THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1969 PAGE 4 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN Dream remains unrealized: the story of Ho Glii Minh (&!IfiT!ir& Opinion analysis by Joel Forrester (CPS) He showad up at the Palace of Versailles in 1919, dressed in a shabby rented tuxedo several sizes too large. Like this, he had come to plead consideration for his people, those of Southeast Asia. But the August gentlemen of the Wett were too busy c nsolidating their gains and carving up Europe, to pay riuch attention to this skinny nnamese patriot, late of Boston, Mass. In fact, he was ejected bodily from the hall. Hopefully the full story of Ho Chi Minh will be told elsewhere and often in detail. For, root and branch, it is the story of our century: what men have accomplish ed, how men have failed. As in the death of Martin Luther King, the passing of Ho Chi Minh calls forth sor row and anger that a great man's dream remains unrealized. There is no need either to refute or excuse the ruthlessness of the man or his intolerance. Let the United States become as sr, little Vietnam, let it struggle for its identity against the greatest might yet called into conception. Then le it find cause for white-gloved com plaint. In his writing, he in variably referred to the Saigon merchants an I their governmental and military protectors as "puppets." Lest the accuracy o- the S0H9I I ! LEATHER S1I0? - - ' nir 235 NO. 11TH SHOES PURSES BAGS GIFTS MENS & WOMEN'S COATS DRESSES CUSTOM MADE SANDALS BELTS & WATCH BANDS. image be questioned, let the ventriloquist leave the stage and we'll see how ell the puppet talks on his own. It should be apparent to all oy now that revolutionary na tionalism has been the dynamics behind much social change since World War II. Its only rival for the motive force of mid-century man has been advanced industrial technology. Must it become iacreas ingly dichotomous: that we (the U.S. and Russia) have the ever-more-perfect gun and they, the ever-more-militant people? Is Alexander D u d c e k allowed to live only to the extent of his ineffectiveness? Did this apply to Che Guevara? Does it apply to Eldridge Cleaver? There's one revolution nobody can stop: the wildfire spread of communication awareness of what somebody else is doing somewhere else. The globe is shrinking. But if we don't grant freedom to the blacks and the Ukranians; if we still occupy Vietnam and Czechoslovakia . . . well, there you have it: the war to end all peace. Thursday, Oct. 2, 1969 Nebraska Union 3:30 p.m. YWCA-Womens Liberation Forum Union Public Relations-Jazz Concert 4:30 p.m. AWS-Court of Appeals 6 p.m. AUF-Executive Quiz Bowl 6:30 p.m. Phi Mu Alph Sinfonia D Christian Science Orban tion 7 p.m. Soccer Club Phi Beta Lamda SI-Y ASUN-Human Rights Union Public Relations- Fashion Show 7:30 p.m. Math Counselors Student senate discusses evaluation, moratorium Soccer meeting The University soccer club will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in the Union. Interested pros pects are invited to attend. The club's coach is Rudolpho Guillen, who has played on the Panamanian national team. The Captain is Victor Ummuna. The team's first match is Saturday against John F. Kennedy college at Wahoo at 2 p.m. Faculty evaluation, a Vietnam Moratorium resolution, and the sanction of the University of Nebraska Korean Karate Club were some of the topics concerning the ASUN Senate at its Wednesday meeting. The Faculty Evaluation Committee was taken from the table and approved after a good deal of discussion. An amendment to the ap propriation proposal in structed the committee to investigate and adopt all reasonable methods of cut ting production costs for the book. It also provided for two members of the senate to oversee the operation of the committee. A portion of the amend ment allowing the Senate to examine the way any one spends ASUN-appropriated money was stricken and later introduced as major legist tion. Student rights Sen. Randy Pner in troduced a motion to designate a Senate Com' mittee on Legal Rights. He explained that investigations of student legal rights are now handled by a subcom mittee of the Human Rights Committee. Prier said that the issue of legal rights investigation needs the authority of full committee status. The mo tion was passed. A resolution supporting the Oct. 15 Vietnam Moratorium was considered and approv ed. Sen. Dan Lawlor ex plained that the resolution calls for no action on the part of students. It simply puts the Senate on record as sup porting the moratorium, he said. Also passed was a resolu tion asking the "Union, Residence Halls, and all other organizations sup ported by student funds to cease purchasing table grapes. This reaffirms the Senate resolution of last year sup porting the United Farm Worker's grape boycott, ac cording to Sen. Orville Jones. A number of student members to various Facu'ty Senate Committees were ratified by the senate. Also ratified were a number of appointees to chairmanships of Senate committees. Oharles Faulkner was elected to fill a seat from the Graduate college. ASUN president Bill Chaloupka announced that there is another vacant senate seat in the Graduate college. He asked for ap plications by next Wednes day. Temporary sanction The senate also voted to grant temporary sanction to two student organizations until their constitutions are approved. These are the University of Nebraska Korean Karate Club and the Student Involvement, YMCA organization. Sen. Bruce Cochrane, chairman of the Community Services committee, reported that the Nebraska Union board has granted the stu dent record store tentative approval for first floor space. The store will be set up as a student-operated, non-profit organization, Cochrane ex plained. Any profit thai should result will be given to the University Foundation for use in the general scholarship fund, he said. Coed living promotes Hess sex JoiN tIje hooT REbidli)N Soft Olive Brown Grain Leather I I i 1 til 9 m re&mt Our price 1j(Q)99 Other Boots From 8", .19" Open Thursday Where You Always Pay Lest than Nationally Advertised Prices An experiment in coed living at a Stanford University fraternity house seems to indicate that sex relations occur less among house members than between males and females living in separate fraternities and dormitories. According to an article appearing in the current issue of "Look Magazine," coed living at the Stanford Lambda Nu house actually appears to de-emphasize BLOW YOURSELF UP sexual relations. A Look senior editor drew this con. elusion after spending a week at Lambda Nu, observing the boys and girls together. Quoted in the magazine, one Lambda Nu member, a male, says, "You think twice about sleeping with a girl when you know you have to face her the next morning at breakfast and at lunch and at dinner and at breakfast." At Lambda Nu, men and women have separate rooms and baths. The two sexes share the dining room and living rooms, although house members often study together in their quarters. One girl quoted in the article considered the pro blem of disapproval on the home front, stating: "My parents really got uptight about this (coed living). used to have nightgowns, so they gave me lots of flannel pajamas." The resident "housemother" at Grove House, another coed unit on the Stanford Campus, sup ported the premise of "Look" editor, Betty Rollin. A mar lied woman graduate stu dent, commented: "It's not that there's no sex here. That would be awful! It's that now we have well-thought-out sex, and well-thought-out sex is less sex." Black end White 2 fix 3 ft. Poster only $Q ($4.95 value) with plastic frame S4 (7.95 r.tlue) Send any black & white of color photo up to 8" 10" (no negatives) end the ntma "SwinKlme" cut from any Swinghne stapler or staple refill package to. Poster Mart. P. O, Box 165. Woodside. N. V. 11377. inclose cesh. check or money order (no C.O.D.'s) in the amount ol S2 00 tor each blow up: $4 00 for blow up and frame at shown. Add sales taa where applicable. Original material returned undamaged. Satitfac. tion guaranteed. Allow 30 days lor delnrem- TAT ai'""!... fj 1 STAPLER The worid'i lamest wlllni itaoler vl no laraer than a pact ol um. ONIY ll( with 1000 nil Itaatal THt 6RFAT NEW SWINGHNE f II R HAND LUD DISK J1APUM UNIT ti ll each. With 1000 llapltl uvu wniimt MM itmtKWiin iii. ini -VAN HEUSEINf You'vt liberated your libido and you'r ing the tcene! Now you can wear th with tht unconventional air, Van Heusen Hamtrshin House! The ihirt with the bold, brash ttrlpet end iwitched-on solid thedet. The one with the new wider spread Bredley collar. And with per manently pressed Vanoprest to let you skip the ironing drag. Kick over the traces, mini C'mon over to Hampshire Heusel rs r liiVi uii iK a jMiiiiiiii. r nun 15th Annual SIGMA CHI DERBY DAY October 4, 1969 Beginning at 9:00 A.M. till 12 noon Held on Mall South of Coliseum FREE DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT AT 9:00 P.M. BEHIND SIGMA CHI HOUSE FOR ALL UNIVERSITY STUDENTS (ElasstftrtiH Help Wanted Men day off with no classes? Come to Manpower for Interesting temporary unskilled lebor work. Report for work at 7:00 a.m. Pay tonight if you want. Manpower, Inc. 1342 O Street. Part-time Salesman and general lack of-ali-trades wanted. Previous sales experience preferred. ACE TV-Furnl-tura and Appliances. 432-4466. 2429 0 Street. Busboys to work for meals over noon hour. Apply Bishops, Cafeteria U25 P. Male, part time. 2 or 3 days a week. Desk clerk, no experience necessary, wlil work around schedule. Apply In person, Clayton House. '6 Brldgestona 350 Motorcycle. Call 432-7?i or set 204 Harper. In school must sell 60 Corvette, new '6 327 V-S, new Hurst 4-spaed, new 4:11 post, new convertible top, much more. $1500. Call 4774061. Honda S-90, call 434-4400. Stereo cassette system. AC or DC. Record and play stereo. Two microphones. One remote control. S12S or best offer. 435-2522. 1?67 MGB $1550. 435-2602 after 6 p.m. Personals Male Grad student Call 466-1266. wants roommate. Dependable babysitter for church nursery. 4t and Cleveland. 1:45-9:45 a.m., 11-12 noon, 6-7:30 p.m. 466-9376. Items Offered Rent i TV bw or color. Used TV $25 and up. Used appliances WO and up. New d used stereo portables con soles $35 and up. 1 rooms of furniture (new) 269. This week's special End Table S3.99. ACE TV-Furniture and Appliance, 2429 0, 432-4466. '69 442 2 DAT, low mileage, excellent condition. 432-2379. P.O. Box 762, Lincoln. 1967 Honda 450 In excellent condition. many extras, coll 46S-7040, 432-7073. 51 Chevy, good 5036 Benton, running condition. hems Offered Scott 260 Integrated stereo amplifier. Excellent condition. Professor Fink ler, evenings, 499-3265. Trombone, Bach professional quality. Case, accessories Included. Excellent Condition. S200. Phont 466-0(26 evenings and weekends only. Attention. Services needed at the Bunny Hutch. Report to "Doctor" Oberheu, alias "Speedy McDermit." 432-5450. Engineering roommate, sophomore or better. S room apt., facilities and park ing. 45th and Holdreg $31. Mary 434-7651. Lost, Found Lost Set of American Expo 67 Key chain, contact 477-6457. Motor keys on If found please RAP! s tTVvj 311 eye fr 2 JH nf an ear Dl 73137 NOTHINO ESCAPES THE ATTACK Of TERENCE, A YOUNG REVOLUTIONARY WHOSE ACID ROCK SOUND AND LASER TONGUE ARE AIMED AT SEX, POLITICS, CIVIL RIGHTS, CONVENTION. TERENCE TELLS IT LIKE IT IS. INCREDIBU NEW EXCITEMENT ON DECCA RECORD AND TAPES D&CCO There are 10,000 political prisoners in the land of the free and the home of the brave. (Men In prison for conscience soke) REPEAL THE DRAFT LAW Rural Nebraskans For Pmco Box 275 Shelton, Nebr. Coffee Hour 9:15-11 a.m. & 1-4 p.m. In the HARVEST ROOM (Union Cafeteria) near tht front desk Lunch 11 a.m.-l p.m. Dinner 5 p.m.-6:30 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Crib 7 a.m.-l 0:30 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. 7 a.m.-l 2:30 p.m. Fri. & Sat. 11:30 a.m.-l 0:30 p.m. Sunday COLONIAL DINING ROOM Waiter service 11:30 a.m.-l :1 5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Catering Service Available o luncheons, dinners tecs, receptions Phono 472-21S1 Rettrvationt Secretary HCRuAO.VMRfMEMBft MM PWCc.. WlltA MCTMJf.Sue MlUTtTO COUGRATUIATC CU HEUO.NOfctMU. how 4 Scut tiVful Mi HCV(?Mt,CAR ISCUTSrP. M, coif MtS.Spflttf. cm ne.Mrs.spiiJiEtMM NOT VtlCeKlUCi AT TPB COUOCO MAT10O. WITP A Dewea m cwejwiitv.v vil PKCrjAtV-v Be iw rut iB. OX- CpMiiTiy.' nu 8T i Mt A . biSATMtVUlf THIS I J "TO! 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