4 vw4mJ THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Editorials Commentary Monday, April 1, 1968 Page 2 - v- 0 T' A J ' ;' Omaha: the fire next time? Today the Daily Nebraskan abandoned the realm of a campus newspaper's usual concerns to examine extensively the racial situation in Omaha. Omaha is 50 miles from the campus; Watts is 1700; Detroit 800; but the distance in no way removes the stu dent from the atmosphere of hate, tension and racism which according to toe President's Riot report has seent the nation well on its way to becoming a divided people. Omaha did not have the guts of its ghetto torn apart last summer like Detroit, Newark, Cleveland. The list was 3errif yingly inclusive. Nevertheless, Omaha is seething and an abyss has opened rbetween city hall and 24th street. It is certain near north side residents will no longer sit placidly and fan themselves during the long summer days. The Wallace riots spewed out only a small amount of "the steam rapidly collecting in the ghetto pressure cooker. City officials, police, educators and powerful business men more nebulously labeled as the Power Structure keep -round the clock checks on the ghetto's pressure valve. They .readily admit we have a problem. ; And only the Power Structure can help the Negro bridge the abyss so he can walk out of the ghetto. Thus far the bridge has not been built and the Power Structure is to blame. These men have allowed themselves to become squeezed in between the irrational wrath of their white racist con stituents and the broiling frustrations of 42.000 Negroes. The results have been token integration for 80 Negro families who have broken into white neighborhoods and in creasing hopelessness and despair for the remaining Ne groes who watch their ghetto spread. The men who can correct the problem refuse to admit that white racism, not Negro despair, has laid the ghetto's rotting foundations. Until whitey fights as hard for civil rights as the Negro is already fighting, the communications breach will widen. For example the aftermath of the Wallace riots proves that the Establishment is pointing its white finger at the wrong people for Omaha's racial problems. One of the main limbs of the establishment, the Omaha World Herald, summed up the whole attitude of the city's white population in an editorial which appeared a few days after the riots. ; It stated: "It was not the white racists who invited dis order. It w as black racists and their white allies, including several nuns and members of the clergy." The Wallace incident also showed the ghetto's high tem perature is not being lowered by the dozens of projects, Tommittees and organizations formed by the Power Struc 4ure to cure the near North Side's problems. It is ironic that James Abbott, the policeman who fatally founded Howard Stevenson, participated in the police de partment sponsored summer camp to improve police and community relations. Stevenson attended the same camp. Zl The way the police handled the Abbott situation has also added to the Negroes' growing restlessness and hatred for the Power Structure. Again rather than show the Negroes 4rue concern for Stevenson's death by holding a thorough, 'Well publicized investigation, the Douglas County Attorney conducted a quiet questioning period with Abbott. The abyss opened wider. Z The educators who occupy another plane in the Power "Structure are also increasing the communications problem "between whitey's schools and the Negroes' schools. The Superintendent of Schools is the prime example of a man who can help solve the problem but instead talks about writing a book on the dynamics of mob action. He says only he understands the cause of racial tension within the school sysem. Then offers his solution a book. There is a bright spot in the ghetto and it will be found in the tiny office of the opportunities Industrializa tion Center (OIC) found in the heart of the ghetto. The OIC is the type of program the Negroes have been begging for an organization which they administrate themselves an organization whose success depends on their own capa bilities not on the half-hearted efforts of the white man. And now OIC and its father organization GOCA must be brought under city administration because of a federal ruling called the Green amendment. The Negroes are fighting hard to retain control of OIC but again the wires to city hall are closed. The Negro knows what he doesn't want. He doesn't want whitey administrating programs to serve a people's needs with which he isn't concerned and doesn't understand. As one Negro said, it isn't the black man who needs educating, it's the white man. And the white Power Structure must catch up on their education and soon. Negroes completed theirs a long time ago. A long summer lies ahead. Only the Omaha city officials can prevent an explosion which will be heard several hun dred miles past the near north side. Until the so-called Power Structure has the courage to fight for programs which en able the Negro to pick himself up and carry himself out of the ghetto the whites may find themselves on their knees. Right now nothing would give disillusioned militant Ne groes more satisfaction than to enact what has become their Black Power chant: "We'll bring whitey to his knees." Cheryl Tritt Campaign procedures The official start of the 1968 ASU election to day has sent Senate hopefuls off and trotting down the campaign trail. To alleviate any misconceptions about the type of campaign coverage the Daily Nebraskan will conduct the reporting procedures that will be used are listed below. Coverage of senatorial candidates . . . This week every senatorial candidate (who can be reached) will be interviewed about his plat form. The same type of interview also will be held with advisory board candidates. . . . Signed letters endorsing senatorial candi dates w ill be published. Coverage of executive candidates . . . Today the platforms of unaffiliated execu tive contenders and of organized student parties have been published. Next Monday the Nebraskan will publish ex tensive interviews conducted with each executive candidate concerning his platform, personal view points and stands on basic issues. . . . Executive speeches and debates will be covered if the newspaper is given a day's advance notice of the event. . . . Signed letters supporting a specific exe cutive candidate or an executive slate will be printed, although the paper reserves the right to to edit all letters. Till 5 MrdtbSlr H4arUt I Wayne Kreuscher f Ballot children ZZ For almost ten mmu'te9 last Saturday morn ing, I. my fiance and our two closest friends a newly "Harried couple were on our way to Wis consin to work for Eugene McCarthy. 1 The suggestion to leave for Wisconsin started as a joke but quickly became a serious plan with an early morning schedule of calls to employers and parents and check cashing before leaving. We knew our bosses would think we bad lost our minds and maybe even fire us. We knew our parents wuld be skeptical. One of ns had a test Monday which was soon forgotten. The others, of course, all bad classes to attend and papers due bat all seemed irreleveni. Also we knew that we really couldn't do much In Wisconsin with only a few days left until Tues day's primary, but nevertheless a conviction as strong as whatever makes a person young made us want to be in Wisconsin more than anything else in the world. After the ten-minute dream which was al most reality we realized that this time it was im- , possible. One of us bad a previous engagement which could not be broken or postponed. Yet for - a few minutes we experienced the feeling that is making hundreds and maybe thousands of other .young volunteers follow McCarthy from state to state. Wbea we realized that we couldn't go, the car became very quiet. I felt as someone bad just bit me in fie stomach and I'm sure my three com panions felt the same way. We have all been wearing McCarthy buttons 3or several months and recently actively working Jn Nebraska for the Minnesota senator's candidacy. -But for a few minutes just working in Nebraska preparing for McCarthy's personal campaign here was not enough. We wanted to be in Wisconsin where he faces his most immediate challenge. I know I'm terribly young and idealistic. Cynics . might laugh at my naivity and lack of eloquence. For me McCarthy has come to represent not only n excellent presidential candidate but everything :Y and I believe roost of my generation believe in honesty, courage, sincerity, mtellegence, tol erance, love, peace. For the first time since John ,F. Kennedy I think I have a national hero that I can respect It's nut iorprising that right sow hundreds of vi-of-state students are piling into Nebraska to Ziimk for the senator. I'm surprised there aren't ' hundreds of thousand. Spring show review Musical overcomes difficulties Editor's Note: This review of the Kcsmet Klub produc tion of W est Side Story is by Ken Pellow an instructor in the department of English. Give a theatrical group a strong actor as the Prince of Denmark, and that group can probably do a good Hamlet. Given a competent Maid of Orleans, a successful St. Joan ought to be produced. There fore, if a cast has a good Tony and a good Maria, it can turn out a fine West Side Story, right? Well . . . yes but it may not be easy. The Kosmet Klub's produc tion of the famous Bernstein Sondheim musical, at Persh ing Auditorium this weekend, overcame many obstacles to provide a show that was more good than bad; and most of the credit for the show's suc cess must go to Wayne Stoeb er, as Tony, to Becky Mc Spadden, as Maria, and to some expert technical man agement. The combination of these "positives" managed to off set a bost of "negatives," ma jor of which were a bad "theatre" (?), a lack of depth unions dancers, numerous spatial problems of staging, and a weary (and wearying) scrip. Pershing Auditorium may be a fine place for the Ice Ca. pades or the Harlem Globe trotters, but for final exams or musical theatre it is some thing Jess than ideal. As many a former Freshman English examinee can testify, a fatten lap-board echoes magnificent ly in that barn, but what the funny man on the loudspeak er said about Question No. 69 is missed by about half of the assemblage. So it is with staging a musi cal there: the thumping of dancers' feet or the sound of a dropped Coke-cup in the house is apt to come through more clearly than the words of a song. Particularly hurt, naturally, were those songs which included dance rou tines; when singers were on the move, they frequently missed the mikes. Consequent ly, such numbers as "Ameri ca" and "Cool" were almost completely lost. The importance of the posi tioning of mikes led te other problems. Sometimes it seemed that the entire cast was divided into those who were not sufficiently conscious ci their position relative to the mikes and those who were conscious of little else. This is to be expected, of course, when sound is suHi a key problem and the actors are relatively inexperienced (or have very UtUe experi ence in such a mammoth setting, at least). Frequently, one pot the impression that an actor was thinking "Now, on this bar, I go over here feet to the left, 'cause that's where I can be heard." This sort of rote movement was characteristic of some of the dancers also. This is ext remely unfortunate, for West Side Story is considerably more of a dancers' show than most Broadway-type musicals Indeed, its j a 2 z-ballet se quences generally frighten off amateur theatrical groups. Often, the sole motivation for a dancer's move appeared to be the fact that the choreo graphers told him to do so. if "Now I do this four times, then over to the other foot . . .") There is not much a choreo grapher can do about this; when cue is working with in experienced dancers, plotting every single move for them is undoubtedly a lesser evil than leaving them to their own devices. Nor do I mean to imply that the Kosmet Klub production was totally lacking in competent dancers. Not only were there six or eight very good dancers, but they were at their best wbea tbey bad to be: in the fan tasy "Somen here" sequence. Indeed, this scene, en hanced by remarkably effi cient use ef lights and back drops, was very nearly enough by itself to "make" the eve ning. Just one more thing both ered me about this show, and that involves the choice of show itself. Not only is West Side Story somewhat over exposed an extremely long run in New York, lots of road appearances, a movie vers ion, a couple of top telling LP's, etc. , but it's a bad "book." That is. take away its songs and dances, and what's left is nothing for worse! Perhaps these two facts are what effected the actors' re sponse to dialogue, which was to treat it as though it were something put ia to "fill" while somebody is getting ready for the next song. That's a very understandable re sponse when one is handling such snappy wit as: "I got caught sneakin' onta' the mov ies." "Why were va' doing that?" "Weil, I snuck in." These observations might give the impression that the show was a flop; by no means was that the case. As I've in dicated, the use of scenery was excellent, as was the use of lighting (despite the fact that the spotlights had to come from points about half way to Otoe County). But most surprising to me was how much of the success of West Side Story can be in sured by a good orchestra and two good singers. If the show's best "stand-up type" sonzs ("Tonight." "Ma ria," "One Hand. One Heart") are done well, the show can't go very far wrong. And in this production, these were done very well. Add to this a smooth dance routine in "Somewhere" and some spirited burlesque-type com edy Jn "Gee, Officer Krupke," and the result is an entertain, ing evening, which despite difficulties the Kosmet Klub presented. Editor's Note: Last Friday's political f columns entitled Doorbells ring liberals oe- mite, and He AHtceeded en a closd were I contributed by John Reiser and Dan Looker If respectively. M The columnists names were inadvertent- I mm, ly omitted. g mmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmammmmimmmB Joseph AIsop Johnson can still win the war Daily ftehrakan TH-H'tMwe: -ow warn, nw niem, Mmw tn-rm t.own m tm mnw K wa tntwu fur. at4 Mm, Wnmcr, Tnvrmr una fnw 4Mmt U- wt NH Uum M4 pem. to? OM tM m nt wru m vjmu waAcr am )ni4vtM m Om famti V 'IJ " vmnma timtrmtmu, M fct it tw ow. .'mSaum m " h iJtnrmfr. mm Saigon Any speculation on timing in war is always most unwise. But it will also be unwise for any American po litician to rule out absolute ly the possibility that Presi dent Johnson will be at the negotiating table or at least that he will be able to point to a decisively favorable turn in the war before the Novem ber election. That is true, at least unless Gen. William Westmoreland's replacement means the President is giving up. Ticking off the factor, one must begin with the one not ed in the previous report ia this space, that the Tet of fensive was a setbark for the allied cause but a dire dis aster for the enemy. His losses were fearful and the blow to his morale must have been very heavy. On the plus side of the bal ance sheet for Mm, his press gangs have been given a far wider range in the country side, at any rate for the time being; and to have his harsh tax coliectort. In the country side, at elsewhere, the ene my ) bow fighting a sfcrt rtnge war, with none of bis former care for popular senti ment. For example, An Xuyen pro vince, at the southern tip of this country, was a commu nist bamboo republic through out the whole French war; and except for Camau City, the province has been almost wholly controlled by the Viet Cong throughout this war. In the Tet offensive, Camau was sharply attacked, but the at tack was repelled with Heavy Vict Cong losses by the local South Vietnamese army JAH VV) units. Three options are ia I act open to the Hanoi leadership. They can go for broke again, with the certainty thai anoth er failure, if it occurs, pray God, will really leave them broken. Or they can decide how to negotiate on President Johnson'i terms, in more advantageous circumstances. Or they can pull back hard, to keep the war going at a low level through the election. As these are their only options the reasons for the a b a v e given advice to American poli ticians can perhaps be understood. iiimraiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiniinHiiiiBfiHMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiiiiiiniiniinig Andy Corrigan I Political parties: I peculiar groups ASUN election time is with us again and, as usual, the crisis has sprawned two vehicles for vic tory, i.e., political parties. A political party, in the American sense, tends to bea "group" of a peculiar sort, according to V. O. Key, author of Poutical Parties and Pressure Groups. If I would have searched Webster's forever I doubt if I would have found a more apt word to describe the campus parties which bave emerged for this year't debacle. Peculiar. Anyone who witnessed last year's PSA sweep realized the need for a two-party system at Ne braska but, of course, nothing happened. In fact, even PSA faded into oblivion. However, as political hopefuls regrouped their force this spring the PSA "flag" was again raised and seemingly had no opposition. The '6S version of PSA is quite different from the original model. Whether old PSA foes would like to admit It or not there hat been a facelift. Party leaders apparently realized that they could not expect to win a second time if they con. tinued to collect dead wood and frame it with stripes of red. A proliferation of new faces and new names now seems to be the only similarity between the PSA of 'C7 and '6a. However, it re mains to be seen if there will be any improve ment. Apparently non-party senatorial candidates fin ally remembered the force with which PSA took the '67 election and so the two-party system finally came to Nebraska almost. CSP Concerned Student't Party concerned about what I do not know but at least they are con. cerned . . . The new party bat no executive slate and con sisit of a few imrumbent senators who are rid ing on their laurels earned during the part year and many unknowns. Neediest to say CSP has their problemt as tho ASUN Elecoral Commission will not allow the CSP party designation on the April ballot they didn't meet the March 15 deadline. So without their name on the ballot who will be able to differentiate CSP candidates from non affiliated ones? So we come to the cm of our discussion for, in my opinion, the only value our campus parties have it their name. In other wordt, the way to g'-t elected to Senate it not through personal merit but through party labcL When there it only one party a problem doet arise for it it much easier for the constituent to vote for something he is si least familiar with (e.g. PSA '67) than to arbitrarily select candidates. Whether (bis situation It detirable it purely academic for the fact remaint that on a camnut !.. i, - U piiVSitaifjr iiaposiinw !T the votcrt to be Informed about all of the candidatei Therefore, party labels and their platformt cava' : toiulfke. ;