THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Editorials Commentary Wednesday, February 28, 1968 Page 2a Larry Grossman Mexican way National highway 85 reluctantly enters the Sier ra Madre Oriental mountain range in the Mexican state of Hidalgo as if aware of the harsh path to follow. It struggles up the slopes in-a series of sharp curves and turns through pine forests and then descends with impatience into a region of wet, tropical vegetation. Banana and coffee planta tions line the margins of the road in the hot val legs. Corn fields hacked out from the forest cling uncertainly to the mountainsides. fT5 tJASYTO WANT ID BUT" WHAT VWR FftXRAM? mwMem fcURtt WRVTHIrJ& RW, fOUAXQ BY TROOP CaUFXTOJOf W6KTT0S. ice" we; mp Be fs Accepwae FRATCRMTZATIOU. Travel Notes our isetAcr stA el 4r -en Youth power College students invariably express an opinion on the country's top leaders with such comments as "LB J is a warmonger; Nixon is the 'Born Loser' personified; McCarthy is dreaming the im possible dream; Romney is just dreaming." But never do the 7,000,000 students enrolled in colleges and universities in the United States have the opportunity to express their opinions as a uni fied group. At last Time magazine is giving these students a chance to inform themselves about top presiden tial prospects for next year's elections and then participate in a nationwide primary election. ; The adaptable ASUN Special Projects has agreed to sponsor "Choice 68," a nationwide presi dential primary specifically for college students, which will be held in April on more than 650 cam puses. " Before the mock primary the University will receive information concerning presidential candi dates' platforms, foreign and domestic policies and political leanings. This information will be dissemin ated to the campus primarily through the Daily Nsbraskan. The results of this election will be highly signi ficant. The presidential selection of 2,000,000 (the number expected to vote) students, whether or not they are 21, should be very effective in gaining the attention of the numberous presidential hopefuls. ; Never before have the opinions and actions of America's highly informed and knowledgable young adults been given so much consideration or re spect. "Choice 68," however, will be most significant for the University, as next fall Nebraskans will be voting on Amendment No. 1, which would lower the state's voting age to 19. ; ; ' Obviously the entire state will be watching the -pre-21" set at all the state colleges and especial ly at Nebraska. If the University demonstrates that - eoUege students are capable of organizing a suc ; cessful election of this scope and then voting in telligently (and in large numbers) in this election, it, should make an impressive argument for the passage of Amendment No. 1. Cheryl Tritt Rodney Powell An ear-ful sS fciinmJ " " I was feeling guilty again (and I'm not even Jewish). Yes, the world was too much with me, I was too with the world I didn't know what was coming off (I couldn't touch that line with a pro verbial ten-foot pole). (But a twelve foot pole, maybe). I am a Walrus Not even my customary cup of Ovaltine could comfort me, so I knew that I must face the prob lem squarely, meet it head on so to speak, really come to grips with it. But I couldn't it had taken weight-lifting and had a decided advantage. Then it dawned on me (an unpleasant experi ence, requiring an immediate shower) that this in ability to even face my problem was, in fact, a symptom of my general malaise, it was this very tendency to evade reality, to circumvent the hard data of life itself which engendered my feelings of guilt. Reminded on every corner of this lack, I knew that I must strive to cultivate a sense of Respon sibility. That night as I went to bed in a compost heap (what the world needs now is lots of mulch). I knew that my Responsibility was growing it was becoming rooted in my system. Soon I would be responsible enough to handle a Total Education, responsible enough to close my door, responsible enough to kill some VC. Xo more guilt. Oh, it was wonderful, so very wonder ful, that by my faith I'd be saved through eternity. But the next day little doubts began to eat away at my seemingly solid structure (and I couldn't even call Otto the Orkin maa). Some wicked thing deep inside of me kept whispering Var." Why should that have bothered me? The little begger wouldn't stop "ear, ear, ear, ear, ear, ear," the word obsessed me, pos sessed me, taunted me, flaunted me. Oh, it was a wicked word! . I tried to be rational. I would go through the proper channels. Good old Responsibility would ac company me and together we would arrive at some mutually acceptable compromise. If whatever was whispering "ear" would be willing to whisper only dnrlng certain hours of the day, I would be perfectly willing to allow It to ai long as things didn't get out of hand. After all, we were all mature. The monster wouldn't listen. "Ear" echoed, re verberated, clanged, banged in my head. I was falling apart. I felt eary. Eary to bed, eary to rise, ear, ear. At last we reached a crisis. Responsibility him self didn't know what to do. I did. I was weak. I gave in. Ear's looking at you. Daily Nebraskan Fen. 28, IK Vol H, No. Second-class postage paid at Lincoln. Kete. TELEPHONES: Editor 472-258. News 472-2S8, Business 47J-2S40. SibKr.Uon rates re M per semrster or W for the academic year. PvbfHhed Monday. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday daring the school rear, except doraig raeau-n ajul exam periods, by the students of the mverrity el Nebraska nnder the jurisdiction of the Faculty Sabeoro mittee on Student Publications. Publication nhaJI be free from censor ship by the Subcommittee or any person ouuride the University. Mem ber! of the Neorassaa are responsible for what they came la ba printed. Member 4aaootated Colleflate Frees, National Educational Adver ttsttut Service. EDITORIAL STAFF Editor Cheryl Tritt; Manuinc Editor Jack Todd: New Editor Ed Icenogle; Nixht News Editor i. L. Schmidt; Editorial Page Assistant am Warner; Assistant Sunt Vein Editor Wilbur Gentry; Sports Kd 'or George Kauiman; Assistant Sports Editor Bonnie Bonoeau; News Ami tan Lynn Ptacek; Staff Writers: Jim Evineer. Barb Martin, Mark Gordon Jan Parka. Joan McCailouch. Janet Maxwell, Andy Cunning ham Jim Pedersen, Monica Pokoroy, Phyllis Adkisson, Kent ('.wesson, Brest Skinner. Nancy Wood. John Dvorak. Keith Williams; Senior Copy Editor Lynn Gottachslk; Copy Editors: Betsy Fenimore. Dave i;ipl, Jane Ikeya, Molly MurreH, Christie Scnwartikoof; Photographers Mike Umaa and Lisa Ladety. Brsrvrw STAFF Badness Manager Clem Fnendt: Production Manager thai lie Baxter; National Ad Manager Leeta Marhey; Bookkeeper and c.'as . at fied ad manager Gary Hii'tngsworth; Bovine, fcef-retarv Jan Bont naa; &etismptioo Manager Jane Ross; Salesmen I'n c nrk. i!iB Leaker. Kethy Drain. Todd aiaurhler. Debbie Mjtcheil. Joel Da-is. Lrsa Womatu.ua. 7A William F. Buckley Uncle George's mansion We have seen that George Wallace stoutly insists that he is not to be thought of as a racist candidate, even though he has never explained satis factorily why he was an en thusiastic national Democrat, in the tradition of Roosevelt, Kennedy, and Johnson, up until the moment when the Federal Government began to interfere with the will of Ala bama on the matter of seg regation. It is not as though, when Governor Wallace stood at the threshold of the University of Alabama and defied the fed eral marshal to carry out the court order integrating the university, he there and then repented of his former acti vities, perceiving the implica tions of state welfarism. He appears to be perfectly satisfied for Washington to collect taxes and remit the proceeds to the states pro vided there are no accompany ing instructions how that mon ey is to be used. He Is quite prepared to accept, for Ala bama, twice as much m:ey as Alabama contributes to the federal treasury. What he is net prepared to do is acquiesce in Washing ton's instructions on how Ala bama should run its s c h o o 1 system, or indeed anything e'se that Alabama runs, that bears on the question of race segregation. What will prove especially interesting about George Wal lace in the months to come is less his views (he has adopted the full paraphernalia of the conservative, even though he is a welfarist populist, catalyzed by his passion for racial segre gation) than his techniques. Here, as I discovered a few weeks ago, are a few of them. 1. Exaggerating the South's plight. GW: ... We had five generations of people who didn't go to school because there were no schools for black or white. , All they could do is eke something out of the ground to eat . . . (There were public schools in Alabama, and for that matter private schools, during the five generations in ques tion.) 2. So's your old Man. Buckley: . . . Certain poli ticians grew up in the South and lusted for participation in a type of government which is distinctively anti conservative, the type of government of which Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Johnson are (repre sentative). Then all of a sud den the consequences of that federalization also meant that they couldn't continue in their segregated ways, and that's when Governor Wallace was born GW: Of course, I was not even voting in the days that you're talking about. I didn't even vote in those elections, but when yon say that, be cause the people of the South voted for Mr. Roosevelt that made them anti-conservative, well New York voted for Mr. Roosevelt all four times . . . GW: It doesn't make any difference to me whether some prominent conservative is not for me. 70 of the people last night on a poll on the television station in St. Louis said they would support me. The fact is that I won the television poll on WIIC in Pittsburgh the other day and defeated Johnson, Kennedy, and Reagan by almost three to one. B: And they might have given more votes to Peron than they did to you, right? GW: That's artil smart answer. B: We know he got many more votes (in Argentina) than you got in Alabama. GW: I got more in Ala bama than you got in New York. 3. Nobody-Ever-Lets Me Talk. GW: Why don't you let me talk on this program? After all ... I thought you in vited me to get my opinion, but when you get on this show, the man that puts on the show wants to do all the talking. (At the point in the program, the moderator had spoken 178 words, I had spoken 269, and Wallace 845.) 4. There-Ain't-Nobody-Loves the Nigra-Lik-Me-An' Lurleen, GW: In fact, we don't have segregation in Alabama . . . I've always made speeches in my state in which I said anybody's entitled to vote regardless of their race or color . . . and we had Negro citizens by the thousands who voted in 1958, when I first ran for governor, land I might say, in the run-off governor, that they voted for me. B: Is that they didn't have the education you're talking about? GW: You reflect on the Ne gro voters of Alabama if you want to, but I won't Perspective on prose Twentieth century life meaningless Editor's Note: This review of Thomas Pynchon's V. is con tributed by Tom Holland, an instructor in the University's English department Thomas Pynchon's V. is probably one of the most ela borately plotted books since Proust. It has two separate narrative lines, each of which includes a great deal of ma terial which is, at best, inci dental to the story. What is apparently the main plot chronicles the life and loves of Benny Profane, ex-sailor and schlemiel (which the dic tionary defines as "an un lucky bungler"), during 1955 56. The second plot begins around the turn of the century in Egypt and proceeds at ran dom through time and space, ending on Malta during World War II. Profane's love life is unusual he loses a girl because she is in love with her MGr ,his jobs even more unusual. At one point he is employed as an alligator hunter in the sewers of New York. There he discovers the tomb of Fa ther Fairing, a priest who de cided during the depression that the rats would inherit the earth, and so set out to con vert them to the true faith. This sort of absurd detail occurs so frequently in t h e book that it becomes almost plausible. Profane's friends, too, are unusual One of .hem spends his life under an Army blanket, under which occa sional disappear food, drink or girls. Another is a painter Mho has devoted his life to painting Cheese Danishes in various situations. Perhaps the funniest epi sode with "The Whole Sick Crew," as they are called, is the one in which Esther Har vitch gets a literal and meta phorical nose job. But be neath all the humor, these people are essentially a pa thetic lot, and more realistic than the reader would care to admit. Cne member of the group supplies a sort of link with the second plot. He is a middle-aged clerk named Stencil, whose whole life has been de voted to solving the puzzle of the disappearance of his fa ther, a British spy, in 1919. The only real clue he has to work with is the letter V, re ferred to by his father in a letter. So his life becomes an obsession with this letter: "As spread thighs are to the liber tine, flights of migratory birds to the ornithologist, the working part of his tool bit to the production machinist, so was the letter V to young Stencil." This plot centers about a mysterious woman known only as V., who keeps reap pearing throughout Europe and Africa during the 20'i and '30's in scenes of increas ing decadance, brutality and sadism, and is finally killed during a German raid on Malta in World War II. Sten cil never learns much about her except unrelated inci dents, and the plot is value and shadowy. And other people and things whose names begin with V. keep appearing: Vheissu, a country "discovered" by an insane explorer, populated by irridescent spider-monkies; a Venezuelan revolution which takes place in Italy; Botti celi's "Birth of Venus"; and o n e of the nuns in Father Fairing's Parish, a rat named Veronica. All of this detail builds up into an elaborate riddle with no meaning; for, as it turns out. Stencil's father was killed in a shpwreck during a ty pnoon. The son's whole life has been spent in a pointless search based upon circum stantial evidence. But if S t e n c 1 1 ' s life is wasted, he fares no worse than anyone else in the novel. Tbe point of the book is that human life in the mld-20th Century is a waste: why not spend your life nnder an army blanket? Man is becoming "dehumanized," like art. This is seen most clearly in the case of V., who progres sively replaces parts of h e r body with artificial replace mentsan amber foot, a glass eye which has a clock built into it, etc. The drawing of "Kilroy" from World War II becomes a wiring diagram; and a dummy used for test ing radiation tells Profane that it is "Nearly what you are. None of you have very far to go." Machines are not becoming human, but man is becoming a machine. Esther's sex life is an operation for a deviated septum; Slab's "cheese Dan ish" paintings replicate them selves with monotonous regu larity; life gets us nowhere. As Profane remarks at t h e end of the book, "No, offhand I'd say I haven't learned a thing." Military recruiter ban lifted (CPS) Three colleges who banned military recruiters last fall have lifted the bans and several other schools which were considering such bans have decided to drop the idea. The bans were originally put into effect at Amherst College and Columbia and George Washington Universi ties after Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey sent a letter to local draft boards recommending that they reclassify and draft anti-war and anti-draft dem onstrators as soon as possible. The apparant reason for the dropping of tbe recruiter ban idea is a letter which Presidential assistant Joseph Califano sent to the presi dents of the Ivy League schools last December. Cali fano said draft boards will not be used to "repress un popular views" or judge the legality of demonstrations. Although General Hershey tersely commented that he knew what was in the letter "but I didn't write it" and the White House has not formal ly disavowed Hersbey's let ter, administrators at Colum bia, Amherst, and George Washington all subsequently re-admitted recruiters. The Army and Marines re cruited last week without in cident at Columbia, the first campus to ban recruiters. In fact, the campus chapter of Students for a Democratic So ciety voted not to obstruct the recruiters. However, there was some student criti cism of university officials. Student criticism of George Washington President Lloyd Elliott was even stronger when he lifted GWs ban al most as soon as Califano'f letter was released. Tbe stu dent senate passed a resolu tion opposing Elliott's action, but he has not reinstated the ban. Military recruiters volun tarily agreed to suspend re cruiting at Dartmouth until students and faculty could work out a policy. The ato dent government asked for a ban, but the faculty voted to let recruiters on campus, provided they will talk to any one, including opponents of the war. Faculty groups at Stand ford and Cornell Universities both voted that recruiters should be banned. Nothing was done at Cornell, partly because of the Califano letter and partly because no more recruiters were scheduled for the rest of the year. At Stand ford the academic council voted overwhelmingly to ban recruiters but after a letter from Califano to Standford President Wallace Sterling the faculty decided to drop the matter. I was returning home from Mexico City one Christmas and had chosen to follow the route through the eastern mountains. I started out early on the outskirts of the Capitol and by late after noon after a series of truck rides had reached a town with the impossible name of IxmJqullpan, I met three Mexican boys on the edge of the town who laughed at my efforts to pronounce Ixmi quilpan. They taught me tbe Spanish for turkey and then flagged down a bus going to their home in the next town. I waited half an hour more un til a Volkswagen bus with New York plates stopped. The drivers were two fellows from Brooklyn named Ivan and Harry. They had just left Acapul co and now were heading back to New York. Both were fat and tallcfed with Buddy Hackett accents. Ivan wore a faded T-shirt which had "Manhattan Speed Shop" stenciled on the front. He chewed cigars and kept up a steady stream of chatter with Harry. Harry was fat, but not as fat as Ivan. He had a face not unlike the Gerber -baby wearing glasses. Their bus was stuffed with cameras, two motorcycles, swimming and diving gear, and lots of cheap souvenirs. It soon was dark and we passed through tiny mountain villages lit only by cooking fires inside thatched huts or an occasional Coke sign circled by flocks of suicidal moths. The ride was so pleas ant that I started to doze in my seat, until I was shaken awake by a violent skidding of the truck. The brakes had locked at a point where tho road was only a shelf wedged between a sheer rock face to our right and a murderous drop to the valley floor on the left. Luckily we happened to be going slow and were near a narrow shoulder. We stopped the bus and inspected the brakes. Wt could do nothing new except get a mechanic. Ivan and Harry were not dismayed. They planned to get one of the motorcycles out in the morning and find a mechanic. In the meantime we settled back to enjoy our night in the mountains. I brought some food out of my pack and made peanut butter sandwiches and tomoto soup. Ivan and Harry sang Alan Sherman songs and laughed and joked. In the gloom of the valley we could see faint specks of fire from the houses of the corn farmers. Harry decided to give them a show and set off some fireworks. Several whistling rockets flew through the air followed by firecrackers and ex ploding roman candles. This lasted for half an hour and then we bedded down for the night I set my sleeping bag beside the truck and shivered to sleep. I was awakened several times during the night by trucks growling up the road and by the cold. By sunrise, I was drenched from the wet clouds that filled the valley. I walked over to the edge of the cliff and looked down into the tropical for est. I exchanged morning greetings with four pass ing farmers dressed in loose white pants and shirts Each had a machete stuck in his belt Ivan and Harry woke up and we got one of tho motorcycles ready for a trip down the mountain. I rode with Ivan as an interpreter because he did not know the Spanish for mechanic (mecanico). We asked for a mechanic In the first town we came to. There was none there but the noise of our arrival attracted a large crowd of curious chil dren. When we started up the cycle, they all screamed and disappeared into the forest We found the town of Tamanzunchale a few kilometers further down the mountain and discov ered a Chinese-Mexican mechanic named Kim Leo Lopez. He drove us back to the truck and told Harry to bring It down the hill in first gear. Tho truck was in the garage for the whole day. Harry and I wandered about the open air markets while Ivan drove around the city on his bike wearing a three foot wide sombrero. That night we left the city and the next day I parted paths with Ivan and Harry in Brownsville. . Texas. - Campus Opinion Dear Editor: There have been too many Professor X's Mys- tery Courses during my four years at the Univer- -sity. That is why I wish every college professor " could have attended the retreat held a few weeks ago by East Campus Faculty at the University of Omaha. I know that the retreat taken by over 110 agriculture instructors helped solve many course problems and create insights in their teaching. The symposium on instruction that was held was divided into three useful parts directed by three professional educators. The three areas were: 1) Establishing educational objectives 2) Instruc tional strategy 3) Testing. The taxonomy of educa tional objectives and programs lattices were im provements that many subject minded professors acquired. I feel that more retreats are needed in the fu- . ture to evaluate our college education and teach ing procedures. Perhaps the professors will even-' tually discover how to modify the behavior of a cessP f student8 to a "ortowWele learning pro- Our University Professors need to receive gui dance concerning improvement of instruction, as the East Campus instructors did. They can then supply to the students the storehouse of improve ments they deceived. I believe they will then remember that many students study not to learn but to avoid failing. I um confident that retreats will be continued in the future by East Campus Fa culty. Hopefully the other colleges will consider holding or attending such conclaves. Chris Carlson Ag Advisory Board