Thursday, April 11, 1963 Page 2 The Daily Nebraskan . .-..II .:. 3 - .-I THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Commentary Editorials .'I if ef ' -,: . i J J. X No books this summer "To me this course is what education should be on your own, some guidance where needed, but with all the mickey mouse cut out." v. This was the type of reaction the summer take home English course, originated last year, received from the 36 students who took the course. This summer probably no students, unfortu nately, will have the opportunity to participate in the course due to the inefficiency of the Arts and Sciences Advisory Board. ...... Last year Dean Robert Hough and a student senator worked for several months outlining an ex perimental English course in which students could read the novels over the summer and take an exam on the pass-fail system the following fall. Academic credit was given for the course. The course proved to be a tremendous suc cess. No students failed the course and most of them suggested that the course should be expanded to other departments. After the coarse was evaluated It was placed In the willing hands of the Arts and Sciences Ad visory Board last December. There the course died in the round file of un finished work which appears to be is much thicker than the file labeled "work done." The project would have required time yes but that is precisely why the students on the ad visory board were elected to contribute their time and efforts to improve the arts and sciences department. If the advisory board felt it was too overbar dened with other pressing matters It shouldn't have accepted the job in the first place. On second investigation it is extremely diffi cult to pinpoint why the other activities were oc cupying so much of the board's energies. The board laid the ground work for a senior seminar pro gram. They've been working on this project for years and it is still in the foundation stage. But otherwise the board has little to show for an entire year's work. Most of their projects such as the student advising system and the survey of six departments to be presented to the Unicam eral were in connection with Senate committees, so the responsibility wasn't entirely left to the board. A new arts and advisory board was elected yesterday. Instead of the usual year's work to accomplish they'll probably have the equivalent of two years work to complete. Top priority should be given to the summer take home courses, and the board must act now. There is a slim possibility that if the board organizes quickly it can still continue the summer program and extend it into other departments, but immediate attention is needed. Cheryl Tritt I Campus Opinion f Dear Editor: , Several members of the AS4000 AFROTC clasa would like to respond to an editorial by you con cerning ROTC. Some of us can agree with you on some of the points you made. Certainly the curricu lum of ROTC should be constantly re-evaluted and revised. Most of the AFROTC class members agree that the program is better for the Air Force and the University if it is not a required course. As far as ROTC's place on campus, that is for the University, the taxpayers of Nebraska, and na tional policy to decide. The military itself is subor dinate to civilian authority, and therefore it is ulti mately the people who decide the place of the mili tary. We have to disagree with some of your state ments. From our experience in the AFROTC pro gram we believe at least some are inaccurate. We can speak only of the Air Force ROTC program since it is the only one with which we have experi ence. We do not know of any cadet in Air Force ROTC who has taken more than the required 16 hours for the four year program or 19 hours if he chooses to fly. Your statement "many" enroll in more ROTC courses than required is inaccurate at least as far as AFROTC is concerned. We consider the last two years of AFROTC in particular more academic than many of the so-call academic courses. Since our junior year subjects such as aerospace, communication, management, organization, world events and principles of leader snip have been covered. How many former Air Force officers do you know who are on welfare? Many large corporations, airlines, educational institutions, and professions se fit to open their doors to officers leaving active duty. The Air Force possibly offers more chances for ed ucation than many civilian industries. Several of us will get our master's degrees and at least one cadet will receive a doctorate before active duty. Rare is the officer who does not get additional schooling while in the Air Force. Many return to universities while in the Air Force, to seek advanced degrees. You say our basic purpose is war. That definl " tion is yours. The people decide our ultimate mis sion so if it is war it is what they have decided, not the members of the ROTC program or the Air Force Our ultimate and overall mission is currently de fined as that of peace. Air Force officers hold a high regard for peace since they often see the dif ference between peace and war first hand. You say our purpose is war. You say our purpose is war. We ask you who airlifted food to the Indians of the Southwest during the snowstorm or who flew in the sandbags to Grand Island during last year's flood? This is part of our purpose to help when it is needed. Remember, whatever our purpose is, it is the people who define it and when and if they think that purpose is wrong, they can change It The Air Force is subordinate to civilian authority. One last point must be made. You say if credit were not given then ROTC programs-would disap pear from campuses. We doubt this. The College of Engineering does not allow credit in excess of three hours for any ROTC courses. Yet, we still have all the engineers our program will allow. As far as engineering students are concerned this has not made a significant difference. David Powell George Boeshart W.Eric Wood D. R. Murray Claude Bolton Jr. Sam Pizzo Jr. Brace Eickboff RouOelsligle Norman L. Mejstrick Charles T. West IP1W5 AfOP mvF Ik) A aw. wr w - rW 10 66TO0T. AMP I IF THAT S0M5' QXU) m OJt OF THIS BOX- I ROM THIS ATOTIVS IhiU a amp r CO019 -mime of cm- m FAC- AMP I 065AM AMP Tfl . UlMUKUOtt mrs so a ecpcf Mick Lowe Aim and the Reader's Digest If Nebraska has "an elite law enforcement agency" it must be the Nebraska State Patrol. Starched-and-pressed hulk ing six-footers all, the Patrol men combine to form an ef ficient, reliable, and even pro fessional extension to the state's legal arm, which is otherwise best described as a stump. Knowing this, and aware of the good senator Carpenter's movings and shakings con cerning drugs on the campus, I decided to pay a visit to the state's recently-formed drag control division, which Is op erated under the auspices of the State Patrol. The head of the division, the man who bears the dubious responsibility of. deflowering Nebraska's budding flower children, is Sgt. Wayne Rowe. Before my visit, I suspected that all drug users on the cam pus had reason to be ex tremely paranoid now I'm not so sure. But read on be fore you light that joint in the middle of an Emily Dickinson lecture. First of all, Sgt. Rowe def initely has his mind right for the job. He is a part of the Old Guard that still believes marijuana to be "the weed with its roots in Hell." Marijuana, he told me solemnly, leads to addiction, crime, and a general break down of the foursquare princi ples of ambitious free enter prise upon which our great country is based. The Sargeant had a filing cabinet full of literature on drugs including the report of the Task Force on Law En forcement, better know as the President's Crime Commis sion. The Task Force was chaired by that flaming radical Nicho las Katzenbach, and included such academic and social know-nothings as Kingman Brewster, the President of Yale, and Whitney Young, head of the Urban League. But the report on the whole is somewhat sympathetic to a more liberal legal stance con cerning marijuana. "T h e points made against it," (the present rather strict laws concerning grass possession) "deserve a hearing." So, I asked Sgt. Rowe if he had read the report. He had, so I quoted him several pas sages. I asked Rowe how the old theory that marijuana leads to crime held np in light of the medical report quoted in the Commission's findings: "The Medical Society of the County of New York has stated flatly that there is no evidence that marijuana use is associated with crimes of violence in this country." "That's not true," Rowe protested. He produced, as refutation, a Reader's Digest reprint entitled, in the best Digestese, "Cool Talk about Hot Drugs." I read Rowe another pas sage from the President's re port casting doubt on the old saw that marijuana leads to addiction. Rowe responded with a Xe roxed copy of I swear to God an Ann Landers Column complete with her wholesome toothy, and probably false, grin. I asked Rowe if he had ever tried any of the drugs he is so interested in wiping out with the serious thought that personal experience might help bis enforcement. "Who, me?" he asked. "No. Heavens no!" But Rowe admitted that if he were my age, he probably would try something. Rowe Is actually one of the most benevolent men I have ever met. I think be Is mis informed, naive and I dis agree with what he is doing, but I like him. As it turned out, the Drug Control Division includes four whole agents, which is prob ably about what the "prob lem" deserves. Rowe said he figures our state has about 18 bona fide addicts. Which gives us one agent for every four and-a-half addicts. As for the campus situation, Rowe said he uses his oft-discussed plainclothesmen not with the thought of persecut ing students, but for making "buys" in quantity as evi dence against bigger-t lme pushers. The Agency, as one might expect, is more concerned with the suppliers than with scattered student drug users. All of which leads me to the conclusion that there is little need for paranoia. Consider one of Lincoln's major "busts" the five non students caught with grass last December or so. The police stopped at their house after they had received some sort of routine call. But the men panicked and tossed their stuff-brightly-out a win dow, almost hitting the police man stationed at the side of the house as a mere observer. But a few final words of caution. The penalties for sim ple possession of marijuana are still severe. Pat Lilly, the University coed who allegedly left her stuff laying aronnd her dorm room could still go to prison for her oversight. (And, while that sort of thing makes for good Paul Newman flicks, it's not really necessary for total education.) Secondly, there is no need to discuss grass trips over cof fee in places like the Union cafeteria. Those who smoke won't be impressed, and those who don't won't understand anyway. Be especially careful when dealing with any sort of sup plierthat's where the heat is. Finally, If by some extreme mischance you are caught, don't say anything to anyone until you have legal counsel. All of those neat new Su preme Court decisions don't seem to matter much to Ne braska police officials hot on a good drag conviction. They'll nail you to the wall any way they can. All in all, if you can't stand the heat, stay out of the kitch en. You will receive little sym pathy from citizens of the state once you are caught. But, I suspect, the heat may not be as intense as some peo ple would like us to believe. Happy trails. . . William F. Buckley, Jr. Rest iii peace . . . but It is curious, and melan choly, that hours after the death of the Reverend Mar tin Luther King, and one-hundred thousand words after the doleful announcement of his murder, not a single commen tator on radio or on television has mentioned what one would suppose is a critical datum, namely that Mr. King was an ordained minister in the Christian faith, and that those who believe that the ministry is other than merely symbolic servitude to God, must hope, and pray that he is today happier than he was yesterday, united with his Maker, with the angels and the saints, with the prophets whose words of inspiration he quoted with such telling ef fect in his hot pursuit of a secular milleniarism. No, it is the secular aspects of his death that obsess us; very well then, let us in his memory make a few observa tions: 1. Whatever his virtues, and whatever his faults, he did not deserve assassination. There are the special few one thinks of Joan of Arc whose career dictates, as a matter of theatrical necessity, a vio lent end, early in life. Dr. King was not of that cast. His virtues were considerable, most notably his extraordi nary capacity to inspire. But although the dreera he had i seemed to many Americans, particularly the black mili tants, but not excluding many orthodox liberals, less and less useful (freedom now, in the sense he understood it, was a dream, mischievously deceptive), it simply wasn't ever required that, in order to reify that vision, he should . surrender his own life. In that sense his martyrdom was simply not useful. Be cause it is plainly impossible that, on account of his death, things are going to change. The martyrdom he seemed sometimes almost to be seek ing may commend him to his tory and to God, but not like ly to Scarsdale, New York: which has never credited the charge that the white commu nity of America conspires to insure the wretchedness of the brothers of Martin Luther King. 2. And concerning his weak nesses, it would take a luna tic (his murderer has not at this point been apprehended, but he is sure to be one) to reason that Dr. King's faults justified a private assassina tion. The theory to which most of us subscribe is that there is no vice so hideous as to justify private murder. Even so, we tend emotional ly to waive that categorical imperative every now and then. If someone had shot down Adolf Eichmann in a motel, the chances are tha4 our deploring of the assassin's means would have been rit ualistic. The only people who were genuinely annoyed by Jack Ruby's assassination oi Lee Harvey Oswdd were Daily Nebraskan Vol. 91, No. 7 April It IMS Second-claae pottage paid l Ijncom, Nov. TELEPHONES Editor 473-M8J. News 472-3Ma. Business 471-2580. Subscription rate, art M per semester or t for (he academic year. Published Monday Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during (he school year, meant aartoif vacation and exam periods, by the stud-nta of the University of Nebraska under the jurisdiction oi the Faculty Subcommittee on Student Publication! Publications ehatl he free from censorship by the Subcommittee or any person outside the University. Members of the Nebraskan are responsible for what they cause la be print-d. Member Asaodated Collegiate Press. National Educational Advertising Service. F.niTOKIAL HTAFT Editor Cheryl Trltti Managing Editor lark Todd; News Editor Ctf Iceoojrlei Night News Editor J L. Schmidt, Editorial Pan Assistant June Weaonori Assistant Night Newe Editor Wllhar Gentry: Sports Editor George Kaufmant Assistant porta Editor Ronnie Ronneein New Assistant l.ynn ptacek; fluff Writers: Jim Eytngar, Barb Martin. Mark (lor don. Ian Parks .loan MnTullough, Janet Maxwell, Andy Cunningham. Jlir Peiieraen, Monica ukorny Phvllia Adktsaon, Kent Cockson, Brent Skinner. Nanry Wood John Inorak Keith Wllllamai Senior Copy Editor Lynn Gottschalk; Copy Editors Iave Flllpi, Jane Ikeya, Molly MurreU; Photo graphers Dan Ladely and Jim Shaw. Btl.NES STAFF Business Manager Glenn Frtendt; Production Manager Charlie Baxtcri Na tional Ad Manager Leeta Macheyi Bookkeeiier and classified ads manager Gary Holllngsworthi Business Secretary Jan Boatmani Subscription Manager Jane Roaai Salesmen ban Cronk. Dan Looker, Kathy Ureilli, Todd Slaughter, ilebhi Mitchells ML XMvia, limn Womaco.ua, those who maintained a fasti dious interest in the survival of Oswald, for the sake of the record. Dr. King's faults, and they most surely existed, were far from the category of the faults of those whose assas sination is more or less tol erated, as we all of us more or less tolerated the assassi nation of George Lincoln Rockwell. Those faults were a terribly mistaken judgment above all. A year ago he accused the United States of committing crimes equal in horror to those committed by the Nazis in Germany. One could only J asp at the profanation. Ten ays ago in bis penultimate speec, delivered at the Wash ington Cathedral, he accused the United States of waging a war as indefensible as any war committed during the 20th century. Several years ago, on the way back from Stockholm where he received the Nobel Peace Prize, he conspicuous ly declined to criticize the Gbenye movement in the North Congo, which was even then engaged in slaughtering, as brutally as Dr. King was slaughtered, his brothers in Christ But for such trans gressions in logic and in judg ment, one does not receive the death sentence. Al Spangler The sad demise of non-violence "The policy of the Federal Government is to play Russian roulette with riots; it is prepared to gamble with another summer of disaster. Des pite two consecutive summers of violence, not a single basic cause of riots has been corrected. All of the misery that stoked the flames of rage and rebellion remains undiminished. With un employment, intolerable housing and discrimina tory education a scourge in Negro ghettos, Con gress and the Administration still tinker with triv ial, halfhearted measures." Thus spoke Dr. Mar tin Luther King, Jr. Presently, the Congress is tinkering with anoth er trivial measure, a new Civil Rights Bill. One of our own Congressmen, Dave Martin, has been an opponent of this bill. It is because of people like Martin that civil rights bills are "trivial, half hearted measures." The bin would ban discrimination in housing in three stages, covering the sale or rental of 80 of the nations homes and apartments by 1970. The bill would also, as the UPI put it, "crack down on rioting." One can only guess why a civil rights bill contains such a provision. The bill won't affect most of the people in the ghettos. They can't afford to move out into the suburbs anyway. Yet the press is making a very big deal out of the effect Dr. King's death will have on the passage of this measure. It was thought to be, in some sense, tragic that the news of bis death was followed quickly by violence in the ghettos. Yet there has always been violence in the ghetto of a less visible na ture which most of White America doesn't see or care about. Dr. King's death has been said to mark the end of non-violent protest. This is bemoaned as tragic. Yet how many of those who so solemnly mourn his passing could say with him, "I'm com mitted to non-violence absolutely. I'm not going t kill anybody, whether it's in Vietnam or here." Think about that statement this summer, when you read that some black "rioter" has been shot for steal ing a six-pack. The midnight raid Washington (CPS) Five Federal Narcotics agents recently roused students out of bed at 5:30 a.m. in a marijuana raid at American University. The agents said they arrested seven students, all allegedly dealers in marijuana. But university officials gave various other estimates of the num ber of arrests which ran as high as 17. The cam pus newspaper, the Eagle, said most campus sources put the number at 13. The raid had full co-operation of University officials. Graduate student counselors who live in the dorms "were all in coats and fles,M according to one student, who added that "they got all the dealers in the dorm." The raid involved three floors in one of American's three men's dormi tories. University President Hurst Anderson issued a statement dated March 21, that the university be lieves "it to be our responsibility to co-operate with federal authorities in the enforcement of drug control laws and to take steps to see that the campus environment is free from the effects of law violation in this area." University officials said the arrested students may also face disciplinary action from the Uni verslty. Many students at American believe the raid was planned on March 21, when the statement was drawn np but not released, but was held off nntil jnst before Easter Vacation, which begins Saturday. U.S. Narcotics Commissioner Harry Giordana. who announced the arrests, said they were made after two months of undercover investigation with the full co-operation of university officials. , Because many students had already left for va cation and were expected to leave before the hour of the raid, no action by students is expected in response to the raid. The Eagle, in au editorial, toe law "P ' SiDCe "the students brok This is the second such pre-dawn raid this year. An earlier raid at the State University of New York at Stony Brook resulted in 34 arrests on marijuana charges.