Thursday, December 15, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Vol. T. No. 50 Nebraskans May Miss '66 White Christmas Nebraskans will very likely miss the proverbial "white Christmas" this year, advance reports from the Lincoln Weather Bureau indicate. The warm weather of recent days is not really out of season, a Weather Bureau spokesman said. In fact the cloudy, cold, foggy weather of a week ago was more an aberration than the current weather is, he said. Normal high temperatures for this time of vear are around 39 degrees and the normal lows are about 21 degrees. Temperatures for the next five days are expected to average five to ten degrees above normal with little or no precipitation. War's Center 'Calm;' Saigon Seige Unseen EDITOR'S NOTE: The fol lowing is an installment on a series on the Viet Nam war written by Howard Moffett, former editor of the Yale Daily News. Moffett is a full time correspondent for the Collegiate Press Service and is presently working in Sai gon. Saigon Saigon is prob ably the world's most relaxed center of intrigue, violence and war. It does not seem like a city under seige. Sloe-eyed will-o'-wisp girls dressed in soft slit ao dai's and spiked heels walk narrow boulevards overhung with green elms or tropical palms. In iv.e market old men squat on the curb over a game of Chinese chess. Their women are nearby, chewing betel nut, grinning and spitt ing the juice through red stained teeth. At the Cercle Sportif Viet nam e s e and European girls lounge in bikinis beside the pool, while wealthy white clad warriors shoot tennis balls at each other on beauti fully grommed courts. In low-slung French colo nial office buildings, civil ser vants who have kept papers moving for nine governments in three years go on stamp ing and filing, conversing in French on difficult bureau cratic questions, and drink ing tea. The university opens a month late, and even then no one seems to know the exact date until one day classes break out, Young women and middle aged men wear silk or cotton pajamas much of the day. It does save time, because from 12 to 3 in the afternoon the city shuts down and people sleep. Newcomers are often baff led by the casual air that hangs over much of Saigon. "I thought there was a war going on here," one five-day veteran said recently. Safgon is hot and muggy. It Is also a place where war Is no longer an emergency condition but a normal state of things. A certain percen tage of t h e population has been engaged in killing as a profession for many years, and the tendency has been to turn it Into a nine-to-five job. A nlne-to-five job loses Its ex citement after a while. Though it does not move very fast, Saigon is one of the world's busiest and most ii Tin crowded urban areas. There are two and a half million people living here now, one sixth of t h e population of South Viet Nam. The city was built for about half that num ber. It has doubled in the last five years. Saigon wakes early. Curfew ends at 4 a.m. and the ten great markets of the capital open for business. A stream of peasants bring chickens, pigs, rice, vegetables and fruit into town. By noon all the food has been bought, the central market is deserted and rats the size of kittens scuttle along the cement gut ters gnawing on vegetable husks and other refuse. By seven in the morning main arteries are choked with battered little blue-and-yellow Renault taxis, pedi cabs, motorpedlcabs, bicy cles, three-wheeled motor buses, regular buses, motor scooters, jeeps trucks, Ameri can sedans, horse-drawn carts, motorcycles and swarms of pedestrians. The stalls of the "common man's PX" have been set up downtown. Army ponchos are spread on sidewalks and ven dors hawk everything from French toothpaste to Ameri can whiskey and C-rations. Mothers nurse their babies as they sit cross-legged in the sun, teenagers hold out sunglasses or cigarette light ers, tiny little girls grab your hand and stuff a bag of pea nuts into it, and everybody asks, "You buy? Cheap, cheap." Everywhere people are building hotels, apartments, offices, private homes. Sai gon's first department store Is going up on Tu Do Street. Off a back alley near a sewer-canal, truckloads of rubble fill In a plot of swamp and two weeks later workers are finishing the second story of a new house. Bricks are thrown up one by one to a middle man who stacks them while a third lays them in with cheap mortar. In the harbor, port conges tion ties up tons of imports for months, while a few hun dred yards away prices soar as speculators hoard the goods that do get through, legally or not. American GI's in olive drab fatigues hang from telephone poles, trying to bolster the city's sagging and over worked telephone systems, Weed Firm Policy ... Scott Questions Values By Bruce Giles "Very few fraternity men are aware a fraternity has any other basis for existence than to have parties, pledges and trophies," Richard R. Scott, assistant dean of a Student Affairs, told the In terfraternity Council. He said that the objectives of the fraternity as stated in its constitution are often not given any more consideration than lip service. Indications of an "I don't care" attitude, he said, are effects of a lack of know ledge of what a socail fra ternity is and its place on the college campus. "It is my thought that the role of a fraternity is some thing more than a place to live and eat it has to be, for the simple reason that you cannot compete on a housing nor financial basis with today's residence halls," he said. Individual Identity The fraternity system must offer a setting where individ ual identity remains, and where an individual is aware that others care and are con cerned about him, Scott added. It must also be a place where education in all its as pects can occur with a min imum number of barriers. Scott cited some problems FM Promoters To Give Outline For Fund-Raising Members of the University of Nebraska Student Broad casting Association (UNSBC) are planning to meet with the Board of Regents Mon day, according to Bob Wil son, chairman. The group will present a progress report and outline plans for incorporation and fund-raising, Wilson said. Wilson and UNSBC mem ber Tom Broad met Tuesday with G. Robert Ross, vice chancellor and dean of Stu dent Affairs, and George Round, director of University public relations. Wilson and Broad reviewed the organization's work in at iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii" I Giving Spirit, Season's Parties I Enliven Christmas Atmosphere if "' BELEAGURED BRAINS ... By Nancy Henrickson Senior Staff Writer Tis the season to be jolly and c a m p u 8 organizations and living units are merry making at pre-vacation Christmas parties. Most campus groups sched uled social activities during the Christmas holiday sea son. Activities have included tree trimming and house dec orating parties, and this week caroling and gift exchanging festivities. Winter formals, date din ners, a winter carnival, house parties, a wreath par . ! A which he has noticed and which fraternity members have discussed with him: "Concern for the destruc tion of an image which doesn't exist. Ah image to be a true projection, must conform to the inner self. It seems that the image you are so concerned about is real, and you should work to de stroy it. "The lack of responsibil ity which is so prevalent within the system today. "P ledge training prac tices which degrade the in dividual, allow hazing to con tinue, and which prevent the individual from keeping this personal identity. "Membership selection practices which allow a very small minority to exclude per sons from membership be cause they are not 'face men' do not have a list of ac tivity credits, or because they were not born with the right name or the right ancestry. "Lack of leadership de velopment in the chapters and the system. "Lack of unity within the chapters and between the chapters. "Scholarship programs which are only concerned with achieving a grade point average and then proudly pro claiming that you are above tempting to clarify the reso lution by the Nebraska Broadcasters Asso ciation (NBA) opposing the establishment of AM or FM radio stations by state insti tutions. Wilson said that several NBA members have said that the resolution opposes only commercially competitive stations, and not the pro posed student FM station. Ross said that the Regents might have reservations be cause of the NBA resolution, but added that this was only one area of possible concern. Wilson said that the of the Cornhusker staff rest up ty, caroling and open houses marked the social , calendar. The spirit of giving was combined .with the fun-filled atmosphere of the Christmas parties as many groups en tertained and treated chil dren to Christmas gifts. Members of Acacia frater nity went to Fremont last Saturday to give a party for the orphans at the Masonic Eastern Star Home for Chil dren. Sandoz 3 residents enter tained children at the Ortho pedic Hospital with skits and tongs. n a cii Wti the all-men's average, for getting that you only take the upper half and are com paring yourselves to all male students. "Isolationism which keeps you from being involved in the current issues Student Bill of Rights, free univer sity, draft, Vietnam. "A defensiveness which makes you say 'this is what society dictates.' Which so ciety are you talking about? The alcoholics, the unin formed, or the uninvolved? Is this with whom you wish to be identified, or with a society that is involved in government, in the welfare of others, is concerned about education, and is concerned about the laws and the rights and responsibilities of indi viduals. Scott then cited some of the objectives of fraternities as stated in their constitu tions, urging them to make a realistic re-evaluation of them. Character "Character means having a sense of responsibility and self-discipline, a sense of ob ligation and maturity," he noted. The faculty advisor to the Interfraternity Council said that intellectual awareness implies an acquaintance with UNSBC has been seeking clarification by the NBA. No official statement has yet reached the student group. The Office of Student Af airs is "not prepared at this point" to recommend the FM station to the Regents, Ross said. Wilson later reasoned that the Administration might still be skeptical of this new ven ture. Ross recommended that the group present its case to the Regents in the form of a summary of what work has been completed and what lies in the immediate future. 3k T , : J-'? at a Christmas gathering. Members of Delta Upsilon fraternity and Kappa Alpha Theta sorority will sponsor a Christmas party for orphans from Whitehall School. The Canterbury Club of St. Mark's-on-the-Campus Epis copal Church will sing car ols at homes of parishioners and Invalids. Cather Hall men were going caroling at Lin coln residences. Individual floors and units in the residence halls held Christmas parties this week. Students sang carols, ate pop corn and exchanged gifts with their "Secret Santas" or "Se cret Angels." Of Fraternities out-of class experiences, dis cussions, reading, question ing and being curious. "Certainly three or four hours of study hall five nights a week, test files and term papers which are available, are not intellectual aware ness," he said. Social Responsibility Scott said that social re sponsiblility "implies being aware of the laws of society, having concern for o t h e r s, not functioning in defference to these, but working to change them if change is needed." "Brotherhood means assist ing and helping your broth ers at all times and not be ing nice at all costs, not help ing him hide his problems so no one else knows, and not condoning or permitting the degradation of the in dividual," he added. Other ideals which he urged members to study and develop their true meaning included: spiritual welfare, fellowship, integrity, promo tion of friendship and ad vancement of justice. SCOTT . "Role of a than a place I fir I i f ' V "fciiwwrr"3' iiwiHMiiimiM i in ii i i Faculty-Senate Court Revision Suggested By Randy Irey Senior Staff Writer A revised charter for a Faculty - Student SenateAd ministrative Court was pre sented to the Student Senate meeting Wednesday by Terry Schaaif, president of ASUN. This plan is based on o n e presented earlier in the year by Sohaaf. The main change ' lies in the area of the judicial powers of the court. The change is most appar ent in AWS. Schaaf said that it was his understanding that, pending the revision of t h e AWS constitution, a separate and ind'ependent court struc ture would be formed, with disciplinary appeal action probably going to Student Tribunal. In the original version, the court's power extended to cases of appeal from AWS Court, Student Court, Student Tribunal, and cases of origi nal jurisdiction involving the Dean of Student Affairs, the Dean of Women, or a Faculty Senate committee, and a stu dent organization or regula tory body. However, at the request of the Student Court, Schaaf has decreased the number of the areas over which the court would have jur isdiction. The court could now hear appeal cases from the Student Court, Student Tribunal, and cases involving an office of the administra tion or Board of Regents, the Faculty Senate and its com mittees, the ASUN and its committees, and any other student organization, as long as it does not come under the jurisdiction of the Student Court or Tribunal. The Senate approved a res oluation calling for the or ganization of a Community Relations Council. This coun cil would be composed of in dividuals such as the mayor of Lincoln, the fire and police chiefs, individuals in the of fice of Student Affairs, presi dents of ASUN, IFC, AWS, and others. The purpose of the council would be to provide an oppor tunity for the various group represented to get to k n o w each other better and to dis Scott noted that higher ed ucation is changing, the coun try is changing and that the fraternity system should change with them. In order to facilitate this change in the fraternity sys tem he offered several sug gestions: IFC and the chapters should take more firm stand on their policies. A "we can't" attitude is no longer appropriate. "You know the system better than any one waiting until some thing is brought to your at tention by Student Affairs is no longer adequate," he said. "Use your fine system good or bad depending on your point of view, and create something a loan program, a Greek speaks program," he added. A pledge training pro gram geared to "total educa tion." Discover what a frater nity is through discussion and education. A program which does not hide your problems but deals with them. fraternity is something more to live and eat." cuss mutual problems and possible conflicts. Roger D o e r r, vice presi dent of ASUN. introduced the topic of a tuition hike for dis cussion. Rich Thompson said that University students should be prepared to pay their share of the University costs. "Presently, according to a recent study, the student pays 43 per cent of the costs of the University through his tui tion. The student should be prepared to pay an increase in his tuition, as long as it does not exceed the current prrcentage," Thompson de clared. It was then pointed out that it costs the University $600 a year to educate freshmen and sophomores, and an average of $900 for juniors and sen iors. Bob Samuelson explained that out-of-state students pay a tuition that exceeds the costs incurred by the Univer siy. Curt Bromm suggested that the Student Senate should do nothing but sit tight at the present time concerning a tuition increase. "If we came out against a tuition rise, it would be the wrong thing to do in respect to getting the proposed budget approved." "The Student Senate should wait and see what the legisla ture does in regard to the budget. At the present time, it is undeterminable what our fair share of the costs should be," he said. Aplications Due For A&S Board Applications are now avail able in the ASUN office for positions on the Arts and Sci ence advisory board. The applications should j returned to the office by 5 p.m. Thursday. Interviews are Friday and Monday. The members of the board, which recently was voted a new constitution, will . serve until spring elections. The ASUN advisory board n mittee will choose the new members. hi I i I f V.; Tf - K m I"! 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