Marilyn Hoegemeyer, editor Mike Jeffrey, business manager Page 2 Wednesday, Dec. 1, 1965 Kjcwr Qfa yioiksud? By Bill Oltman How obnoxious it is to be involved in a blind date? It was just the other day that I made such an ob servation. I was sitting in the room busily looking through TIME magazine's movie reviews for a complimentary comment, when a body entered the room and approached my roommate with a usual, but frightening concept. My roommate was chosen as prey, I am sure, because his builder's calender was empty. This is a sign of social activeness that can never be overlooked. I keep mine full of birthday dates of the famous baseball players. My roomy is, according to this person, a lucky person, for he has a chance to be 'fixed' up with this somebody (or something). Foolishly, my roomy's response was, "Oh?". After this point I realized that there was no hope for him. It was just a matter of small talk now. I knew be was in trouble when they asked him how tall he was. Her name came up of course and was defended well: "Anybody can find a date with a Susie Right?" He looked at me, but I didn't answer. "But how often," he went on, "do you come across a Maudy Monsoon?' She was of course from one of the top five sororities. This seems to be the greatest variable on campus. "Well, who knows her?" he asked. Nobody knows her. "Well, I've got to find out what she's like. Where's she from? Omaha? Too bad she's not from someplace like Lincoln where everybody knows everybody." He found a 'confident' that filled him in on all the pertinent details. Like; the color of her hair, how old she is, how wealthy her parents are etc. Then it really got tense. He asked what she looks like. Chances are the best comparison would be to a water buffalo, but he's never going to hear that. More likely they will say that she is 'cute'. If so, I advised him to forget it! To forget it if they say she's fun. And if they say she's not a beauty contestant, not even to take her to a dog fight as a con testant, because she'll probably lose. On the other hand if she is said to be beautiful, and the life of the party then the 'confident' is also the blind date. With nothing else left to do, I tried to cheer him up by offering the solution that he carry the thing out to its fullest by never opening his eyes on a blind date. Fox's Facts By Gale Pokorny I hope the people who accidently stumble across this little article, (few) and those who are foolish enough to read it, (fewer yet) will forgive me if they find a couple of these sentences slightly incoherent, (is this really new?). You see, I'm not really well (at last, he's admitted it). ,I contracted a rather serious illness of late, not un usual among college students. In fact, the more I talk with friends, the more I become aware of the fact that nothing short of a major epidemic is about to be uncov ered on the Nebraska campus. r It will not be discovered by doctors or nurses how ever. Those people who will first see it will be the pro fessors and instructors that make up the N.U. faculty. But then they won't be too surprised. In fact, I rather thirk they expect it because it inevitably accompanies ev ery vacation that lasts longer than two days. It becomes quite severe over Thanksgiving vacation and over the Christmas-New Year holidays, it could prove disastrous. Its effects are seen to a certain degree as soon as the vacations end but the fatal results usually appear around the end of finals. Death certificates are not issued by the city morgue however, they come from those merry un dertakers over in Administration who handle the grade matters. The disease that I have contracted along with the majority of students here on campus has been called many things but I think that most would recognize it by the name that the famed Dr. Schulz gave it when his favorite patient caught it. It is called Charlie Brown Disease. It poisons the mind and warps one mentally. Suddenly one loses all interest in economics and math and Robinson Crusoe. All that work carefully and innocently allowed to accumulate till vacation time permits time to catch up, is scorned. The sufferer tends to put great faith in one thing, tomorrow. Tomorrow will be the day that 1 will sit down and write my report, do those chem problems, read that book, prepare for that test, etc. Tomorrow, being quite elusive, keeps slipping away til suddenly there is no tomorrow, vacation is over, and funniest thing, you haven't opened a single one of those fourteen books. All of a sudden you get sick, and the second phase of C.B.D. has taken hold. One can spot C.B. victims by their bleary eyes re sulting from, "just one more TV program", or one more date or just another hour with the guys etc. The symptoms of Charlie Brown Disease also include a marked inability to sleep at night probably caused by the various resulting guilt germs. If you do manage to fall asleep, you are haunted by nightmares of piles upon piles of ugly books, mailboxes stuffed with downsllps or visions of sunny trips to gay Hanoi. As yet the cure along with the causes are unknown but one thing is known, Charlie Brown Disease has taken its toll every year since the first college fell from the heavens and will continue to recruit new members for the service for at least the remainder of this year, and prob ably many more. Daily Nebraskan TELEPHONE: 477-8711. Extensions 2588. 2589 and 2500. Member Associated Collegiate Press, National Ad vertising Service, Incorporated. Published at Room 51, Nebraska Union, Lincoln, Nebraska. RnUrad aarnni' clam mallei ai Itar mint afflaa in Llnnnln. Nrhranka. nr iim an at Humi.i 4, mil i Tha Dull? Mahnikii la publlh Miindat, Wailnaailav, rhiirada? and PrMa; durlna Mir arhoal Faa. anna tirln vanallnm and ,atn narta k; atnnVnl, at tka llalvarallar i N.hrailta andar Ika InrladMlan at lha Faculty Nnhxnmmlllar an Rlndanl PuhllraMflni Publlraltnna anal) na fraa tram aanaarahla by th Utikaammlltna or any naraon nuMldr lha linlaaraltv Mmnbara al ika Nabraaaan ara raapunatnla lor what tka aauar In ba arlntrd EDITORIAL STAFF Bdll.F, 4MRII.VN HORtMrMHYKKi manaalni editor, CROI,p RPNIl, aw, adllar .lOAWkJK Tllll,MANi aimrt. adltar. IM HWARTZ, nlnbl aawa adllar HOR WHIM UfXI.i arnlar ahiff writer., WAVNK KKFIIHOHIvRt hit. lor alarr writer., .IIH.IE IMOIIRIH. HTKVE JOHDAN, JAN ITKIN, tlHVCK (III KK IIIANE LINIMIIIIHT, TONY MVKttHi F.aat Camma rniMMar, JANE PAI.MI lt' tOliu ,M"K H0,'MN "' ara, FDIXV RHYNOLDH, JACK BUSINESS STAFF Rnalnaaa ninnarer MIK mWHV: lu:lit,-s. aa.ui.nt., l iinnip; rah MiimKN. MIKE KIKKMANi alrrulallnn manairer, LYNN KATH.UCNi uihanrln tlu mannaera, JIM HI'NTX. JOHN RASiHIlNKDN. aunaariB HimiNKIK (IFPKI HIMIKM. M am Mnndu. lhr.,.h Mi.. IMibaarlatlan rata, art l-l aar aameatai nr M inr lha aoadainlo faar TOMGHT! Tlim. & nil, MfiHT 8 P.M. AKi:X. THEATRE (Sft3 lIMPIi:) TTMIE Campus Opinion 'Mo Wacation Changs' Support Is Irrational Dear Editor: I am astounded by your support of the administra tion's callous, irrational re fusal to consider a change in vacation dates. What rational reason can be given for this policy. It certainly can be no mo re than a mild inconvenience to put off the vacation one day before and after. If the Administration believes that the prominence of football has become detrimental by the academic Stnng of the University of Nebraska, there are steps that can be taken. I and many others would be opposed to these steps, but they would at least be rational attempts to solve a problem. The administration could Smile Never Pasted Dear Editor: Speaking of the Orange Bowl: Who can better represent the University than its foot ball team, the "Cornhusk ers"? And who might bet ter represent the State of Nebraska than "Miss Ne braska," Karen Hansmeier? You say that the rider of the float will represent the "University of Nebraska Cornhuskers." Do the Corn huskers need representing? (Arkansas thinks so! ) From the Nebraska Cen tennial Commission's inter est in the float, I assume it is a state-wide not just a Dear Editor: The Idea of a Library Love Library, which nor mally operates at a high rate of efficiency and econ omy, chose, for reasons un beknown to me, to open its doors from 7:50 AM to 4:50 PM on Nevember 26 and 29 (Friday and Monday). This course of action was without precedent and need lessly involved a consider able waste of taxpayer's money as well as the li brary staff's time. Most stu Orange Bowl Bound? PLAN TO STOP AT KIMBERLY MOTEL 158 St. AT COLLINS AVE. MIAMI BEACH, FLA. 33160 SPECIAL STUDENT RATES D'ErCTLY ON OCEAN $7.00 PER PERSON DOUIUtS OlYMPIC POOL $2.00 EACH ADDITIONAL PERSON PRIVATE BEACH ' I THE NON-PLAYf reduce the number of ath letic scholarships, cut .out the practice of red-shirting, arrange the schedule to in clude Kearney, Hastings, and Omaha University. They could de-emphasize, if they believe football is over-emphasized. But of course they don't believe it is and few others do either. There are very good rea sons why the vacation should be changed. Four or five thousand students went to each of the last two bowl games and this stupid ex ercise of academic preju dice will not make any dif ference this year. So t h e first day of classes will be quite poorly attended and that will actually be detri mejital to the academic University idea and activ ity. The University is repre sented and so is the state. Could a coed represent both as well as "Miss Nebras ka"? Like myself. Miss Hans meier is at Concordia Teacher's College for a pur pose, not because she has something against the "U". The logical choice for Ne braska was made, so wipe off your jealous grin. A "Nebraska jmile" is never pasted. R. Scheer CTC Seward Library Open? dents, myself included, were hardily engaged in matters non-academic over the much-welcomed vaca tion. Why should our Library offer its privleges for the benefit of trie few? Besides, the Lincoln Public was open during said hours for the convenience of that minor ity. Yours, Thomas J. Renna Graduate Student (L AEEfETT MS99 aOl quality at this University. Secondly t he r e will be students who will try to make it back. The consci entious students, those who have quizzes or hour exams, and those in classes like speech where absences are heavily punished will be driving like mad across country trying to stay up the thirty-six hours the trip re quires. The administration's pol icy for which there is no possible excuse other than a distaste of administrators for seeming to cater to foot ball will be putting the lives of students in danger, and this is almost criminal in my opinion. And to see the student newspaper blindly following along completely oblivious to the problems of the students and the strong feelings of the vast major ity of them is absolutely unbelievable. Sincerely Ray Wilsen Water Supply Is Decreasing Dear Editor : On my way home from the Hyde Park gathering I hap pened to hear the Water Commissioner and the Scho larship Chairman discussing a timely topic. It seems the Water Commissioner's prob lem of the day was the high consumption of water of the SDS members. In an effort to scrub off the wide yellow streak down tis invertabrate sect's back, the SDS members had show ered several times daily. The Scholarship Chairman's office had been over-run with SDS members applying for assistance to pay their high water bills. Now Editor, I realize you are a busy person, but could you find time to he a d a drive to ask for donations to help pay deficient SDS water bills; relieve the Scho larship Chairman of extra burdens; and perform a civic service to Save Our Wilier Supply. Meter Reader to the slightly fabulous trrrntrira TT(JD Im fmnrp sj JUL JmL& JfcaJ JJ UL XLS ZSJ FJSYIG (ho Mixlcn! of NEBRASKA Ilsaa-aalal Piafnr t i Teaching After wew ere Editor's Note: Teachers and professors face a new day professionally and so cially according to Harry H. Ransom, Chancellor of the University of Texas, who presented the following article at the recent conven tion of the National Associa tion of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges. Ransom's analysis and suggestions which follow are pertinent not only to t h e University professor situation but also for those students who will someday be lementary, secondary or college teachers teachers who can expect "alternating acclaim and distrust, ap plause and suspicion." "Many Americans have been cheered a n d some have been hastened by re cent public clamor about teaching. First a loud chorus, not yet s i 1 e n t, brought a series of indict ments against the present state of undergraduate instruction. Behind the negative rhet oric there were certain hard negative facts. The "flight from teaching" could b e illustrated by numerous fac ulty members departing the campus for industrial and federal appointments. More disturbing were statistics within the university: Larger budgets often invited larger numbers of the fac ulty to do less teaching in order to do more research. "Publish or perish" policies, sometimes exaggerated or misunderstood, seemed to sound a death-knell for the teacher's primary concern with students. Student outcry, which once had been spontaneous expression of the undergrad uate's inalienable right to complain, changed tone. Stu dents put their case in force ful terms: They objected less to what and how they were being taught (an anc ient complaint) than to the fact that some were sure they were being completely ignored (a new and serious charge). Quickly the press and the public rediscovered the importance a! teaching. The Sputnik syndrome, which had roused insistent, in coherent demands for re search, invention, innova tion, and technology still lasts. National defense sus tains it. But it is overlapped by nostalgia for Mark Hop kins, ready and eager to teach, facing a ready and eager learner who is not just a bump at the opposite end of the academic log. Old arguments received old truisms, and familiar testy questions. "If ever the learner is to advance know ledge, he must first acquire it." Is today's student really learning? "accumulating in formation, trying out results, judging values, developing taste are essential to the independent mind." Is the student really being brought forward to responsible indep endence? "Education must be submitted to the trials of experience, the unknown challenges of the future, the hard necessities of citizen ship." Are students really moving toward those high goals? If not, what is the university going to do about it? FOR SOME TIME NOW, THE United States has been holding a wide-flung town meet' ig on such matters. Confusing though some of the arguments may be, sure ly this involvement of the public, the press, and the academic community in co "imon purposes is healthy. More than that, it enlivens tradition and adds tremendous o p r o r t u nity. Educators cannot avoid or escape this hujbub. 1 know very few who would choose to do so. DURING THIS PERIOD DANCE Being Ignore we have learned a whole vocabulary of educational pessimism "drop-out, "late-bloomer," "college illiterates," "campus revolu tionaries." We have also learned about new theories of learning, new arenas of teaching (auditoriums, lab oratories, libraries), new educational aids (television, information retrieval, pub lication and communication devices). From the time when Soc rates was younger than Ma caulay's s c h o o 1 b o y, the learners have been educa tion's main asset. If an edu c a t i o n a 1 renaissance is under way, it is largely because of revitalized con cern about these learners. For one thing, there are so many of them. Their pro portions will continue to in crease. In ways not always apparent to earlier genera tions, they are now con cerned with what happens to their own minds. Some are equally concerned about the social issues of knowledge what may happen latter to a world which they must in herit and can perhaps, re make. WE WILL NOT SOLVE future problems by resorting to formulas, hard and fast systems, aimless imitation and adaptation of what seems successful on some distant campus. I would suggest seme em phasis upon certain condi tions and special opportu nities: ?. The youngest university student a freshman or a sophomore, let's say is reg istered in three to five or more courses conducted as quite distinct if not com pletely unrelated processes of learning. Meanwhile, his instructors, rightly con cerned with the burden of specialty, usually suffer from current under-exposure to t h e r academic dis ciplines. The undergraduate, of course, is expected to ac quire, retain, and relate the whole array of miscel laneoui instruction. 2. We must avoid the ABCD fallacy in measuring attainment. If an under graduate completes a course with a grade of 75 or C, he may conclude that he knows only three-fourths of what he was supposed to learn. Worse he may assume that twenty-five per cent of his effort went to failure or futility. Yet as a matter of experience, he may have got twice as much as he was supposed to get Regardless of his grade, later signifi cance of what he did may diminish to zero, or expand to vast proportions. TO SUSTAIN GOOD TEACHING and to improve it, some kind of sensible and generally acceptable method of eviluation is necessary. Evaluation by colleagues brings to bear the necessary professional com petence, mingled with other random human elements. Evaluation by alumni pro vides more than perspective in time; it can reflect the staying power as well as the Free to College Students 25s to others A new booklet, published by a nun-profit educational founcla tion, tells which career fields lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses-which career field offers 100,000 new jobs every year -which career field produces more corporation presidents than any other what starting salary you can expect. Just send this ad with your name and address. This 24-page, career-guide booklet, "Oppor tunities in Selling," will U mailed to you. No cost or obli gation. Address: Council on On- portunities,550 Fifth Ave.,New York 36, N. Y. UOA-OO-OO. a , , ;;,, Luiliiaai edhsovery fudenf Cry hitting power of instruction. EVALUATION BY STU DENTS is not new and has nver been systematic. Com plicating the judgement of undergraduates by elaborate sampling, reciprocal grad ing and comparative numer ical analysis will not system, atize the results. Yet such evaluation is important for its own sake. The impor tance is doubled when the course and its materials are evaluated together with the instructor. Evaluation by more objec tive means standard exam inations, academic consul tants, professional critics can be effective only if the process is clear to the teacher and to his depart ment and if it is prevented from becoming routine or desultory. IX MOST DISCUSSIONS of teaching, we use the word ".learning" too little. After his last commencement is adjourned, the student will still have easy a c c e s s to formal education adult courses, special courses, lectures, doors open to sub jects not included in his formal course of study. Nevertheless, if he has not proved the uses of learning by himself, on his uwn im pulse, he will have missed the most important lesson the university can teach him. In this section of educa tion, we have made some progress. Directed j t u d y programs, honors courses, tutorial systems, have been joined lately by undergrad uate "research" programs, awards for creative work outside courses, numerous plans for solo study in read ing periods, summer vaca tions, and spare time. For m a 1 encouragement has been given such activity by the advanced-s t a n d i n g examination. STILL NEEDED, how ever, are much larger bud gets to provide much wider opportunities. Above all.such independent work should b recognized more widely, even when, at first glance, it seems to be obtuse as well as independent Thoreau's distant drummer is still drumming; but too many academic ears catch only a sound muffled by cur riculum requirements and grades and counsel to safety and stuflfy habits acquired through secondhand exper ience. WHY A DIAMOND RING Because Keepsake give you . . . 1. A perftct center dia mond, flawlessly clear, of fine color and expert cut. The fomoui Keepsake guarantee of a perfect center diamond or re placement assured. Permanent registration of your diamond for life time protection. Lifetime trade-in privilege toward another Keepsake ot any Keepsake jew eler's store. All diamonds protected against lots from the set ting for one year. 5. ""trnma USE YOUR CREDIT W3 fi - ai, n - . n - M12H3 Admission SO Cents at (be door