s.-"?iinn!tiniiiu"i!iijiiiiiniii"nniiriMiniiii:iiiiiitiiTiMitiiniiiiiiHMiiMniiiini ltiiiiiiiiiMniimmna 1 CAMPUS hot? V' n, ? ( ... '.V, - 4 S -. . n v. v.- v '.' I t, y : A ' t : 1 4 fcoh The. Jo Stohlman, editor Mike Kirkman, business managei Page 2 Thursday, May 5, 1966 Week-end Activities Editorials get shorter and shorter at this time of year, because there is not 1."" 'much to write about. (You will notice : that if you finish reading this one.) After mulling over several topics which are editorial stand-bys ( AWS s . student government, senior honoraries, administration, finals, Outstanding Ne braskan nominations, etc.) we arrived at the subject which is probably dom inating the minds of students for the coming w eekend. - After two paragraphs of introduction, you may have guessed we are speaking of the Ivy Day weekend activities. First and foremost are the wood ies on Friday and Saturday night. This should occupy a lot of students' time. Then there are a few street dances and other parties. Sunday is the day of rest, that is, recuperation. Last on the list are the Ivy Day ac tivities themselves. This is probably true for most everyone except those being honored and those doing the honoring. A word to the disappointed-juniors-after-the-tapping-and-tackling is all ov er: Don't blow your cools; you've got all next year to be bitter. What He Has Done . . Yesterday Kent Neumeister spoke at his last ASUN meeting. He spoke of the challenges and work that student govern ment faced this year. And he spoke of similar challenges to be met by the new student government next year. Kent's words were well chosen. He has had a hectic, and sometimes rewarding, year as the leader of a new student government at the Uni versity. Larry Frolik, the outgoing vice presi dent, explained that Neumeister and he had done what they felt was right; al though if it was right was not always certain. That's all that can be expected of a student government leader. Few know the hours which go into decid ing what is "right." Many are those who are quick to criticize when they disagree with "rightness." But fewer are those to praise. Pos sibly that is the way it should be . . . quick to criticize, and slow to compli ment. In some cases that is true. But not in the case of Kent Neumeister. What he has done for student government and the image of the Independent may not be long remembered. We think it should. We thank you, Kent, for a success ful year. We thank you for hours spent for other students at this University. We thank you for what you've accomplished. But most of all, we thank you for your interest. IF ACTS By GALE FOKORNY Have you ever noticed the location of the churches here on campus? At first glance, one may see noth ing significant in their placement, but that is an erroneous judgment. Ev ery one is in a strategic lo cation on busy corners or near heavily used cross- - walks. They were all built in ac curate expectation of the pedestrian - auto problems that plague this school to day. The churches are where they are so students and other luckless sorts who wander into this area may pray for mercy before at tempting to cross the street. ', Sure, you say, pedestrians -on this campus have the unquestioned right of way. But as you abandon the sanctuary behind a conveni ent street-lamp pole, and step off the curb and out in to the dragway, you ask yourself if Parnelli Jones there in his super stock GTO, rodding down the yel low line at sixty-some miles per hour knows that he is SUPPOSED to stop for you. Am I really certain that this guy coming down the wrong side of the street on his monsterous motorcycle with his head bent down and wearing that spiked Ger man World War I helmet. - sees me and intends to stop? The assorted tread marks neatly imprinted over my back and cbest are vivid proof that I am not the judge of human nature that ;1 once thought I w as. In fear of my life then, I started asking people who do not own autos or cycles how they manage to sur vive and from them I have -learned some interesting 3 a A effective techniques -which when utilized, should get you where you want to go with a minimum of bumper scars and tread burns (which incidentally really louse up a suntan I. First there is the "Blind man's Bluff" method which has many variations. A pair of dark glasses, a tin cup (you never know) and a cane (preferably white) will bring even the most cold blooded truck driver to a tire-screaming stop (it looks sorta bad on the old record if you knock off a blind pedestrian) when you step out in front of him. Burying your face in a newspaper is a clever var iation of this method. If it fails, the witnesses have something with which to cover up what remains of the victim. Crutches when used right, will make almost anyone stop, even an experienced, time-hardened taxi cab dri ver. Regular canes, howev er, for some reason do not evoke the necessary sym pathy required to make the average campus commuter slow down, let alone stop. But then canes do have their advantages (have you ever tried pole vaulting with a pair of crutches). If you wish to invest a little cash in preserving what is left of your health, a shiny wheel chair with a few safety feature's is just in on a on the thing you're after. Safe ty features like a 007, spring loaded, ejector seat just case that grinning guy that Honda doesn't care what he h'ts. But money isn't essential to survival (although it does make it easier). Some peo ple have reported ad mirable results with noth ing more elaborate than plain cardboard box which TNT has been clear ly block-printed in twelve inch red letters. Still others contend that a better w ay consists of pur chasing an old army sur plus bazooka and crossing thr. street with it casually slung over, your shoulder They say it appears make the average driver think twice about coming too close. Whatever you do, where ever you cross the street, bear this in mind, never under any circumstances, look at the approaching dri . ver. If they don't think you see them they will probably stop. What sport is there in getting a pedestrian who didn't even see you? Also when you cross the street, make sure you have three things: track shoes, a Bible, and a large insur ance policy. With luck, the guy behind the wheel might miss permitting you to make it to class just in time for a pop quiz . . . to Vou'f TMOK ArrtR, "75 Velars 5oH.OUE. IOOOL.O BOY Gut ofpicep., twi, 1-5 do VOO J A OOPIOP- X W Ir f TOPICAL Sorry About That! Being a compendium of farce, humor and comment, selected arbitrarily by the Edi tor .. . Historical Note of the Day: In 1594, Quiochee, Massachusetts, angry Pilgrims fire blunderbusses upon tacky quahogs. In 1947. University of Nebraska, angry juniors notified that they are in Ivy Day Court fire upon Mortar Boards. One Board is wounded, while three remain in shock. Thought for the Day: The Pink Rag will come out tomorrow. Valid election or no? Not even the RAM Council knows for sure. We hear the Spring Day m ystery event for girls will be figuring out the racin? forms. Rose are red. Violets are blue Several got zapped, How about vou? the 2.0 minimum average for next year. They'll probably change that in the fu ture to a 1.5 to give all girls an equal chance. (Panhel doesn't have to worry about the draft.) The Mystic Six spooked at women's living units Tuesday night. We hear Vicki Dov.ling out-spcoked one of the Six. That's understandable though, since she started practicing early. The Six did a pretty good job in spooking, however. They tapped one girl who will never see a mask. Dear Hooker: Why haven't I heard from you lately? To Frank Partsch: Vagunnablheirun-satifsoihopeyadonttripporeyurscarcletrobe-euzumitebbarassed. According to the Iowa State Daily, the Mortar Boards are serenading in prep aration for tapping ceremonies. The paper notes that the president "said up to 25 women will be tapped on the ground." Kind of a curious place. Panhellenic is working bard to keep For those who thought that yester- the initiation requirements for sorority day's racing form was for Innocents, we're membership stiff. They've voted to keep Sorry About That! niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiin Anolher Viewpoint I I College Newspapers liJiimfjiiiiinirufiirfMiiiTiiiiiitnjiiJiiitiiiMiiinriiinuiittMtiMFiuiMffiiifniinf MiutittttiiuJtiifiiiMiciuci I More Letters . . . 1 Getting Desperate To Whom It May Concern, I've noticed that recently ALL the restrooms in the Physics Building have been designated "Staff." I don't mean to be crude, but after two weeks, some of us are getting a little desperate. Drew Enderline Editor's Note: The fol lowing is an excerpt from an article written by Jeff Greenfield and published in Harper's magazine entitled "College Newspapers in Search of Their Own Voice." I spent the better part of my college life in a grubby, ill-lit room full of pencil stubs, shreds of paper, paste, ink. broken chairs, typewriter ribbons, and can dy wrappers, ruining my eyesight and digestion, liv ing off cheeseburgers and potato chips, arguing with teachers, students, deans, communists, public-relations men, alumni, rascists, cler gymen, and my mother, who was convinced I was killing myself. For four years I worked on my student newspaper, the Daily Cardinal at the University of Wisconsin; for more than two years I was editor-in-chief. My method for getting new ideas was time-honored and effective: I stole them from every other student newspaper I could lay my hands on. I became convinced that far too many college news papers are indulging in a passive, timid journalism which is of no benefit to their readers on campus. Some papers have devel oped the art of saying noth ing at great length to near perfection. 1 once saw a col lege weekly, printed on the best glossy paper and fea turing color photography. MAG JrC 'JCING Tom NAG Mr. Everything Chancellor's Son-in-law Quiz Kid Old Yeller Teddy Bear Fig Robin D'Artagnaa Value Red Ryder Whisk Athos Porthos Aramis Drug Store Hubert Evil Monk Roomie liamlet STABLE TRAINER ODDS Martin's Parking Lot None Sure Bet Stone Fortress Hairy Loss Sure Bet Wayne Manor Good Time Sure Bet Checker Cab None (officially) 4-1 Acre Monkey's Uncle Sure Bet Harley Haven Eig Pig 42 Sweaty Wayne Manor Good Time 13-1 Wiling None Sure Bet Sheldon Annex Teapot Dome 600-1 London Tower None Fruit Celler Big Shot Selleck East Chemco Selleck East Chemco 395-1 10-1 Sure Bet Sure Bel Selleck East Chemco l'i-l Fruit Celler Big Shot Sure Bet Tomestone Terrace None Hangin Close Doric Disaster Casper 20-1 Locker Room Old Master ' 800-1 Suspended None 6,000-3 t ) On the front page was a huge photo of the homecom ing queen; on the editorial page as a paean for the school's president, praised for his courage and fore sight in approving funds for color photograph; on the back page, resplendent in academic gown, was of course a full-color photo of the president. The passive voice can af flict any campus newspa per, no matter how strong its tradition of critical and aggressive news and edi torial coverage, if the edi tors or staff are unwilling to give up the relaxed pace of college life and probe the difficult issues of higher ed ucation. In the last analysis, a free and active student press requires a separate commitment on each cam pus. It requires a core of students willing to speak out about a large number of topics, some of them involv ing touchy and emotional Is sues. It requires a hard-working staff, willing to give up a more difficult kind of life. And it requires, most of all, a school willing to let its students run the risk of making up their own minds, however mistakenly, howev er awkwardly, however im maturely, and to let them offer those opinions at large. But on the basis of the record made by the student free press, the risks Inher ent in encouraging the active voice seem very much worth taking. OPINION Haddish Robes Gellin Deai Mr Partsch, Im vooso smart sunnnuch finger out shosummev. er radish robes are gettin, whyent summun like Stole. mannnot grammask. huh? Im lceden neeple talk-think an finger out who goenivv. dav an grammask an snarfup redrobe, howcomen whynot did she not, huh? TJ,, cmno uill nnt hull? EveglaSS Will Wavfontno write? Writo, ole Parchcorn-fella. Seeyu 6nna greenon slat ernday. Mole Conscientious Effort Dear Editor, Innocents' Bystander sounds like sour grapes to me Could it be that he was an eligible bystander at the last Ivy Day or maybe nobody has spooKea mm yet this week. Or mavbe he s a jealous noDoay. I ask what Bystander has done for this University besides wear out the grass on his way to and from class if he ever goes. You can bet you could write his activities and accomplishments on the back of a postage stamp with a piece of chalk. If he's a junior I would encourage him to go to Ivv Day and just as an Innocent is sighting in on his suc cessor he could jump in tront oi tne onrusnmg red cape and fall to the ground amiast tne tumult ot congratulatory screams. Taste a little glory and see if it really would stick in your craw, i.e. ! If he's a sophomore, he probably just realized - that he's spent too much time in the library or the Crib..nd will never be remembered for passing tnrough this Insti tution, should he pass at all. It is high time that we all realize that, while Inno- cents and Mortar Boards cannot and do not recogniae- all the leaders on campus, they make a conscientious ind I feel verv successful, effort to single out for commerida. tion, those who have given a great deal to the University in time and talent. No. 6584833 'Production number of gunner-factjry jo Purpose Left Dear Editor, At the moment I'm writing a letter with someone reading it over my shoulder. What is with these things in Black and Gold wearing Lone Ranger masks? Are, they latest type of CAMP or are they some lost souls left over from a 5-month Halloween drunk? Luckily, and I thank my parents for this, I am of the wrong sex or else I would run to my Congressman for fear my constitutional rights were going to be viola'ed. These "spvoks" have all the aspects of the Ku Klux K an or some other terrorist organization designed to strike fear into the heart of all campus artillery women. . But, I hear rumors that there are some male ot at least I think they are of that gender) counterparts; to these "subversive groups." who dress themselves in scar let and cream Red being a color too often associated with another group out to destroy our society. Seriously, if one can be that way about these freaks, the organizations that these examples of chicanery str.nj for, have ceased to serve their purpose in my eyes, no matter how narrow I see things. No longer, I be!'"'" is it necessary for these pec'ole x I'Aan tljir Qtll n.iV,!r Vi nlnniJni'fi'nA jnntlnsi. . .f cheap costume: rather they should serve one purpose that of sciior honoraries. not as secret, and really fairly subversive, student power factions. I'm really not sorry about the fact that I'm not eli gible for these groups 'cause I'm only, 1 A Freshman Ran the ('ram! Dear Editoi , Out with final exams'! Ban the cram!! This is in response to your editorial in Monday's Daily Nebraskan. I think your choice of unit tests over comprehensive tests is excellent. Unit tests are a much more sensible measure oi a students' "performance" than anything comprehensive. Personally, I do not like to take tests at all because I have confidence in myself that I am learning. It is no matter whether I can throw hack the information, it is m ,ie important to learn to think. The unit test is designed to cover a specific period of study and work. It is no different than an hour exam to finish the semester. But the comprehensive exam cov ers EVERYTHING, which is practically impossible to study for in less than 30 hours. Some professors thV.k that a singie final exam is efficient but this is not so. Psychologically, students will studv and learn more if they had regular exams throughout the semester. They could not put off the studying until Dead Week became all the exams would have equal weighting. This wouid eliminate the necessity of a long exam period. For the sake oi students' sanity, I hope professors' do consider your programs. ; A Frustrated Student Tenure, Dismissal i Pi ogram Adopted Editor's Note: The University of Nebraska could; do well to fol.nw Gettysburg's lead In getting rid of Incom petent instructors with tenure. -Gettysburg, Pa.-(I.p.)As a part of its general pol icy regarjing faculty employment and promotion, Gettys burg College has adopted a tenure and dismissal program, to provide for any situation requiring the dismissal of a faculty member with tenure. The final program adopted the 1940 "Statement of Z"PC ic! of Academ'c Freedom and Tenure" and the 1J53 Statement on Procedural Standards in Faculty Dis missal Proceedings," both of which are approved by the Assn. of American Colleges and the American Assn. of University Professors. As stated in the Executive Committee report, profes sional Incompetence, gross neglect in fulfilling responsibili ties, moral turpitude or financial exigency of the college are grounds for dismissal. A change in the college pro gram ellm nating the need for certain courses is also rea son for release of a faculty member. A college spokesman explained that any problem f u di,sc:ussed with the professor, through his department. If solution could not be reached on that level, a committee would investigate the need for a formal hear- .,S ya?1S?trM,cd lhat a"y Pressor In question would be tried by fellow faculty members. Any final ac ton, of course, would be taken by the Board of Trustees. f i ..X f "f- f.