1 Thft Dairy tfebraskan Wednesday, April 24, 1963 'age THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Editorials Commentary I HAVr; m i act. mt?- FLIRTATIOUS VOW Awe? w me of w m- SOiAUTieS IS m with w WITH MY WITH MY WITH MV K IAtf5rl7t5e- 50k)- 9 IFC cure-all lor pledge ills .Mdny fraternity pledge programs next fall will become as outdated as Greek Week games if the Interfraternity Council today approves a proposal calling for the establishment of pledge training contracts to be. presented to fraternities insuring progressive pledge training methods. ""The pledge training contract was borrowed from a similar program adopted recently by Indiana Uni versity - The contract requires such inclusions in pledge programs as guaranteed study Lours, enforcement of no-physical hazing rules and prohibition of any - "nfcdge power" services which would be detrimental to a pledge's scholastic achievement or good health. Few of the contract's stipulation are new addi tions' to the Nebraska IFC's policies. During the past few years many progressive pledge training guidelines have been adopted but until now IFC obviously has not had an effective method for en forcing these policies. ( The pledge-training contract would be enforced bit, IFC executives who would have the option to ' enter unannounced any fraternity house which had signed a contract and start asking freshmen ques tions concerning their pledgeshlp. If the executives would find pledge paddle marks r evidence of the Old Guard method of produc ing fraternity men, the pledge contract would be re scinded until active members reformed their habits. J " -And what could be more of au incentive to re . form pledge programs than to have a prospective member tell a rush chairman he refuses to pledge - this house because it doesn't have a signed pledge Z training certificate. "It seems inconceivable that IFC representatives I would oppose this proposal since the majority of the contains policies that should already be in effect. - If IFC approves the pledge-training contract, r the University's fraternity system will become a '.- leader in promoting progressive pledge-training pro - grams. : Cheryl Tritt Rodnev Powell ) Trust and obey : .-Well, here we all are, back at dear old Ne-, bfa"?ka U after spring vacation. So much excite ment before we left the SAF report and the '. Faculty Senate's change in the grading system. So much excitement still to come Spring Day, -. Ivy Day and even (heaven forbid!) final examina- ) Yes folks, another year is rapidly drawing to , a close, and it is time to once again take stock of our situation and decide here we're going and all that.- This is not a frivolous task; indeed it calls for seriousness, high moral purpose and a strong de- termination to tell it like it is. No flinching before I the harsh, brutal, searing realities can be tolerated ; fersqeb, a quest for the truth. I liave before me the results of one such un compromising search for where it's at. Inspired by thejrandor and power of the SAF report, the lone crusader who completed this document on "Exper iences in Total Education" asks to remain anony mous. I shall only be able to present excerpts from this amazing report, but have no fear, the entire document will be out soon. And now on with the show. fart I: Students, Cars and Feeding of Same. Students are usually nice, only sometimes they ; are not This is not, however, sufficient cause tor ; the denial of visiting privileges or for the punish ment of spending a night in the box. Mature reflec tion will reveal to all that students, faculty and ad k; ministration, working together as a fruitful whole, can solve most problems just by talking about them. - Part II: What Total Education Means to Me I Total education is not a sterile process. To be totally educated is to be immeasurably enriched ; in mind, body and spirit. Administrative restrictions - are a necessary and vital part of this process of ! total education, for how are students to learn what they me to do what the boss says if not through I our educational system? I Tart III: Total Education: How to Achieve It M I To receive the full benefits of a total educa- tion, it is wise to keep the words of Alfred, Lord ; Tennyson in mind: "Theirs not to make reply, ' Theirs not to reason why, Theirs but to do and die." One may, of course, at times speak of the need for educational reform and student partici- ; pation, but we all know that this is acceptable dis- ' sent-since there is little fear that substantive change ; will jesult. Therefore, it is possible to work ma- . turejy, and responsibly through the proper channels Part IV: Total education: Exotic Variations Today's questioning students are not all satis fied with simple total education. Some, in fact, may press very strongly for changes and, in order to maintain the system, it may be necessary to compromise, with them. Therefore, it is permissi ble to have a limited pass-fail system and even a Free university. If such changes fail to placate the muWrity, reassert the ideals of the one true total education by instituting an important reform; for insjalice, make the grading system more precise. PafTV: Total education: The Answer to Our Prayer "It is obvious that without total education our' lives- would be significantly shallower. We would no"bnger be concerned with tests, grades and other important features of the total educational process. It is time for all of us to consider carefully the alternatives offered by irresponsible extremists and then to reject them. As someone in administration wisely said, "Only ,-te-wand obey." W REAL M m My WH wsew- 1 - mW5H WITH sou- DAUGHTER - Ihn. NMirfwvHalt ftyndtait MUCH lS HE A i i j v r William F. Buckley Lost between the subject and verb It must be very discourag ing to be a politician. Here is the governor of the most in fluential state of the union, running hard for the presi dential nomination of his par ty, richer even than Bobby Kennedy, abetted by one of the two or three most expen sive speech writers in the English-speaking world, ad dressing the editors of j u s t about every newspaper in America, delivering a much heralded speech in which he managed to spend 150-billion American dollars and you know what the headline is the next morning? In one of the nation's most liberal newspapers, devoting maybe second most linage in the country to national and world affairs? "Rockefeller SpeechHeard in Silence." Surely Mr, Rockefeller en visioned other headlines? "Rockefeller Solves-Problems of City," might have been one. Or, "Rockefeller Magnetism-Wows Editors" would have been satisfactory. Or even, "Rockefeller Speech Brings GOP Raves." But the reporter (Mr. David Broder, one of the nation's best) was as uninspired as the general audience, as uninterested in what Mr. Rockefeller ended up saying as the editors who heard him. A total of two sentences from the massive speech was reproduced in the morning paper way off, toward the end of the first-page story which began: "Governor Nel son A. Rockefeller of New York made his long-heralded debut as a 'non-candidate' yesterday, delivering a thirty minute speech on urban prob lems, uninterrupted by ap plause, to the luncheon meet ing of the American Society of Newspaper Editors at the Shoreham Hotel." What happened? Well, to begin with, the speech was so heavy with rhetorical pomposity that it would have required a Saturn IV Booster to launch it. Would you like a taste? "Our time of testing now follows like a twin heritage of challenge from both these earlier ages (Lincoln's and Roosevelt's). The signs of peril and the chances for leadership rise as high on both fronts: from within and from without our nation. For we are not only struggling to build peace in the world. We are also striving to live at peace with ourselves." If you believe that I select ed the single worst passage, I give you the peroration which, I have a paralyzing suspicion, somebody at Rock efeller's shop a c t n a 1 1 y thought was eloquent . . . "I believe deeply in such a new government, such a new leadership, and such anew America. "We as a people, have right now a choice to make. "We must choose between new division or new dedica tion. "We can live together as bullies or as brothers. "We can practice retribu tion or reconciliation. "We can choose a life of the jungle, or a life of justice. "We cannot have both. "We cannot live for long H 1 ! jtT in OX' t with parts and pieces of both. "We must choose." We must cut the crap. Really, we must. And it Is an objective Indication that such emptinesses are boring, that they bored the audience, and bored the reporters, and permanently traumatized the musers. "The audience reaction," says the account in the Wash ington Post, "was noted with concern by some Rockefeller For President sponsors in the room. One of them said after wards, 'I hope this convinces Emmet Hughes (the Rocke feller adviser and writer whose stylistic touches were evident in the text) that it will take more than the power of his words to nominate Rocke feller." A pity, really. Because Mr. Rockefeller is a v e r y able ' man. His delivery is first rate. He has great facility for extempore talk, and his ideas, if one excavates them from all that lard, are worth pon dering. For instance, the recogni tion that the private sector is five times more resourceful than the public sector, and that if the cities are to be saved, it will have to be largely by private enterprise. For instance, his observa tion that we are spending five times as much money sub sidizing our rich farms, as our poor cities. But it takes men of archaeological pas sion to find Mr. Rockefeller's Ideas in Mr. Rockefeller's current prose. Next time, he should furnish his audience with a trot. Two divergencies cause Polish strife Warsaw, Poland (CPS) The sit-ins, strikes, and riots at Warsaw University and the Warsaw Polytechnic School which have resulted in hundreds of students being arrested are reflections of two diverging trends inside Po land: an Increasingly pro-Russian regime with distinct Stal inist tendencies; and an increasingly anti-Russian populace. "A year ago," says one student at Warsaw Universi ty, "the regime still had some popular support. But now they have lost almost ev erybody's sympathy the stu dents, the intellectuals, the farmers, the workers, the military nobody supports the government except the high est level of the party bureau cracy." Such discontent has been brewing for some time, but the student protests which are now making news begaa much more recently, when discontent flared up over the closing of an anti-Russian play at the end of January. Anti-Russian sentiment is, of course, traditional In Poland, and has been strongly pres ent since the country was partitioned and occupied by the Russians in 1345. But since 1956, and particularly in the last two years, it has be come increasingly difficult to express publicly such ions. opin- dor. The order could not be The play which was cen sored, "Dziady," is a Polish classic written by the 19th century Polish writer Adam Mickewicz, and is normally considered to be an unim peachable part of the Warsaw theatrical repertory. The play contains anti-Crarist rather than strictly anti-Russian sen timents, but this particular production strongly empha sized the anti-Russian aspects of the play in the broadest possible way with the actors shouting each line and wait ing for the applause to die down before proceeding. The play was ordered closed after the third per formance, which was attend ed by the Russian ambassa- carried out immediately, however, because tickets for the next few nights had al ready been sold. When the news of the impending clos ing became public, crowds gathered around the theatre, forced their way into the building for the remaining performance, filled the aisles, the halls, and even sat on the stage, while even more crowded Into the lobby or waited outside. Shouts of "freedom for art" and "free dom for Mickewicz" (the author) were at times so fre quent and violent that the actors could not continue. After the performance, the audience, which was largely composed of students, marched to the central Daily Nebraskan Vol. tL No. April St, lMt Sccond-cluo pootam paid at lavm. fteb. TELEPHONES Editor 472-3SM. New. MlrtM. Butacu 472-2M0. Subscription rite in M m ranter or M (or Utt oodorale roar. PiblUkot Hondojp Wediwiday, Thttmdiy and rrtdar dnrtSK tlx school rear, except taring vacation ana nam prnoaa, OJ uw taici-ita of thm CuiverdiT of nbr-ka nuter th tortndirtlo of th raonlrr Jnbroinmltta' on Sudan PoMlrationi Publication! S"r 'T? rmm rnimmMp b the Subcommittee or anr parson ontatde the University. Members tl the riebraakaa are responsible lor what they aauaa la M printed. Member AaaodaMJ Collsrfat Press, National Rdoeatleaal Advarttslag terries. EDITORIAL WTKTT Editor Cheryl Trttti Manarhia Editor lack Todd! News Editor Ed teesoelei HUM Nrwe Editor J L. Schmidt, Editorial Pare Assistant Jane Wagoner; Assistant Nlvht New Editor Wilbur Gentry: Sports Editor George Kaofmaoi Assistant 'ports Editor Roome Bonneem Nnr Assistant I .van Ptaeek: Star) Writers: Jim Evtnger, Barb Martin. Mars GorOoa. Ian Parka Jons McCallowh, Janet Maxwell, Andy Cunningham. Jlir Pedrrsra. Monica okornr Phyllis AdUsaon, Kent Coekson, Brent Skinner. Nancy Wood John brorak. Keith Williams) Senior Copy Editor Lynn Gottschalki Copy Editors Dare FilipL Jaa Ikeya, Molly MurreUl Photo graphers Daa Ladely and Jim Shaw. , BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager Glenn Frlendt! ProdocUon Manager Charlie Baxter: Na tional Ad Manager Leeta Macheyi Bookkeeper and classified ada manager Gary Holllngsworthi Business Secretary Jan Boatman s Subscription Manager Jane Rossi Salesmen Daa Cronk, Dan Looker, Katiur DrelUi, Todd SlaugbterTCabUa Mitchell, Joel Pavla, Lyn Wemacojiia, square in Warsaw and dem onstrated outside the mas sive palace of Culture in pro test against the regime's po litical censorship. Special po lice were brought in from Poland's newly enlarged school for riot police "Goled rinow," just outside Warsaw, and in the ensuing conflict more than 50 students were arrested. Most of these were released after a short period, but three were held and tried for dis trubing the peace, which in Poland can be a fairly seri ous offense. One of these three was the son of a promi nent party member be was released with a light fine. The other two were sentenced to six months. This obvious favoritism only intensified public opin ion and, together with other evidence of official corruption and stricter official controls, has helped prepare the ground for the massive demonstra tions which Poland is now ex periencing. ' Compared with student movements in Western Eur ope and America, the Polish students are politically more conservative. On the other hand, considering the impli cations of being expelled from a university in a state where all employment comes from the government, they are also more daring. giiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiin Larry Grossman (Border CustomsJ S The border areas shared with our North Ameri can neighbors, Canada and Mexico, are geographi cally similar to the adjoining land in the U.S. When one crosses into Canada there is no physical dif ference in the appearance of the land. The same high plains covered with wheat in. Montana extend into the province of Alberta, the same forest and lake country of Washington continues into British Columbia. Crossing into Canada is like going to another part of the U.S. People look the same on both sides of the border, dress the same, live in similar kinds of houses and speak the same language. ' Canadians speak their English with a trace of a British accent and make constant use of the word ayeh (pronounced like the letter A) much as we use the word huh. But Canada, except for its slightly evident British heritage, presents the U.S. border crosser with no substantial change. Mexico is an entirely different story. As one travels south in the U.S. towards Mexico, he en ters a zone of gradual cultural transition in which the presence of Mexican people and the Spanish language becomes increasingly more prevalent. In Texas, from San Antonio to the border, nearly everyone is Mexican. The people are usually bilin gual or speak a curious language called alternately Texmex or Splnglish. When the border is actually reached, be it at Laredo, EI Paso, or Nogales, the people are 100 Mexican and the English lan guage disappears. It is hard to believe that it is still the United States. But even though the U.S. side of the border is entirely Mexican, it does not prepare one for what waits on the other side. Mexico is an ex plosion of life. The streets of the border towns at all hours of the day are jammed with shoppers, vendors, strollers, and loafers. The staccato sound of Spanish mixed with the ringing of bells on taco carts and the roars of diesel buses without mufflers creates a discordant sym phony of ear splitting sounds. The smells of strange spicy broths floating out of street stalls, the fetid odor of garbage and the omnipresent exhaust of partially combusted gasoline hang in the air. One's first reaction is that there are a lot of people in the town and many must be out shop ping at this hour of the day: But this idea quickly , disappears when one sees that everyone is always out on the street. In short, the Mexican lives" his life outdoors using his home for meals and sleeping. One is seeing the entire population of the town. One December I crossed from El Paso, Texas to Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua. The bus from down town El Paso passed over the sleepy Rio Grande . on the International Bridge. On the Mexican side, the driver stopped momentarily to let on two boys. One had an accordian and was blind. He stood in the front of the bus and sang a raucous song in . Spanish while his brother went down the aisle col lecting dimes and pesos. I got off the bus no more than 100 feet from the International Bridge. Standing on the curb was a weathered old man with an enormous tray of bot tles hanging from his neck. He rang a giant bell and called out the virtues of the waters of San Juan de los Lagos, only three pesos complete with non-returnable bottle. A donkey cart moved down the middle of the street pushed along by the angry honks of an an tique school bus stacked full of afternoon shoppers. The bus accelerated wildly through the crowded streets laying down a cloud of black exhaust as if to cover its escape. My attention was now caught by a line of peo pie waiting in front of a shop a short ways down the block. The women and children in the line were buying their daily supply of tortillas being stamped out automatically by a large Walter Mitty machine. Next a man rode by on a bicycle balancing an enormous tray of hot rolls on his head. The tray had a space for his head and he wore It like a giant sombrero. He was followed by a bike loaded with chickens In crates balanced uncertainly be hind the rider. All this was happening a few feet from the line marking the International border! Mexico is Indeed another country. The change one undergoes when crossing into Mexico is great. This results naturally from Jha contrast between a rich country and a poor one. But even more important is the difference in two cultures with different values and outlooks on Ilkfe. It is impossible to make a Judgment as to wheth er one culture is better than the other. Hopefully you survive the initial shock and learn to dig ths new culture on its own terms. 1 cannot but feel a bit of the absurd whenever I enter Canada or Mexico. The act of crossing an arbitrary line and entering an area ruled by a dif ferent government seems quite artificial. The land wp.s there before man created his states and marked off (he limits of his control. But then it does one no good to ponder such mat ters. Just be sure your papers are in order. t