Fox's Facts Marilyn Hoegemeyer, editor Mike Jeffrey, business manager Monday, Nov. 1 , 1 965 fliiiiififiiiiiifHitstiiiiiiiriiitaatfiiiiiiitiiifitiiiitiitiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiftitfiiiiiniifiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiitiiiiiMiiiiiiif . Protests Cause Greater Support THERE HAS BEEN much discussion on campus about the effect the conscientious objectors and draft-card burners have had on the morale of our soldiers fighting in Viet Nam. National leaders have revealed the fear that anti-war demonstrations have hurt our image in South east Asia and in the world. Students here have pondered the same supposition. Some have suggested that the members of the local chap ter of Students for a Democratic Society be laughed off the campus for their distribution of pamphlets outlining the procedure to avoid the draft legally. It seems the majority of University students believe the government's policy in Viet Nam is acceptable, is the right one or they believe that the policy set by our elected leaders should be followed for that is the reason we put them in office. THE ECHOING VOICES of University students sup porting the United State's role in the vicious, complex war are welcome, are needed. The new surge of support was demonstrated on several campuses where students organized blood donation campaigns for the men in Viet Nam. There seem to be about four varying opinions about support in Viet Nam. There are those who completely sup port the U.S. policy and would gladly give their lives in the fight. There are those who verbally support the policy but would rather someone else be chosen to "do the honor" of protecting our nation and the world but they will fight if they must. A FAIRLY LARGE segment of the minority does not support U.S. participation in the Asian war because they do not believe in war for religious or "moral" reasons, but are willing to donate their time for their country in civil jobs. A very small part of the minority actively, openly ob jects to U.S. participation and seek to influence others to avoid the draft. They encourage defiance of the U.S. government, the law of the land. Fortunately the majority of the American people falls into the first two groups. The majority of University stu dents is part of the first two groups. MOST UNIVERSITY STUDENTS will not buy the conscientious objector solution. But, it is not necessary to laugh the draft-objectors off campus. As long as they maintain the right to voice their opinions and objections, within the confines of constitutional law, our form of de mocracy can be preserved. James A. Poulter of Ann Arbor, Mich., in wake of recent demonstrations against U.S. policy in Viet Nam placed an advertisement in the Ann Arbor News offering to pay for a ticket for anyone who wished to move to North Viet Nam or Communist China. IT IS UNLIKELY that the conscientious objectors or even the draft-card burners would take Poulter up on his offer. They prefer the United States to either alternative . country. They like the freedom of speech they have here. So do we. IN TIMES OF CRISIS in our history it was often a minority group who openly objected to a government poli cy who motivated the majority made them aware of their position, clarified their stand, strengthened their support of the government policy. This process has happened at the University of Ne braska and in the United States as a whole. MARILYN HOEGEMEYER Union Week Lacks International Theme This has been proclaimed International Week at the University of Nebraska. The focus is on Germany. THE NEBRASKA UNION is again the sponsor of the event. German food will be served. German films will be shown. German-made goods will be on display. It sounds like German Week. It certainly will not be international. Though we appreciate the efforts made to acquaint the University community with the country of Germany, we do not believe it should be passed off as International Week. Union officials and their committees are overlooking a very important segment of the University population who could provide a real international atmosphere the foreign students, some 250 strong from over 40 different countries. IN PAST YEARS the members of Nebraska Interna tional Association (NIA) have prepared a program, "Cul tures on Campus" designed to acquaint students, faculty and Lincoln residents with the dances, music, and dress of those countries represented at the University. The presentation was a part of International Week the most important part. To eliminate the participation of such a group is to eliminate the last element of real internationalism. WE URGE the members of NIA to overlook the shortsightedness of the Union staff and to present "Cul ures on Campus" again this year even if it is not a seg ment of "International Week." WE URGE those who organized "German Week" to recognize the international program possibilities that 250 foreign students could provide if given the chance. Such a chance would be a sincere gesture of friend liness, a wanting to know, to understand about life in the various countries. THE OPPORTUNITY is one few midwesterners can enjoy but in a university community. Nebraska Union of ficials should be aware of that fact. They should see the opportunity to present a REAL International Week. May that realization come soon! MARILYN HOEGEMEYER Daily Nebraikan TELEPHONE: 477-1711, Extensions 2588, 2581 and 2530. Member Associated Collegiate Press, National Ad fertilise Service, Incorporated. Published at Room (1, Nebraska Union, Lincoln, Nebraska. Kalaraf M nwrt alaaf aiatlar at dW put alllaa I Uaeala. Kakratka, la r im art i af nl . Ikli. fka Dtlif Nefccaafcaaj b aabtttk Mn4ar. WUmitr- ftn" aa frMr tfartai tfca atkml i. ect 4arta vtrtllm mnt nam aarlwla, wr M4wtt ka UalaaraMf af Nakraaka a4r Ika frlctla ft t r.aaitr fakaammlMaa a Maaaat rvfcUcatlm. Pakllaallaaa tkaU ka fraa tnm aaaaarfcla k Ik (akaammKtaa ar aar aarara aalaMa Ika Catraralla. HaaNkara at Ika frakraaka ara mailUa tef wkat Ika aaaaa Ik ka ariatr EDITORIAL STAFF fcfHlar, MAMltN IKorNrmi awaadBf tfltar. CAMLE U.NOt aaoa alte. JA"I5 ATOftlMANi aparta 4ltr. JIM AWAKTZi alfkt , BO ttT.THk.BPl.Li aaalar Hi IT trilm, HUM RltCL'VCHKRt Janlaf atatt vrtlari, H UE MOHM. (TKVE JORDAN, JAN ft KIN, l tE CILr, SMAKV I.IND4UIKT, TONT WTRUi Eaat Camaaa raaartar. JAKE PALMtXi satta knttiaal. JAMEt riMlIi aaar thn, roLLt MTNOIDH, HfKNtKB DhkVM. JACK IOUO. BUSINESS STAFF Km4ni nuniftr. MIRE Kffi kailana ililinla, COS Sir. RAft. VaWKN. MI'CE WRK.HT. MlkK KINKMAM, KHIRLKT RfcVTINKl rlrralallaa aaaaaavr. IthN RATHJtS itikwHatian miuitri, Jim kunta, Jk "-. t WrM Qtrwt joiM. t. .m. Maar Ikr.a.k trMar. akacriatfes rataa tra M amr armttiw tr M It Ika aeafemla rear. r ' Motorbikes found Deadly TAIL, WHERE YOU DRAWN' US? Theatre Review By Gale Pokorny Yesterday as I gathered up my books and papers that had been spread all over the street, applied a tourniquet to my left arm, put my right ankle in a make shift cast, and covered the other assorted wounds with bandages, etc. I contemplated the red and white motorbike that had just chalked up another one, its rider laughing hysterically, disappearing down the street. I came to the conclusion that from now on I would have to be more careful . crossing the street or I am liable to get hurt. Actually I was lucky, I could have been schmixed by a motorcycle. These are built quite a bit tougher due to the higher speed at which they careen madly along . and the greater shock they must endure when they slam into some pedestrian too fat to jump, too slow to run and too stupid to stay indoors. The motorbikes are more tiny and as a result they force their riders to be more particular (sort of like Pall Mall smokers). They have to be choosy about who they try to run down. Little kids and midgets are real popular these days. But if the motorbikes are at a disad vantage due to size when compared against their big brothers, they make up for it through their ability to sneak up on people. First of all they are smaller and hard to see coming down the sidewalk at a cool eighty miles an hour. But even more dangerous is the i thot thpv don't make. You can hear a motorcycle aiming at you four blocks away giving you ample time to shinny up the nearest street lamp. But those motorbikes make no more noise than last year's mosquitoes and by the time you realize that buzzing sound is the voice of doom, the front wheel should be just passing over your head. But all is not hopeless for the people who walk (or limp). There are ways de vised by Cornhusker pedestrians to cope with this new rash of sexed up bicycles. Trial and error methods have shown that the best way to cope with them is to exe cute a "La Rubia" sidestep just prior to the moment of bone-crushing impact and then thrust the umbrella, that we all carry, into the spokes of the front tire. True, it s tough on umbrellas but it's even tougher on front tires. The guy has to come to a complete stop in order to pick the spokes out of his teeth. Other dastardly methods have likewise been dreamed up, involving hand gre nades and land mines in those little briefcases that everybody carrys along with their umbrella. But then let's not be too hard on the motorcyclists after all they are just re leasing their penned up frustrations and emotions and what better way to do it then go out and smear somebody. Excuse me, while I put on my goggles, now where did I leave my black leather jacket. . . Weapons Of Words And Wit Used I nB ratal Production: 'Virginia Woolf, Campus Opinion Student Attacks Paper A DRAMA of skin-tearing, blood-running, bone-breaking action, all the more brutal and destructive because it is done by sociable, civilized, and intelligent characters, has opened at the Universi ty theater and will play on alternate weekends for the rest of the semester. There are no clubs or knives used in Who's Afriad of Virginia Woolf, and no one is physically injured except for an attempted choking but the havoc wrought on psyche and emotion is enor mous, and the weapons are the civilized ones of words and wit. ANDY BACKER, in this modern com edy of manners, plays on every octave in his vocal range an very wide one and on every emotional pitch that George is capable of reaching: he is annoyed, an gry, tolerant, charming, amusing, fright ening, aggressive, passive, obscene, and ''ways in control. The energy and grace with which he creates his role are breath taking, and are matched in his exciting use of small gestures and stage-business. Except for a loose-limbed quality about him, and a habit of dropping into a half crouch every now and again, Backer's body, as well as his voice, is completely at the service of his acting. No one should miss this performance. LETA POWELL DRAKE, playing George's wife Martha, has a more diffi cult job to do in this play. The role is written as a brassy, one-or-two dimen sional character for the first act and a half of the play, and the audience does not see the depth of her personality until the first few layers of her skin are pulled away. Leta is a powerful, commanding actress, with as much energy as Andy has,, and when Martha becomes intimate enough with George to tell him sadly that their relationship has finally snapped she grafts a moving sorrow onto her brassi ness and blossoms into a role as full as her husband. ' SUSAN REYNOLDS' playing of Hon ey enforces a belief in her character even though she is not the physical type Albee and the other characters have in mind she is not "slim-hipped," she is psycho logically frail, and that's what really counts. Susan creates a deliberately ab stracted, and almost stupid, young wom in who, if she could face the truth about herself, would be ashamed of her sexual failure. But she reaches hysteria before she comes to self-knowledge, and refuses to consider even the possibility of a reality too fearful for her to face. ROSS GRAHAM'S Nick looks good, and many of the values which thev actor and the character have in common work toward the ends of the play. He is awk ward in his new surroundings, but has a basic confidence which probably could never be shaken except by this play's ruthless probe of truth and illusion. The role of Nick makes fewer vocal and physi cal demands than George and Martha do, but they are specific, necessary, and dif ficult in their own way. Despite the brilliant diction, phras ing, and dramaturgy of Albee's play, and even granting the high order of acting evident in this production, the issues of Virginia Woolf, not to mention the point, would have very easily been lost without the sensitive hand of Dr. William Morgan arranging the physical and emotional moves of the actors. , HIS SPLENDID collaboration with Charles Howard has produced for a set ting a well-appointed, modern "early American" living room which concretizes the "national theme" in subtle and signi ficant stage dressing: a suspended, three masted ship (which looks a lot like the Constitution), an old-fashioned rocking chair, a huge American eagle over the hearth at center, a grandfather clock down stage left, and reversed, thirteen starred American flag a battle flag framed on the stage left wall. Combined with the brilliant use of a baby's chair for the mythical son, and an abstract painting (done in elemental colors and black) to actively symbolize Martha's fantasy-ridden mind, and the stress upon the parallels between the two couples, Dr. Morgan has made comprehendable sense out of a very obscure play. More than that, he uses every acting space on that great set, everybody posi tion of his actors, every usuable space relationship and every bit of stage busi ness he could imagine to bring Albee's masterpiece to life, Morgan's production of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf is a piece of genuine theater art. Base-r LBJ is reportedly holding out on per mission for his daughter to be married. We have it from a reliable source that LBJ is waiting until Luci casi prove to him that she is grown up enough. The word is that she will have to prove this by beating him in arm wrestling. Campus Opinion Two To Listen Dear Editor: I paid for two $2.75 tickets Saturday night to listen to Peter, Paul and Mary sing not 5,000 miserable college students. Dirty Old Man Three A Week Dear Editor: Why do freshman and sophomore women have three late nights a week (Friday, Saturday, and Sun day) while junior women have only two? .Dirty Old Woman Dear Editor: The time has come for the Daily Ad Sheet to eval uate its purposes in relation to the University as a whole. Is its purpose to report on the activities of the en tire University or to mere ly glorify its ad salesmen? The last time your pol icy on ad space was ques tioned, your excuse was that the University budget hadn't been drawn up yet. This is the seventh week of school! Surely it has been finished by now. And what about the 50 cent increase in tuition that was sup posed to get the paper out of the red? It has also been argued that there aren't any stor ies to be published. How ever, last Tuesday a mem ber of a campus organiza tion submitted a small ar ticle on an open house victory dance to the news editor. Tuesday evening I talked to a staff "writer about it again. Both times we were assured that it would be in Thursday or Friday's Daily Nebraskan, but there was nothing in either except ads of tennis shoes and levis. Now I ask you, which is of more Importance, tennis shoes or an activity of a University of Nebraska or ganization? This question is of utter importance to the future of this newspaper. If there aren't more articles and less ads there will come a time in the not too distant future when 5,000 copies of the Dally Nebraskan will rot in the boxes of Burnett Hall. Publicity Chairman, Julie Clark UNICORNS Editor's Note: Unfortunate ly the "article" submitted by your organization was omitted in the m a k e-u p stage of our newspaper production. But, can you understand that were we to print every organization's announcements, meetings and victory dances, the Ne b r a s k a n would be filled A BALLPOINT PEN! On a purchase of one or more paperbooks at the University Bookstore tomorrow or Thursday. Li f jh3 01 Pi PIZZA HUT CARTOON Si 'Everybody is going to the Pizza Hut! " PiZZ 4601 "O" A WY 489-4601 with them. We do not be lieve that is the purpose of our campus newspaper. At no time have we ar gued that there are not enough stories to be pub lished. That is not true. Our staff is limited only by time and space. We hope the space problem will be eased with the eight page edition on Wednesday which will require more time than ever from our faith ful staff. If we ever discover that 5,000 copies or even 50 cop ies of the Daily Nebraskan are left in Burnett Hall we will promptly stop de livery there and place the Nebraskan in other less strategically located build ings where students con stantly search in vain for the Daily Nebraskan. We do not believe that will hap pen. One Response Dear Editor: At least one organization is responding to Professor Trask's call for more edu cation on contemporary problems which appeared in Oct. 14 Dally Nebraskan. As Dr. Trask so aptly put it, "Students look to the faculty and administration for leadership." This leader ship, however, is not always forthcoming, and as a result many undergraduates feel that their professors do not take a personal interest in them. Increasing enrollment is presenting a challenge to ef fective education at the Uni versity of Nebraska. It is to this challenge that we hope the students and faculty will respond. The History Club offers an opportunity for students and faculty to discuss Issues of mutual interest on an in formal basis. Why not drop by, profes sor? Larry Willmore, President History Club Yes . . . plenty of choice seats available! SAT. . . NOV. 6 at 8 P.M. THB OP 1 i V I mi a mm andTHEZ PENNSYLVANIAN8 PURCHASI RI1RRVRO TirvaTi TODAY AT lIHINO SOX OFRICi n.!it7-M.M On lata Til Curtain Tim.i