionally fine slate of films for this year. It is one of the highwatermarks of cultural activity in this en tire area. tion, but most of all, thoughts and values. my We're building a strange society it seems, with PLAYBOY as its Bible and James Bond as its god. We can hope that from one of the carefully groomed, prop erly perfumed heads,w i 1 1 come one original thought and save us from becoming a madras-clad herd. If today, sweaters in a men's shop carry a banner proclaiming their approval by PLAYBOY'S Man On Campus, maybe tomorrow we'll check our dates at the house to see if APPROVED P.M.O.C. is emblazoned on their foreheads. After all we can't fight the system and maybe one of us will get to do the approving. R. E. Cult 'Gag' Rule Is Disputed Editor's Note: On July 8 the Ohio State University Board of Trustees, by a 5-3 vote, elected to retain the "speakers gag rule" which prevents Communists and others defined as subver sive from speaking on the OSU campus. The following editorial, ob jecting to the decision, ap peared in an Ohio news paper, The Plain Dealer. We present it for our read ers' information and inter est. In voting to retain their infamous gag rule, the ma jority of the board of trus tees of Ohio State Univer sity has flouted public opin ion, defied the faculty and the students and ignored the university's president. The five members who voted to keep the 15-ycar-old rule can be held re sponsible for the continua tion of the poor name OSU has in the academic com munity of the nation. They can also be held re sponsible for the expected resignations of a number of respected faculty members who threatened to quit if the rule went unchanged. And any student demon strations protesting the deci sion can be charged also to " the bullheaded backward ness of the five who disre garded the recommenda tions of the professional ed ucators they hired. President Novice G. Faw cett, following the recom mendations of a faculty committee, urged the trus tees to eliminate his power to veto speakers he felt were subversive. Since 1951 an OSU presi dent has been empowered to bar from the campus any guest speaker he judged to be subversive, allied to sub versive purposes or whose views he felt to be just not in the best interests of the school. In the '50's Ohio State w as one of only eight universities in America us ing a gag rule. Fawcett wisely advised the trustees that "so long as federal and state govern ments permit people who are classed as subversives ... to move about this country freely, it seems to me that we set ourselves up as being over and above the law when we restrict ... the liberty of these per sons." In a disjointed piece of logic, former U.S. Sen. John W. Bricker charged that changing the gag rule would somehow be a repudiation of U.S. policy in Viet Nam. Cuba and other Communist areas. What does the sena tor think this nation is fight ing for if not freedom in cluding freedom of speech? According to Fawcett, 75'i? of the students favor ed changing the rule. But the five trustees who voted against the change apparent ly believe most of Ohio State's students are not cap able of making responsible judgments. And apparently these five trustees feel the faculty judgment is also wrong. One of the five, Carlton S. Dargusch of Columbus, is a disbarred attorney pre sently appealing his disbar ment. His participation in the proceedings at all was in questionable taste, con sidering his circumstances. The others who unfortu nately voted with Bricker and Dargusch were John C. Ketterer of Canton. Mervin B. France of Cleveland and Frederick E. Jones of Columbus. lfflllMAklT UC VI I IN PROMT Of THE mm- 1 5 PRESENTING: LITTLE BOHEMIAN TAVERN 2600 Cornhusker Hwy. Lccasa Pizza & Eevercges Open till 1:00 a.m. 'WAS THIS TRIP NECESSARY? Spoof I must confess. I had a blind date last weekend. That weekly temptation for non-movers, clamped me in its frustration-filled trap once more. The evening started typ ically. My date, Maybella Furd, promised to look dis tinctive by wearing Madras so I could recognize her. I introduced myself to three Madras-clad honeys before Maybella came down. But I mustered the enthusiasm to try once more, "i'm keith krueger?" 1 pleaded. Noth is worse than being stood up on a blind date. I opened with my best line ("What's your ma jor?"), followed 'by "My third cousin also studied Pie-Cambrian geology," and then my spirit was gone. Maybe she just sat too far across the seat to hear what I said, but after 7:40, the evening was just one long awkward silence. May bella and I had established a new University and Big Eight record. Perhaps I'm just a voice crying in the wilderness, but I'm determined to break my losing streak. May be my blind date for this weekend will be better. Keith Krueger BASE-r Kent Neumeister, President of ASUN, claims that ASUN is the supreme governing body. This is esjecially inter esting in light of the fact that the Faculty Senate decided that Ron Psota, an elected senator whose election was contested, was legally a mem ber of Student Senate. ' WHAT I DID THIS $(MMER... I U)NT TO CAMP, AND I PLACED BALL .THE94D" I LOVE SCHOOL ...IT'S SUCH A SATISFVIN6 EXPERIENCE 1 acaoosooooa Thumb's AH Right But, Why Mot fly The cheapest way to trav el is hitch-hiking, and in this age of the airplane, with the great proliferation of private aircraft, sooner or later someone had to come up with a plan for updating the "thumb rou tine." I was riding to Kansas City last Easter vacation with a salesman who picked me up just outside of Omaha. He put the bug in my ear. "Listen," he said, "I trav el a lot and do a lot of flying for the company. If some one came up to me, and he was well dressed and looked OK, and asked if he could ride along, I wouldn't mind. In fact it gets lonely up there and I'd be happy to have him along. So when you want to go somewhere why don't you go out to the airport and ask around?" I said I'd try it. This summer I traveled to San Antonio. Hitching by car I made it in two days, and spent two weeks with Peter O'Connell, freshman. When I was ready to leave, I remembered the ad vice of the salesman, and went out to the S. A. Air port. Asking around I found a ride with two men who , were going to Cincinnatti. i They were flying a Lock- i heed 350, very plush, with a ; bar even ! That evening 1 slept at : the VMCA and the next morning found a ride in a ! m PAi ai.i k rULWlVUS ' W 1 f 1' 2- "W Peter Mm Peter Pai!a Fte-rttiss mi gun tfv urs'da Address Thtffn ril togetlw again! ( the H time!) Cessna 310 to Chicago. We landed at Midway and I spent five hours looking for a ride, any ride, going east. Finally one of the employees offered me a ride over to O'Hare Field. I walked up to a man who looked as if he had just landed, I said, "Do you know anyone who is going east?" "Do you work here," he asked. "No. I'm a student at the University of Nebraska." "We'll, just a minute and I'll see." He made a phone call, came back and said it was all right. He turned out to be Frank Sinatra's pilot, and was tak ing Sinatra's Lear Jet back to New York. The trip from San Antonio to New York in a day and a half, 12 hours actual trav eling time, didn't cost rot a cent. Rich Meier Lodging occomodatiorts for male grad students. University approved. Each room with bath. Two blocks from downtown campus. Daily mail service. Single oc cupancy $1.25 $2.00 - $2.50 per day. CAPITOL HOTEL 11th & P St. 432-1261 to thscaTOdy question APff73VCk ffTboli I FINAL WEEK-END " ' I - - i l!ccoooooosoooa