THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Commentary MONDAY, MAY 1, 1967 Editorials Baby There Is Action (EDITOR'S NOTE: Baby, the Unl verslt isn't such a bad place at all! What "a discovery! Don't insult us Bnd call us a cultural wasteland. Don't call .ni g bunch of hopelessly dull country boys. Because if you are here there can be action.) What's a nice person like you doing in a place like this. I mean really, what do you think you're doing here? It was probably your Mom and Dad who had al ways expected you to go to college, and because you wanted to get away from home, the university seemed just far enough distance. Or was it that all the other seniors in your high school were planning college careers and you don't want to be separated from your friends or lose your status? Maybe you had already completed your graduate work and you and your wife thought you could make better advance ment as a professor at a university which was more in keeping with your own cuU tural background. Or when coming out of high school, you had the choice of wearing a blue fraternity blazer or a khaki field jacket, and you finally de cided that blue had always been your favorite color. Perhaps you could see a better chance of finding a potentially suc cessful husban' here at the university and chose not to be a sales girl down town after all. Well, now that you're where all the action is, baby, what is the action? It isnt dialing the phone yourself and ask ing Mom and Dad for a little extra spend ing money or going for a coke in the Union to watch those guys in beards and wire-rim glasses and not have the cour age to talk with them. Nor is it action for the newest prof in the department to stay home to correct 120 extra, essay tests while other members of the depart ment are attending a conference in San Francisco. If you are the one who chose fraternity blue over Army khaki, action isn't get ting up early for your military science class and then sneaking back to your room before anyone sees you. And for the sweet young thing who is looking hard for someone to love her, action isn't catching the bus Cor her part-time job of validating parking lot tickets for a downtown de partment store. There must be a better way of staying where the action is and getting more out of it BOB SAMUELSON'S In the rush to get to the high paying job, the altar, the department promotion or the student body presidency, you'll prob ably miss most of the real action. The action, interaction and human dialogue, out of life. A part of that comes from the textbook and the lecture, but the more Important end is in you and other per sons. It's the huddling together for warmth and understanding, action and re action, interaction and human diaglogue, the wanting-taking and the having-givlng. Learning to live where the action is requires loosening up enough as a pro fessor to ask a few of your students to your home for some coke or coffee and an evening's conversation, or to accept their invitation to a party or for a beer after your night class. For a student it s skipping an uninteresting class to sit with other students and discuss how you feel about premarital sex, lack of need for student government, a professor's views on comparative religion, or about why you just can't seem to open up to people without fear of blowing your cool. Getting the most out of life is talking to your 60-year-old next door neighbor about how it was when he was your age, or taking the time out of your busy schedule to sit in on a juvenile court hear ing and talking afterward with a few of the losers. Probably one of the better ways of getting the most out of life is to find in other persons the qualities and characteristics you enjoy, and want from them, the things they can give you. Bend them, push them, pull them, and manipu late them, but without intent of hurting them, and develop a trust in them and the freedom in yourself to encourage them to do the same with you. It is in this place, where the action is, that you can practice with other per sons how best to live and enjoy life. You will meet success and failure in this ex perience of change and come to really know other persons and finally begin to define and better understand yourself. But you can't have any of this ac tion until you free-up enough to take it, and taking cny of it means to replace it with part of yourself. Where is the ac tion, baby? Take a look around. Take a look inside. How much of living do you want to take today? by Tom Helzer The Collegiate Press Service All The Lonely People (EDITOR'S NOTE: In his column for the last several issues of the Daily Ne braskan, Bob Samuelson, former second vice president and senator ef ASUN, is concentrating on student government, its history and its power at the University.) Last installment we discussed a short history of ASUN's development, its phil osophy, and one of its most important accomplishments, the Faculty Evaluation Booklet. We discussed at some length the rather rocky road toward its approval by the Faculty Senate Subcommittee on Stu dent Affairs. We came to the conclusion that because students had faith enough to stand up for what they believed, they were able to overcome administrational opposition to the booklet. Instead of taking up the second of the four major accomplishments of ASUN as was scheduled for this article, I shall turn toward a matter of very pressing importance. That is the Faculty Senate Subcommittee on Student Affairs and its rather dubious role in the University ma chinery. Procedure Unclear We mentioned last Thursday that Vice Chancellor Ross is the chairman of this subcommittee. It is not clear whether or not a subject of student concern must be approved by the entire Faculty Senate after it passes this subcommittee, before it goes to the Board of Regents for final approval. Neither is it clear j Jst what the Board of Regents must approve, for sometimes it does not consider matters of importance. In the instance of the Faculty Evaluation Booklet, the Board of Regents was merely informed of its imminent publication and gave no formal approval. The criterion for whether the Board of Regents is called upon to give approval of student requests, actions, or projects seems to be whether or not the Office of Student Affairs wants the measure to be vetoed. The Faculty Senate seems to be getting bypassed in a wholesale manner in almost every in stance. Visiting Hours Proposal The most recent case-ln-point of the Board of Regents acting as a veto for the Office of Student Affairs in the coed visiting hours proposal. This proposal was passed by the subcommittee and then voted down by the Board of Regents after Dean Ross spoke against the measure. Dean Ross was acting in a two-fold ca pacity at the Board of Regents meeting he was representing his office of Stu dent Affairs and also he was representing (supposedly) the subcommittee whose vote he went against in speaking against the visiting hours proposal. This is a clear case of a conflict of interests. The reason this is a clear case of conflict of interests is that the Board of Regents is not well informed on what goes on at this University especially where students are concerned. This is common knowledge among students and m z m m wm nv WPQCW ot OB VfciRlP. too MSlTt Stir . M a Srt 1111 1, Aid lb 6av Oe MAT 3 -l4.k W. Our Man Hoppe Black and White Arthur Hoppe faculty alike. The Board of Regents re lies as does Chancellor Clifford Har din on the Office of Student Affairs for knowledge of what is happening among students at the University. The Board of Regents, the Chancellor, and the students are aH fortunate in that the three prin ciple decision makers of the Office of Stu dent Affairs, Dean Ross, Dean Helen Snyder, and Russell Brown, are all very intelligent, dedicated, able and well-informed people. If any of these three peo ple ever leave the University and their power is turned over to others the stu dents could have an intolerable situation, but this is beside the point. Duality Should Cease The point is that the Office of Stu dent Affairs is a small body and no mat ter how diligent and intelligent the peo ple are, they are people, and as people they can make wrong judgments and de cisions. Also, because Dean Ross cannot act fairly upon matters in which either of his dual representations differs from the other and because the Board of Regents is at best an innocuous figurehead and at worst an uninformed detriment to the progress of the University, this dual rep resentation should cease. Another important question is wheth er the Faculty Senate should have a sub committee on student affairs with the pow er to make decisions which negate but seemingly do not affirm student projects or innovations of student policy. ASUN has not seen any need to set up a student subcommittee on faculty affairs. (It has set up a committee for closer student-faculty liason in order to bring closer harmony between students and faculty which is an admirable goal). Skeleton Bill But the Bill of Rights and the pro posal of the Ad Hoc Housing Committee are now before this committee for its con sideration. Why the Bill of Rights must gain approval from every body from the subcommittee on up is a mystery to many people. While it is true that the principles affirmed in the Bill of Rights are more apt to have immediate accept ance by the administration if the admin istration is allowed to approve them first, what will happen is that they will give approval to those articles of the Bill with which they have no disagreement, and they will not approve the special amend ment on housing and anything else which might cause them administration or pub lic relations difficulties. We will then be left with a skeleton Bill of Rights which will have no import ance or meaning. There was No re peat No special approval of the amend ments which were passed in the spring of 1966, and there is no reason why this spring's amendments, of which the Bill of Rights is a part should need approval. Once these amendments were passed by the students they were AFFIRMED. (Did the colonists send their Bill of Rights to King George for his ok)? It was one of those days, white clouds scudding across a blue sky, yellow green buds swelling In the park. Another spring, as fresh-colored and new as eternity's first. How good it was to be alive. On the newsstands, in the stark black and white, the papers told how the world was that day. A Russian cosmonaut, trapped in his capsule, had fallen four miles to the earth below. In Bonn, President Johnson was discussing nu clear proliferation with the Germans. In New York, Gen eral Westmoreland made a major address on the war in Vietnam. The Peaceful Snatch Is war an inevitable pattern of human behavior? That is the central question. v If your answer is yes, then the debate is ended. We can only count our bombs and wait for the in evitable destruction of the world ... and yet, werent there other patterns of behavior that men once thought were inevitable and intrinsic to human nature that have proved not to be? Gandhi Confronted What about human sacrifice? What about human slavery? What about the caste system that Gandhi confronted? The solution is tht we must change our wys of thinking from merely being against (which focuses and fixes our whole attention on what we want to forget) to being for. In this case, being for human dignity. For loving persons Instead of manipulating them as objects. The hang-up is that we figure that there must al ways be somebody we can categorize as the bad guys (we're the good guys of course), somebody we can use as a scapegoat. Must that hostility control us? I dont deny that we'll always have some hostility and dis agreements. My point is that we needn't lose our heads and fly off with the mouth and the bombs. We need to de-escalate the emotions. Nursery Rhymes Critics of the war as well as war supporters may be accused of losing their heads in these times of crisis. I'm not Just thinking of MarUn Luther Kine. I m thinking of my self too. It's very hard to be rational when nobody listens, when the government seems total ly remote from our influence. Its very frustrating br ing to talk to a brick wall. Somehow shouting at the wall seems a better release for our frustrations (la huff and 12 puff, and I'D 'alow the White House down . . . Yes, ell of life can be reduced to nursery rhymes). All I ask is just one week that will not be an "anti-" week for us. Be for something or, tetter yet, someone. Maybe be for reforming yourself as yot think it should be done. Don't be antl-PSA, anti-SDS, anti-hippie, anti-Greek, anti-Negro. I mean maybe it will seem like a pretty big vacuum at first, but then that tells us something about ourselves. If anyone must be reformed this let's Just work on ourselves at you yourself thins; it should be done. There's sort of a silent pray-in scheduled for Wednes day, but I'm not so sure we need to be urged to make that scene. I'd probably go myself but for you . . . only you know what you need. Make yaw wn scene this week and take yourself seriously. That s the start of human dignity. founded on debate, and he sees every protest as evi dence of crumbling morale and diminishing resolve . . . This, inevitably will cost lives American, Vietna mese and those of our other brave allies." The old man in the chefs cap turned to denouncing cheap wine. The smiles of his listeners broadened and they applauded tolerantly when he paused. Across the street, a blind lady with an accordion sat in the sun singing. "I was delighted," said the General in New York, "to learn of the two MIG bases bombed today." "Somewhere, over the rainbow . . ." sang the blind lady. She had a thin, flat voice, yet it carried well through the clatter of , ... the streetcars, we roar or DV Steve AbDOtt the buses. It sounded wist ' ful and beautiful. "I foresee in the months ahead," warned the Gen- His troops, said the Gen eral grimly, "are dismayed, as I am, by recent unpa triotic acts here at home." Outside the five-and-ten, a thin old man in a chefs cap, a tatterdemalion over coat and white spats was talking into a baby blue toy telephone hung about his neck. "The Lord says re pent," he announced, cup ping the receiver with his hand. "Are you ready to die?" No one answered. The enemy, the General said gravely in New York, "does not understand that American democracy is piwmimniimni Campus Opinion J Coed Shocked By Policy Dear Editor: . M ... As a senior who has thoroughly enjoyed and taken full advantage of a senior key, I was utterly shocked to day upon hearing that Dean Helen Snyder has contacted the Campus Police Department concerning what she con siders an abuse of the system. According to a fellow senior who has been questioned by the campus police about this. Dean Snyder h a s asked their assistance in "apprehending" senior girls who use their keys to stay out with their dates and i i i -park. She has requested that campus police ask to be shown the senior key for proof that the woman is a senior and then take the names and addresses of these women found parking after regular women's hours and give tne names to her. , . . ... I cannot help but question her motives for doing this and ask what she intends to do about these "infractions or "abuses." . Whether a girl stays out till 12 -- or 1 - .or .2 - w even 3 or 4 - studying at a library (yes, Virginia, there are some still open then) or parking with a date is none of her business. She consented to the key system philosophy on the grounds that a senior woman is a mature, responsible person able to conduct herself as she deems right, is Dean Snyder now denying this concept, saying that she, Dean Snyder, ought to at all times be able to slap the hands of those using keys in a way Dean Snyder con siders improper or, perhaps, immoral. The senior kay system can work only when senior women have complete control of their own actions and conduct. Its purpose is thwarted when Dean Snyder de cides to attach any more regulations and personal De lief. to its operation. Patricia L. Layma, Catlier Amendment Endorsed DearEditon thirteenth floor from the Cather Executive Council, although functionally meaningless, has pointed up many inadequacies in the government of the hall not the least of which is the fiasco that is erron eously labeled "the hall legislaUve process." Cather government is now an oligarchy. The Execu tive Council conceives, debates and passes laws without considering the sentiment of the Individual residents. Con ' sequently the present administration had met a forcible backlash in response to the recently enacted by-laws, de crees if you will. , President Bruce Bailey, not insensitive to pronounced public opinion, has now proposed a constitutional amend ment that would subject any proposed by-law to the ap proval or disapproval of the members of the individual floors. Under the proposal, a floor would consider the pending bill, vote on it, and Instruct its president to vote in the Executive uouncii as me nuui vui. This we feel, would endow Cather government with the representative character it so desperately needs. Once instituted this amendment would provide a framework within which the other difficulties plaguing the hall could be remedied. ... We fully endorse Bruce's proposal but at the same time wish to make it unmistakably clear that prompt ac tlon must be taken now. Any government incapable of giving a redress of grievances shall not long enjoy the support of its people. Cather 12 Trivia Contributed Dear Editor: x 4 .u . This is just a short note to contribute my bit of trivia to our campus newspaper. Recently there have been several completely unimportant errors in your paper and I feel that every cosmopolitan Nebraskan should know th! S"is not a member of the Ivy League even though it is located east of Ohio. Pembroke is not a university. It is the Women's Coordinate College in Brown Univer sity Classes at Brown are coed with only one faculty and "brokers" live and eat at a separate campus a few Checking on quotes and facts once in a while may ProveuseM- Eugene F.Maleski Outside Art Defended Dear Editor: . . . The complaints about the art department's "sculpture garden" can easily be answered. The students working out-of-doors are working there principally because there is not enough room inside the building. This was not the fault of the art department but rattier, a lack of funds with which to build an adequate building. We have been suffering under the lack of space for many months and with the coming of warmer weather, it was decided to move some of the students outside. I am certain that the work being done by the art students adds very little to the eye sore that the campus already is this spring, and we can all stand it a few weeks more. . ian wnamoeriaiii eral in New York, "some of the bitterest fighting of the war." There was"a candy store down the street You could smell the peanut brittle, warm and sweet "There are civilian casu alties in Vietnam," said the General, "and these are of SSmSnd'men'' WRA Complaints Tested A girl with long hair was passing out flowers with a genuinely lovely smile. Two sailors stopped and they laughed gently together. "I must honestly say that I am concerned about cease fire proposals," said the General bluntly. "Inevitably it will be a military ad vantage to the enemy and a detriment to our side." On the way home, I paused on a hilltop and watched the sun set nakedly In the ralnwashed air. And I felt for the first time (it always seems the first time) how incredibly pre cious life is. How precious it is to me and to the old man and the blind lady and the pretty girl and the sailors. How equally precious it must be to each American soldier, to each ally, to each Viet namese, friend or foe. How Incredibly full and joyous and replenishing the world seemed. Not the stark black and white world of newsprint and battle plans and global strategy in which our lead ers live. I mean the real world. And never, as on this spring day, had the two seemed further apart Dear Editor: I would like you to print this letter for one reason. I wish to see how much power is behind the complaint that WRA is unjust and-or unduly severe in its rules and the punishments based there on. Would anyone who feels that they have a legitimate complaint against WRA please call 432-4815 between the hours of 8 p.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Thursday, or between 10:30 a.m. and noon Sunday, from the time of printing of this letter until the dorms close (please ask for Terry Weymouth). If these complaints prove sufficient in number and validity, they will be presented in or offered as evidence for a formal case to the Board of Regents, the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs and WRA. If this letter proves unfruitful, there shall be no al ternative but to assume that complaints are based on chance miscarriages of justice and rumor. Terry E. Weymouth Daily Nebraskan TilNM. M u1 Mona-elw tartan paid at Lmceln, Hen. VIXKPUCNEi 477-87 U. BaUMtone KM. Mi ed KM. SabKrivtUa retae ere H per eerocatei or M tar the academic year. Pub H4ud Maaday. WaaMadav. Thnraday and Friday dariai tha eclxxK yaar. except donna Taoauoaa and aaam parted, by Ite atudaata at ttaa Ualvantty of Nebratka aadar tha juriadletloa ai the Family naasaimlttaa aa Mudeat pabilcatlona puhileeUooe akall be Iree tram eeamrahlp by tha Subeammtttae er any tenon utahia the Ualverttty. Hembera at the Netaraekao are reeaoaalbl tor what tbey eeane a fee pitalaa. ilambtr AaaariaM Collestaai Praia. National advartlrau Seniea, Incor paraiea. PoUlaaad at Boom Nearaaka HUoa. Uaeele, Smk., aHla. bditobual rrkrr BS4 Wayae Kreaaeber; Maaayjaa aVUtar Breee Otleai Newa Editor Jna mtai MlaTM Newt Bdllet Pas Benaetii Editorial Page Aaaistanl toeta PholiKi (aorta Editor Ed Iniaaalet Aaalatant Sparta Editor Tarry Oraamlcki Hualni gun Wrltara. Julie Uarrte. Cheryl TrW, Beady Ireyi isaier Halt Wrlwn. Mice Ura. Dartf kantslB, Roeet Bare. J he Evlneet. Oaa Leoaar. Peal Eaten, Mark Oordoa. Cnrte Carlaoni Newt Aaatataot Bueea Wtrttll Photofraehare. Mlka Hiyman. Deoa BeKlari Copy Bdttara Romaey Bestial, Lyaa Ana GottKhalk. Marty Dietrich. Jackie Olaacoek. Carta Stock well. DUae) Unrtanln. Aaa Boeae- d ii . n r.nw oinrr Btutaeai Manawr Beb Olnm Nattenal adwttftaa Maniesr Beyer Beye; Produettaai Maaaa.tr Charlie Baxtari Claaalfled Adnrtialna klanaeari JaaM Boatman. John ftemmlafi Secretary Amy Benakai Baataeat Aadatant Bob Carter. Glean PrKadt. Buaa Fuller. Ckrta Looiee, Kuthy Seaonley. Linda Jeffrey) aubacriphoa Maaaaer Jin Buaui Clrcurletloa Maaaaar Lynn Batejeni Circuit Baa Aaaiatant Gere Merer! Boekkeepeai Crals Martlnoon.