UNIVERSITY OF NEUR. LIBRARY ARCHIVES CI 241001 . c . Student Senate . . . Jurisdiction 1 J o Student Senate passed a resolution Wednesday which was supposed to clarify the constitution and explain what student government's powers will be in connection with campus organizations. The resolution or policy itatement, which was intro duced by Sen. Bill Coufal, president pro tempore of the Senate, said: "The Student Senate or ex ecutive branch will not inter fere with the constitutional function of any existing cam pus organization or activity. Because itjs representative of the student body, however, the Assn. of Students of the Uni versity of Nebraska (ASUN) can examine and study any area that affects the general interests of the student body. Student Interests "If this examination demon strates that the best interests of the student body are not being served, Student Senate has the power to take ap propriate action which may include making suggestions to any activity or organiza tion or to reassign a function to another activity or organ ization. "If no existing campus or ganization or activity is in volved In an area that affects the interests of the student body, ASUN can initiate a function in this area." Coufal explained that the policy statement was needed because of the misunderstand ing and controversy that has resulted over the student work with the Nebraska Foun dation between ASUN and Builders. Unfounded Fears "Builders," he said, "for some reason feared that ASUN wanted to take away every organization's rights." As the policy statement says, Coufal pointed out, we don't want to take over Build ers or any other activity. "We just want to represent the students and put forth the pinions of the students." He stressed that none of the ASUN committees want to take over an established or ganization or committee, but that they want to "examine and study areas that affect the students." Senate Action If an examination shows that the best interests of the student body are not being served, he said, then Student Senate has the power to take appropriate action which" will include making suggestions to any activity or organization which already, according to its constitution, has interest in this field. "If the activity which is al ready interested In this field doesn't want to take our sug gestions or if there is no ex isting activity involved in this area," he said, "ASUN can Religion, Stimulate Besides a few organized na tional groups on campus, there are many individual stu dents or small groups of stu dents who are concerned with contemporary problems. One group of students who demonstrate a certain kind of searching youth are a dozen students wbo will go to the Ecumenical Institute in Chicago this weekend. This institute was organ ized to experiment in church renewal and to try and find a form of church service and theology more relevant to the twentieth century man. JoEllen Williams, who spent eight weeks at the institute this summer, explained that the weekend would consist of a 44 hour seminar in Chica go where students would study papers of leading theo logians and worship in experi mental worship services. "Old myths about Christian theology are stripped down," 6he said, "and the institute challenges people to live their life and to be aware of the fact that they decide what they want to make of their wa life and determine their wa future and that of all mankind." She said that the experi mental worship service de mands a great deal more of the individual and the whde corporate body worships more together. ' She stressed that before go ing to this institute a college student might feel like reject ing religion and all its myth, but that with the modernized ideas and human emphasis put on religion by the institute, one's viewpoint changes com fdatety. V v initiate a function in this area by itself." 1 Dick Newton, chairman of the ASUN alumni-foundation committee, said his commit tee would not overlap Build ers, but that it would main ly bo an investigation and study committee. Senior Contributions He said that things his com mittee wants to investiga'te include the possibility of tak ing pledges or asking for con tributions from the Univer sity seniors for the founda tion. Another area he said h i s committee wants to investigate is the relations between the students and the foundation. He said he wanted to find out just how much the students know about the foundation. Sen. Cuz Guenzel, who is also a member of the Build ers executive board, said that there had been a complete misunderstanding 'and that sh was sure she could speak for Builders in strongly sup porting "this type of policy statement." "This is the type of govern ment the framers of the new constitution had in mind." ASUN With Activity Larry Frolik, ASUN vice president and president of the Senate, said the ASUN will never act suddenly in de ciding that an activity isn't doing its job for the students but that it will work with the activity as much as possible in helping it to solve its prob lems. In other business at t h e meeting, Bill Harding. Ne braska Union board president, read a proposal to Student Senate which gave union's full recognition of ASUN as the "supreme government" and welcomed its comments and suggestions activities. about union "It is our feeling." Harding said, "that the ASUN offers students and organizations on this campus a fortunate and long sought after means of expression in many areas of student concern." Nebraska Union is pleased' to invite the ASUN to j o i n The president on this cam with us he explained, and; puS( Carl Davidson, describes further to review and exam- i r.c. t. - i . ine anv and all aroas of nr!SDS as bc,ng extremely anti- program function "with the sincere hope that ASUN ' may prove of assistance to the un ion in the implementation of its programs. Frolik thanked Harding and said he was sure they could "work together in a spirit of cooperation." The Senate also passed sev eral motions which approved the ASUN committees and their members appointed by ASUN President Kent Neu meister. Politics Thought Miss Williams said that after the group returns they would gather in groups called "cadres" to discuss the ideas expressed at the institute. ' Another group of students at Ihe University ' who repre sent student action and think ing is the Student Action for Government Effective ness (SAGE). The difference between this group of students and perhaps some others on campus is that they are organized because of University problems,' One project that SAGE has accomplished this year was their backing and help with the conference room petitions which prompted the Assn. of Students of the University of Nebraska to pass a motion suggesting the rooms to the administration. Dick Sherman, one of the SAGE organizers, said, "Now we're waiting to see some thing done about making plans for these rooms. We don t want to see them end with a resolution." Another project is the for mation of a research commit tee which is looking into the matter of University concern. Sherman stressed that the keynote of SAGE'S organiza tion is "cooperation" with the present student government and University, but that "they won't hesitate to voice opin ion." "We are very concerned," he said, "with creating an at mosphere of learning which we feel has been lacking on this campus." I SAGE's present mem bership is estimated at 35 members. , Vol. 81 , No. 18 The Daily 'Serics Student' ' V - fir w& ' h 3 ' V: 'j -if t 1 - - p.Cll :u I 1 1 i, ' , -vH ..r.; I I -j, , 2 v 1 . 4 . . - " 'j ' " : V 'if $ j CARL DAVIDSON . . . SDS Plans Viet Nam Teach-in Nebraska's newest student action group, Students for- a I Democratic Societv fSDSK is , interested in not only civil associate professor of history. -iKf K,.t ; as he took an overall look at rights but also many other;thfl rfls.t student a c tion contemporary social p r o b - lems. These problems range from international speech and reform. peace to free University totalitarian, against both fas cism and Communism. The group, which includes about a dozen members, has been on campus only about four weeks, but it already has numerous projects and plans. Sunday they will sponsor a Teach-in from 6 to 11 p.m. on the war in Viet Nam. The teach-in, coordinated with the International Protest Days! against Viet Nam on Satur day and Sunday, will feature faculty members speaking on both the pros and cons of the war. One of SDS's national officers will also be here this weekend to welcome the new chapter and participate in the Teach-in. Other projects considered k., enc tu,L t a f by SDS include a study rules and regulations on cam- pus. One of its members has begun a study of these rules and recently reported that he could find no information on the Unjversity code which is vaguely mentioned in the campus handbook. He explained to the group that the University's actual rules are vague. For instance, they prohibit any "bad be havior" or violation of t h e rules of "morality and de cency," Davidson has stressed that if there are rules to be made on campus, SDS believes stu dents should make them and "not have rules just given to them." Hc has also explained that students should have the privilege to bring whoever they want to campus to speak, to publish anything they want and to do research on a n y subject they chose. Another project that has been investigpved and consid ered by SDS is the unioniza tion of all service-type Uni versity employees. Davidson stressed that SDS's purpose is not riots and disobedience for he said "there is no reason for riots as long as the channels are open." SDS nationally has more than 100 chapters and is de scribed as a radical-leftist movement. President of SDS, takes over the "Hyde Park" platform. New Movements Encourage Trask A call for more student ac tion, a less apathetic adminis tration and more education on contemporary problems. All of these things were i stressed bv Dr. David Trask. 1 groups on this campus. "We are not a first rate ! University," he said. "One of the tirst signs ot a nrst ciass , tha stale, such ss conserva school is active student ac- tism, are threatened. tioJ" , . . He said that most of the He said that m the last. tadents t Ncbraska fee, the wo or three years there had sures of an inadequate been promising signs of a fntellectual atmosphere. but DR. DAVID TRASK growing concern for great na - tional and international Drob- lems by students at Nebras- ka, but that we were still far behind most schools in the na- tion. Trask explained that at highly rated schools like Harvard, Colomhia. the Uni- versity of California and the University of Wisconsin, the i students are lar aneaa oi ie-, 1 braska in thinking about and j understanding issues. j jJe appauded the students j who are taking part in Friends ! of Students Nonviolent Coordi- nating committee iriNU, '"e siuuenis. ne saia, Students for a ; Democratic I "are apathetic for two princi Society (SDS and other less pal reasons." i organized "think action! First, he said, there is at groups" on campus. He said lack of adequate education these students were simply : about the great conlemporary "more advanced in the recog- problems. Second, the Univer nition and understanding of sity administration and facul education." ty have fallen short of their "The people who participate responsibilities in arousing the in FNCC are the brightest ' student's interest in these most sensitive students in the problems. University." he said. "Students look to the facul- He explained that student ty and administration for lead action on Midwest campuses ership," he said, "and if they Combos Set Tone! For Homecoming Three different combos will i set the tone for the Homecom "t ning at 8:30 p.m. The Home coming queen and her attend- j ants will be announced at the ; event which is the Homecom-! ing Week kickoff. The Kopi Kals from Has tings, the Starfires from Oma ha and a campus group, the Nate Branch trio, will be playing on different areas oi the floor in the Pershing Au ditorium Arena. A huge 15 by 20 foot red and white back drop across the stage will ac cent the dance's theme. "Sa lute to NU Sports." Vkki Cline, last year's queen, will crown the new Homecoming Queen at 10 p.m. The honored guest at the dance will be Mrs. John Mor row of Lincoln, Homecoming Queen of 25 years ago. Nebraskan was slow in getting started because the two main prob lems, civil rights and interna tional peace, were especially distant from the Midwest ; area. Trask said people in ! Nebraska are generally afraid of any type of change and had a 2reat fear of infen- ority which comes into plav wnen basjc commitments of that only a few are advanced enough to organize. "There is much more dis content at the University than appears on the surface," he said. The basic student com plaint, he said, was the ad ministration and faculty's lack of attentiveness to the real needs and aspirations of the students. "The University has lost sight of the students in trying 1 to deal wth problems of ex-j pansion and diversification." ; he explained. He said that the adminis-! tration and faculty were ed-: ; ucating the students in 1965 to live in 1945. "Students want to be taught how to live in the present and ; .future. They want to under-; stand the problems they must face," he said. Trask explained that even umugi. ki uaeius . c e . : tins need, few of them on the i Nebraska campus at the pres- ent time have the initiative and concern to do something about it. are apathetic and don t care neither will the students." But he stressed that stu dents will only continue this way for so long and then when they begin to feel this ever in creasing lack of education about contemporary prob- lems, there will be problems. "We w ill have riots compar able to those at Berkeley in , the next two or three years unless the administration and faculty do something to meet the real problems and impor tant issues being raised," Trask said. He said that the University needs to take stock of these problems right now and begin I to redress the student griev-1 ances. j "The best policy oi the facul ty and administration," he! said, "is to work with these student action groups rather than against them.'" We are only at the beginning of the student movement in Ncbraska, he said, and it will continue and grow rapidly. i By Wayne Kreuscher Senior Staff Writer Editor's Note: This week end college students all over the nation will be taking part in International Protest Days against U.S. participation in Viet Nam. No Nebraska group on the University campus will be protesting primarily against participation in Viet Nam. but many will be thinking ah oat serious issues along wit'i the rest of the wuntry. Action on the University campus this week has already Hyde Park . . . Students, Faculty Voice Opinions By Steve Jordon Junior Staff Writer i The Student Non-violent Co ordinating Committee, the' Students for Democratic So ciety, juvenile delinquency, American apathy and weak ! ness and the "University code" were discussed yester day afternoon by some 300 University students and facul ty. The occasion was the first of a series of events called "Hyde Park," held in the Ne braska Union Lounge. The name was taken from a small park in England where passcrsby can express their opinions or listen to oth ers whenever the impulse arises. 1 The audience traditionally participates by heckling, ask ing questions. and occasionally removing 'he speaker from the platform. The session is sponsored by the Nebraska Union Talks and Topics Committee headed by Liz Aitken. It is open to FSNCC Strives To Help Gulfport Civil rights is the primary concern of the Friends of the i Student Nonviolent Coordinat-' ing Committee (FSNCC) on the University campus. j Organized last year by six! P'vle, the group now has 40 ; members. It was the first civil rights group ever organized' on the University campus. i Gene Pokornv. president of j FSNCC, said that the group this year planned on continu ing some of FSNCC's projects started last year such as the Gulfport Project ile explained that the Uni versity is the only school in the North which is helping the Negroes organize for political, educational and economic lib erty in Gulfport, Miss. FSNCC collects money on this campus, he said, and tries to send about $200 a month to Mississippi for the project which is now trying to organize and educate the Ne groes into using their voting rights. Of this money, $40 goes to 1W5 University graduate Pes gy King who is the third Uni versity volunteer Sir w ork er to spend time in G u I f port. Pokornv explained thai this $40 a month was all Miss King receives to live on while working for the project in Mississippi. FSNCC sends the other $160 to the Gulfport Project in gen eral which is trying to help a Negro ghetto register all of its citizens above 21 to vote. "People don't understand,". Pokorny said, "that when a Negro has been stamped on for so long, it's hard for him to understand that all of sud den he has the righ to vote. People have to explain h i s rights to him and why he should vote. They have to show him that this right will mean something." He stressed that the $40 Miss King gels each month means tat thf spends "(I cents for each of her meals and that lor every dollar con tributed, . five meals are bought. Four months ago. he said, the total project at Guliport had $50. thus "every penny really means some'hing to ..hese people." i The money for this project Thursday, October 14, 1965 included the first Hyde Park forum. Today a national socialist leader, Norman Thomas, will speak in the Nebraska Union a. 3:30 p.m. Sunday evening Nebraska's first teach-in will be held in the Love Library auditorium where faculty members, stu dents and Lincoln individuals will informally talk on both the pros and cons of the Viet Nam war. The Daily Nebraska today attempts to describe the small but growing student action and student thinking groups on the University campus. any faculty member or stu dent for a 20 minute speech, for active or passive listening or for a simple statement of an opinion. The program lasted until 5:30 p.m., and during the two hours of discussion, the Uni versity's authority boundaries were questioned, the integrity of the American citizen was placed in doubt, the goals of the Students for Democra tic Society were reviewed and criticized and jesting cheers were heard for juvenile delinquency. The audience was as niuuh a part of the event as the speaker. Some speakers ig nored the interruptions and questions of the listeners, some answered questions when they arose, and some members of the audience marie wisecracks that drew laughs and applause from the crowd. Hvde Park will be held noxt week an hour earlier, again in the Union Ixtunge, accord i ing to Miss Aitken. . is collected through FSNCC's Dollar Days where a c a r d table is set up in the Nebras ka Union lounge seeking con tributions once a week and by some solicitation. "Last year," Pokorny ex plained, "almost all of our money came from the faculty , because many students just weren't interested." Other things FSNCC wants to do this year include stu dent and faculty contact com- GENE POKORNY mitres. Pokorny said they wanted to go out and talk to living units and to the faculty about their organization and try to find more "badly needed" members. "People at Berkeley, Har vard. Columbia and other places are ready to fight lor what is right," he said, "but here people just d o n't seem to be interested." "If we are ever going to solve the problems of this col lege generation, people are going to have to become more aware." Other projects planned are an investigation into reported discrimination in some Lin cr'n taverns u.A a regular news letter which will be dis tributed around campus entitled "Called To Be Hu man.' Pokorny said the group has plans to co-sponsor a visit to the campus next April by ireedom-singer Pete Seeger.' "1 wish people just wouldn't dismiss us without hearing us. Often all they hear are a lot of rumors. If they would In vite us into their houses and then alter hearing us say no. I would respect them a lot more than the ones who won't even hear us," Pokor ny said. 1 ......