I " if A i f MorJyn Hoegemeyer, ecftf&r . WiJce Jeffrey, business monoger Page 2 iirs Panhellenic has taken a step in the right direction. With their ruling that there be no active, pledge "ex change" on pledge sneaks, they have heightened the pos sibility that the sneaks can be more than an afternoon female rassling match including hair pulling, lipstick smearing, and other less feminine tricks. The nature of the pledge sneak should be left up to the individual groups perhaps to the individual pledge classes provided the display of pledge sneak fun does not become a public embarrassment to the participants. Panhellervic's ruling should set the precedent for other Greek face lifting measures. With the combined leadership of all the member sororities, programs and projects can become effective means of enhancing the image of the Greek tradition. iazaar The Christmas Bazaar is successful again this year judging from the crowds of people Tuesday that waved their way from table to table, item to item. Selection of the foreign goods was excellent. Nearly everyone could find the right gift for a friend, parent, brother or sister. Many evidently did almost all their Christmas shopping in one afternoon's survey of the YWCA's yearly bazaar. Not only University students but many Lincolnites joined the streams of buyers, or just lookers. The YWCA is to be complimented for providing the opportunity to buy the unusual, the conversation-piece gift. Marilyn Hoegemeyer Fox's By Gale Activity jocks take notice, a new organization has just been stablished which even you can belong to. Set your alarm clocks for a little earlier tomorrow morning so you can hustle on down and join. R's called A.I.L., remem ber kiddies you're just not in unless you A.l.L. It stands for the Apathetic Indifference League. It's somewhat of a secret organization in that no one really knows what the mem bership of the group is. Actually no one does know for sure because none of the members care enough to come to a meeting all at once so they may be counted. While it is a nation wide group, it is believed that it gets the majority of its members from the Midwest in general and Nebraska in particular, where the real A.l.L. material is found. It has widespread appeal, in that you can now tell everyone you belong to a popular group and chalk up all those nice points and still not have to do anything if you don't want to. No more do you have to watch out for those gunners who for ever want to be busy, ruin ing it for the rest of the people. A second attractive fea ture Is that girls can more easily join since A.l.L. doesn't require its members to grow mustaches and beards. V personally like this feature because nothing disgusts me more than a cute little blond with a han dlebar mustach especially if she is smoking a pipe. I hear that A.l.L. is hav NEBRASKA UNION ORANGE BOWL TRIP includes 5 Nights in MIAMI Round-trip AIR FARE Ground Transfers Orange Bowl Game Ticket Orange Bowl Parade Ticket Hotel Accomodations (5 Nights) Party in MIAMI Student Price J229 50 PtlijJit fve Lincoln Tuesday, December 28, 19f5 ttehirni Snnda Jummry 2, Iflfifl. Sign up lu Orange Bowl Headquarters South Lobby Nebraska Union For Further detail cull ext. 2200 bottom 111 Wednesday, Dec. 8, 1965 Success Facts Pokorny ing a little trouble however, with their officers. It seems the club president hasn't shown up at a meeting since he was elected. We tnust have some doubts about the treasurer too, after collect ing the dues, he has also failed to r e a p p e a r. He couldn't have been tempted, to bug out with the group's finances though, after all how far can you go these days with three dollars and twenty eight cents. It seems not too many members cared enough to pay the dues. Non-violence (more ap peal) is the most effective method A.l.L. has of enforc ing the little that It wishes to accomplish. This non violence is utilized in sort of a boycott-sit in combination. For example, suppose A.l.L. wishes to give static to something like Hyde Park. The members boycott it, they don't go. Clever eh? While doing so they also stage a sit-in. They sit in their rooms and twiddle their thumbs. When one thinks of the potential this group has around here, it is alarming. It makes you want to run over to the nearest phone booth and alert the C.I.A. and F.B.I, so that they have something to do when they finish their Investigation of Teach-ins, Dr. Trask, Abel fires, and the sudden accumulation of street signs in Mr. Arnt's room. However I really wouldn't lose any sleep worrying about the danger, A.l.L. members don't care enough to form a menace against anything. Faculty & Staff Pike 245 50 D?sr Editor: List evening after I drove into the East, parking 1 o ! across from the library, I noticed a campus police car with two policemen in it. They soon stepped out of their car with a flashlight in one hand and a book of tickets in the other. They began ticketing each car vithout a faculty permit. Now 1 am certainly not opposed to faculty parking priority if the faculty uti lizes that privilege and they do, of course, during the day. I have parked in that same lot or close by it al most every evening since the beginning of school and very rarely is it even half full'. In fact, Judging by the number of tickets issued, most of the cars parked in that lot were not faculty members. Tf it is true that few faculty members park in the East lot at night, then 1 see no reason for not al lowing students to park there. Anyone who attends the University of Nebraska knows what the duties of 'Letter On Miller Is Over-Reaction' Dear Editor: It has been my pleasure to be entertained by one of the most bizarre and jaun ticed letters to the editor that you have ever carried. It attacked your staff for the excellent c h a f a c -ter story on Rev. Miller, and was signed simply "Two Concerned." I have not the Miller story before me, not usual ly accustomed to beat my breast over feature stories six weeks old, but I re member it because 1 en joyed it much. To find it a "brazen show of hypocra cy" and "just another tra ditional coon's tale" is so incredible a distortion as to make one fear for t h e writers' sense. Note well the bitterness In the letter. The pushbuttons of hate, charged words such as "coon," are the letter's, not the article's. Note too the overriding bitter attack upon religion, unjustified by the article the letter attempts to criti cise, a heavy-handed over reaction. Rev. Miller was probably better known to me than to the too concerned "Two Concerned." He was a charming old man and an old gentleman, but certain ly a "character." It would be ludicrous to portray him as a tidy, tea-sipping, mid Daily Nebraskan TELEPHONE: 477-8711. Extensions 2588, 258H and 2590. Member Associated Collegiate Press, National Ad vertlslng Service. Incorporated. Published at Room 51, Nebraska Union. Lincoln. Nebraska. KMtrt ar. monap rlmf maitai l thr ntnn in Unwiln. nbrtei. aVr tin act l AimwI 4. laij ,7' Jnt Nahraaa m Mlhlhnm MnmliDi. WfnMdu rtttlMtfuv am) FrMa; orlnt ( rbm mi. w urtii rai-atlnni and rrmm narlnaV aiaaat al ilia Kalvaralt? af J.brk anoVr thr tarhtdloiin, i far Vttntty hMmimlttf-t- m tnr1mt PuhlloallmM Pubilrniiniw null r fm frm mrMnklii d the KalMwmmlltfp r an pernon nutifnV Mir. linlvrltr MMtihfri l th Naaraakan ar nnnmihl fnr ohai tdM ianr In t nrlntrd EDITORIAL STAFF Ealtar. MtWl.VN HOI'flFMKYVR: manailnn nlMitr. f'Klll,F RtfNOi aaw. editor JOANNE arrow MAN. imp Millar, im W4KTZ. nlirhl new,, dllar. BOB WETHKRRI.l.t wnlar ntntl wrltr, WnVNT KHKIWIIIWi Malar tatt writer. JULIE MOHRIN, STEVE JORDAN. JAN rTKIN. IIIIUrF RITII HAflKIMIRN. BETH ItOHHrNH; Eal CnmmM rxwirtfr. JANE IMI.MEK; VHIH '"""";. fMCK HOLMANi mvr fdltorn, POI.IA RIIYNOl.DK. JA!K TODD. JON KKKKHOFF. TO CHERISH FOREVEI AKeepsak' O I K O s o R I N fc S APOLLO on W'ft (ft iftmjLij BotjS OMAHA COUNCIL BLUFFS GRAND SSLAND FREMONT COLUMBUS St fj the campus police include First of all, thev are respon sible for maintaining order in the numerous parking lots around the campus area. Secondly they direct traffic before and after football games and. ! might add, rather ineffectively. 1 have a solution which will provide a truly useful activity to occupy their time. The University of Ne braska should send them to traffic school, so they might learn the fundamentals of traffic control. Then, as suming the administration cares about its students, the campus police should be deployed at strategic lo cations such as 14th and "S" streets to direct traf fic. If the administration does not accept this respon sibility, then someday a student or two will be seri ously injured. By the ad ministration I mean Chan cellor Hardin, for he is ul timately responsible above all other university officials for the welfare of the stu dent body. This ietter proposes to dle-class parson, a figure the old man simple lid not cut. Yet our unknown friends are outraged that you have presented his ec centricities, have "written such an article on an or dained minister." To portray him as an in dividual, and individuality is his strength, .t is neces sary to capture his brave refusal to be bullied or de feated. Both his refusal to sell to the U. his chicken ranch in its midst, and his flinty will to build a new home, alone and by hand, at an age past 80, these are at the heart of my respect and fondness for the man. Yet our "Two Concerned" find such depiction an evi dence that you and 1 do not love Rev. Miller as a broth er. Because l love -Rev. Miller and men like him I do not want to see his per son flow away in a white wash of Negro bourgeois respectability. 1 do not want C h i c k e n Charlie to be camoflaped, patched up, reconstructed, or eulogized. I am not too concerned, not neurotically concerned over the Nebras kan's fine portrayal, orob ably becarse I see the old man in it, not excuses for anti-religious tirades or roosting places for my per sonal devils. Sincerely, P. J. Callahan StuJtnt . . . Wtar SbiunwnJ.i " ark in iiii m ii serve a dual' purpose. It may ave lives which de mands Chancellor Hardin's immediate and serious con sideration of the matter and it suggests the need for leg 'Fads' On Miami Dear Editor : We read with genuine in terest and complete agree ment the articles in th fraily Nebraskan in "Sam's Salvos" and the '"'Campus Opinion.'" We would like to express our disapproval of the -administration's de cision to hold classes on Monday. January S, and to carry this expression one step further by offering a few carefully gathered facts concerning transporta tion, costs, and mileage to and from Miami. Mode: Time leave Lin coln, arrive Miami; Round TrinFair: Railroad: 9 p.m. 8:45 p.m. i two days later) at $96.20. Airline: via Kan sas City, 10:56 a.m.-5:S5 p.m. at $198.25: via 'Chica go, 1:25 p.m.-7:57 p.m. at $260.98. Bus: 5 p.m. -5 p.m. (on second day) at $86.85. As is plainly shown by these figures, the o n ly plausible, 'ndeed possible way that a student could 'take commercial transport ation and still arrive back in time for classes would be to take a plane. Sine e all other means 'take at least 48 hoirrs. So don't take commercial 'transportation, you might say, all right, well drive. We have a car. five pasen gers counting driver. Tt is, according to the Nebraska Safety Patrol, roughly 1800 miles from Lincoln to Mi Orange Bowl Bound? PLAN TO STOP AT KIMBERLY MOTEL 158 St. AT COLLINS AVE. ' ' MIAfflf'JEACH, FU."33H0 SPECIAL STUDENT RATES $7.00 PER PERSON DOUBLES $2.00 EACH ADDITIONAL PERSON ambitious? go where the GROWTH is! 3 Texos instruments has grown without interruption during the last 10 years from 2293 people to over 30,000 today. This continuing growth has created challenging and rewarding career op portunities for all types of professionals. In ad dition to its development as a company, Tl also places strong emphasis on development opportuni ties for individual Tiers. While recognizing the role of individual initiative in self-development, Tl pro vides a variety of formal training and educational assistance programs which aid individuals in im proving their skills and in their professional advancement. Texas Instruments policies and benefits are pace setters in advanced personnel relations. Tl's Wage & Salary program provides for the periodic review of each Tier's job classification and rate of pay to assure that a proper appraisal is made of each Individual's compensation. Tl also offers a broad spectrum of company paid insurance, plus ad vanced profit sharing and retirement programs. Texas Instruments representatives will be on your campus. DECEMBER 3 1o intsrviow BS and graduate level applicants In Z m Thore are additional openings for Individuals with MBA degrees with a technical ES dogroe. J To arrange Intarvlew, ptaase contact your placmnt J If Interview Inconvenient at ttik time, please end confidential resume to Jack Troiter, Dept. 447. Texas Instruments : INCORPORATED I P.O. Box 601 S , An Equal Opportunity Employar '11C8 n islative action by the Stu dent Senate to remedy the unnja son able parking sit uation in the evenings. Sincerely yours taroy Breslow ami. Figuring gasoline at an average of 33.Sc a gal lon, this makes a total of $14.85 for gasoline alone on the round trip. When food, lodging, tickets, and mis cellaneous expenses are added to this, it is evident that driving is going to be costly even sharing er penses five ways, but more important, consider the time element. Averaging 65 m.p.h. with no stops whatsoever for in cidentals like food, gas, etc., the dviving time is roughly 28 hours. Assum ing these nearly impossible ditions, and supposing that a driver could leave the game and be out of the heavy traffic by midnight this would put him back in Lincoln sometime around 4:00 a.m. Monday morning. If any teacher is naive enough to think that this student is going to show up in class that iay, well, he's in for a shock. Kids, if you have $200 lying around" doing nothing, fly to Miami, if you dont stay home and watch our team on television, and let our administration wonder why no one showed vp at the game. Respectfully. Bonnie Kimble Michalynn Wagner Jean Reynolds Cathy Spurlock Lynda Lacoma Kathy Bauer OLYMPIC POOL DIRECTLY ON OCEAN PRIVATE BEACH - Dallas, Texas 75222 Stuffing Facts is To lo Avail Dear Editor : Trying to be objective and fair about the University, I have not griped too m u c h about memorizing the facis that my professors deem vital to my well-being in a democracy. I thought it just might be tripe, but t put my trust in the all-know ing patriarchs.- So, I dutifully stuffed in my mind 40 newspaper men for Journalism, t rammed home the Latin names of dozens of argu ments for logic, I learned the number of flutings on an Ionian colum nar for art, and who is buried in the great pyramid at Koochootankstank. ft was hard to believe that my profs had any rational thoughts when they em I CAUTION: SOFT SHOULDER 1 I Iff A lambswool classic pullover in the V- l 1 v"4 neck tradition. An ensy-going -way -of add- li I ing to ymir sweefor collection that's avail- h j I ja3P able at the 'Establishment in a lineup of jg j B worthy colours. IS.SS f H yil IINCOLN," NEBRASKA c I I I . i GIFT CERTIFICATES "for your roommate and other Uniersity friends7' UniEversity Lower Levol phasized this stuff, but I kept faith. NOT ANY MORE! In freshman English ihey expect me to memorize the phonetic alphabet. (AH those queer signs that sym bolize the sounds we gur gle.) This was too much, I'd just as soon learn the names of Sheik Abdul's 47 chil dren. UNBELIEVABLE! Disillusioned and hurt, I see what college really is: not a place to learn, of course. It is where you play games with your teach ers. Anyone can ""get th grade'" if he wishes, T h real test of the game is to see whether one has th tenacity lor stomach) to learn all this tripe. I see now that I DON'T Nebraska Union 'f t"4 ' ' i- ' -r .i-i.