PAGE 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1969 Students' union? Editor's Nole: The following letter was submit ted for the Open Forum column. Answers from Union officials to many of the complaints are on Page 1. Dear Sir: 'The "Student" Union, soon to be embellished with a reflecting pool of dubious aesthetic value4"' and certain high cost, puzzles me. Students con sistently meet high prices and poor service at an institution purporting to serve them. Some minor examples: The cost of a box of tissue paper in the Union is $.35, whereas the same box of tissue is $.30 at the local grocery store. The cost of a package of cigarettes similarly increases at the Union. The student meets also predictably wretched coffee which is to be enjoyed in marvelously unkemipt surroundings. Tables go uncleaned even during the slackest periods of the day. The floors lack a modicum of hygenic care. The prices of food items have been rasied while the quality has diminished. Is this the sort of service the student is entitled to? The individual student pays $12.00 per academic year to the Union. With the enrollment of full-time students at 16,590, the Union is given $199,080.00 per academic year in support of its activities. But what is the range of appeal of these activities? Sergio Mendes is a fine musician, but the at tendance at his concert demonstrates that few students are able to afford between $3.75 and $4.75 per ticket, especially if they are treating dates. Some of the money given the Union may support the weekend film program, but this is carried out in a theater capable of holding about 1 of the student population. Should the other 99 of the students pay for such obviously expensive films? I doubt it. Does this money keep the building open at hours convenient to the students such as Sunday morning? No. Does it buy a series of ludicrous grandfather clocks for the lounge of the Union? Yes. It also pays for the color television which daily mesmerizes hundreds of soap addicts. Are the students paying also for the exclusive use of the building? I see no one checking student I.D.s on football days now should I. My point is that the Unlen is obviously a profit-making in stitution open to the public. As such It should not be supported with monies taken from the students during registration. As students we are receiving a minimum of service in return for a highly generous subsidy. If we are to continue this support, the building and its activities should be directed toward the convenience and the enjoyment of the majority of students not toward those of the Union ad ministrators and a minority of students. If the administrations of the Union and of the university can give good reason why the present financial support of the Union should be continued, they are obliged to make these reasons public. David R. Carr DAILY NEBRASKAN Saeontt clau pottage paid Lincoln, Neo. Telephone,. Idilor 471-UM. Ntwt 471-UOT, Business Subscription relet art M par ttmester or M par year. Published Monday, Wednesday, Thurtday and Friday during lha chool yaar axcept during vacations and axam periods at M Na- braika Union, Lincoln Nab. Member o Intereollejlate Pratt, National Iducatlonal Advertising lervlce. The Dally Nebraskan b a itvdant publication. Independent of ttie University o Nebratka't administration, faculty and ttudenl government. dltorlal Staff Idltor ftetjer ioye; Managing editor Kent Cockson, Newt Editor Jim Pederteni Night Newt Idltor J. L. Schmidt, Dave Filipl; dltorlal Assistant Holly ftosenbergeri Assistant Newt Idltor Janet Maxwell) Sports Idltor Randy York) Nebraskan Staff Writers) John Dvorak, llll Smltherman. Sara Schwiedor, Oary Seacrest, Steve Sinclair, Bachlttar Singh, Linda McCiure, Mike Barrett, Sue Fettey, Sylvl Lee, Ron Whltten, Carol Anderson; Photographers Dan Ladely, Jim Dean, Howard Rosenberg, Mike Hayman Copy Idltor Sutan Matid, Jan Parks, Suil Schllche hitler, Phyllla Adklaton. Buslnttt Staff utlnett Manager Id Icenogio) Local Ad Manager J. L. Schmidt! National Ad Manager Margaret Ann Browni Bookkeeper Ron Bowllni Business Secretary and Subscription Manager Janet Boelment Circulation Manager Jamet Slelier; Classified Ad Manager June Wagoneri Advertising Representatives J. L. Schmidt, Margaret Ann Brown. Joel Oavit, Jot Wilton, Llnd fete to wr BrrmzKEvr of eta.iuer, fast ro culture, cxwwe TO AfTUtCTU4L tEVlOPHMT, AM TH? Fwg Vfm$ M UPS . Nebraskan editorials at . Ron Alexander It's high time we as students take a critical look at the Student Union, its operations, its pro grams, and its philosophy. Few people realize that the Union is built by student fee money, operated on student fee money, and that every aspect of the Union operation is financed by part of the $52 per semester paid in student fees and from profit from our fee money. Almost $20 per semester of student fees goes to the Union, the rest going to Student Health, ASUN and other projects. Students have representative control over the funds of ASUN through the Senate. No such control exists over the fee expenditures of Union and Student Health. The Union is run by a board composed of four students, two faculty members, and the Direc tor of the Union. Student members of the board Agiiew modeled on Nixon of 50s by Frank Manklewtcz and Tom Braden Washington "The Vice President of the United States should never be a nonentity," spoke Richard Nixon when he was Vice President. "I believe he should have a very useful job." Granted the self-serving quality of this remark only a Vice President as puritanical as Jqhn Adams could tell the truth about the job it Is unlikely that Richard Nixon is in the slightest degree worried about the recent public performance of Vice President Splro Agnew. Agnew has taken his lumps from the press and from liberals and moderates in both parties for such affronts to good taste and the English language as: "(The moratorium) served as an emotional purgative for those who feel the need to cleanse themselves ..." It's been a long time since a high-ranking of. flclal has spoken so scatologically. Hut he went on. "(The moratorium was) encouraged by an ef fete corps of Impudent snobs . . ." And "Today we see those among us who prefer to side with the enemy." Thus, in one vulgarity, he not only questioned the patriotism but also the manliness of many of the senators over whom he presides and whose votes he may solicit. The following week he accused Sen. Edmund Muskie of "playing Russian roulette" with American foreign policy: "One does not need to be a foreign policy expert to have common sense," aid Agnew. That may be true but, alas for the Vke President, the reverse is not. Does all this bother the President, as has been reported? It cannot be. For when one compares Vice President Agnew's prose with that of Vice President Nixon, Agnew e"lrges as a latter-day Lord Chesterfield. It was Richard Nixon, as a candidate for Vice President, who said of President Truman and Gov. Adlai Stevenson that they were "traitors" and add ed as an afterthought "to the high principles of the Democratic Party." And that "Mr, Truman and his associates were primarily responsible for the unimpeded growth of the Communist conspiracy within the United States." And that Adlai Stevenson held "a Ph.D. degree from Acheson's College of Cowardly Communist Containment the State Department." And that Harry Truman fired Gen. Douglas MacArthur "so that Acheson would be free to make a deal with the Chinese Communists." And it was Mr. Nixon as Vice President who said "Isn't it wonderful to have a secretary of state (John Fositer Dulles) who Isn't taken In by the Communists?" And "We found in socialism In America." Uie files a blueprint for Mail? wmm As Mr. Nixon was doing all this, the liberal press was as critical as it is today of Agnew. ahock and dismay were followed by political analysis: "Ho does President Eisenhower no service," was the consensus. But the liberal consensus, as so often, was wrong. Ills Vice President was doing Mr. Elsenhower a considerable service. He was going after, and nailing down, the so-called "gut Republ ican" vote. President Elsenhower went his serene way, above purty, and collected all the "Family of Man" and brotherhood awards there were to be had. And if the Republican faithful grumbled, as they often did, there was the Vke President to give them the raw meat they craved. On one occasion In 1908 he accused the Democrats of "rot gut thinking." Mr. Nixon's problem is not Gen. Eisenhower's: he has the solid Republican vote, whatever tern porary defections the ABM and Clement Haynsworth disputes may reveal. But the election returns of 18 showed him that it is not enough. Henot), the so-called "Southern strategy," the effort to capture, by word and deed, a sizable portion of those who voted for George Wallace. North and South. Agnew will win no awards from the Citizens' Union (or the English teachers), the New York Times will never praise his "moderation and wise restraint." but the President and Atty. Gen. John Mitchell hope he will attract enough of the Wallace vote real and potential to create a winning majority. In Mr. Nixon's phrase, Agnew now has a "very useful job." are selected by the Union Program Council. The program Council has the responsibility for pro gramming which involves speakers, films, enter tainers and the like. The students on the Union Board are on the Program Council also. Program Council each semester selects its own replacements from those applying who are In turn usually members of the previous council. There is no election process involving the general student population. I feel that, because the student is left out of the selection process, Union has cut itself away from a very important body who would criticize its work, namely those whom it serves. A board that has no specific constituency to represent is in a position to grow lazy, to back away from inviting controversial speakers, to avoid laovative programs which might invoke displeasure from non-students. The laxity is amplified by pressure from administrators who find It easier to discourage controversial programs and speaker requests than facing community criticism. Through this administrative pressure, be It subtle or not, the free platform of the university Is aborted. So the Union programmers get Innovatively lazy and programatically blah largely because of the lack of student pressure the electrive process would establish. The speaker series, the film society and the rest of the Union programs go relatively unevaluated over the years. No one determines how effective the programs are or whether a new approach might be needed. The nature of the struc. ture Is such that few committees are eliminated, despite the fact that some no longer serve a useful purjwse. Again it is important to note that the Isolation factor is not the fault of individuals responsible but the fault of a system which put students too far from the deciding process as to how Union is to spend our money. Questions such as what speakers are to be invited, what programs get the money, who shall deckle what group uses Union facilities need significant student Input at least by representation. Simply, we need to assert our right to spend our student fee money by creating a more directly representative Union. At Harvard Crimson runs true to name By Rowland Evans and Robert Novak Cambridge, Mass. The source of ap prehension and melancholy felt by a handful of thoughtful Harvard faculty members 13 seen in the publication last week by the Harvard Crimson, the student daily, of an overt incitement to riot. Writing in the Oct. 22 Crimson, student editor Richard E. Hyland delivered a justification for terrorism. "The only reason I wouldn't blow up the Center for International Affairs," Hyland began, "is that I might get caught." From that start, he went on to discuss fully the desirability of violence. "If buildings begin to blow up all around," he concluded, "people may well ask for a new inquest into the permanent." The manifesto by Hyland, who doubles as journalist and student agitator, scarcely sent students running into Harvard Yard with dynamite bombs. But it did heighten apprehension over next Tuesday's (Nov. 4) assault by the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) on the Center for International Affairs, which has sinned by accepting Federal government funding of some scholarly and often anti-military studies. But apart from what may happen here Tuesday, Hyland's diatribe points to longer range problems for the nation's foremost university. Significantly, the Crimson's call for terrorism went unchallenged by either administration or faculty. Consequently, the article constituted another victory in the campaign against established authority and legitimacy that began here last spring with the occupation of University Hall by student radicals. In the hangover from that violence, the vast majority of both faculty and students have come to regard the campus turmoil as a spectator sport. That creates a vacuum most suitable for the microscopic number of student radicals typified by Hyland. The fact they are actively opposed by only a few faculty members (inappropriately labelled "conservatives") poses a question mark against the future of Harvard. For instance, the "conservatives" feel ir reparable damage was done to Harvard's academic standards by last spring's hasty agreement under pressure to creation of an Afro-American studies department a victory for black militants more complete than was accomplished at either Columbia or Berkeley, where administrators were under greater duress. Thus, Harvard is now offering a credit course in post-conviction rights and privileges of felons as part of the new program. An even greater departure from academic norms was the selection of the new Afro-American department's head. Instead of the usual ad hoc selection committee, black student militants had the deciding voice. Since no self-respecting Negro academician would accept the post under those conditions, it went to a non-academician: Ewart Guinier, whose only post-graduate work was in law school and who ran unsuccessfully for Manhattan borough president in 1949 as candidate of the Communist dominated American Labor party. That Guiner should be elevated to the academic pinnacle of a Harvard full professorship Is appalling to many senior faculty members here. Moreover, the events of last spring have menanced academic freedom. At that time, a visiting professor drastically altered a course on prevention of urban riots because of protests by black student militants establishing a precedent for student censorship for academic content. Yet, the great majority of faculty members seem oblivious to the danger. Nor have they fully realized what is now ob vious to the Berkeley faculty: no matter how many concessions are made to student radicals, there always will be one more demand. Although Harvard capitulated to all demands last spring, the new fall term has opened with the call for closing the Center for International Affairs. Once that Is accomplished, a new demand as the basis for agitation is a certainty. Indeed, the SDS motive is not really that demands be granted but to trigger a radicaBzation of the silent majority of students the result last spring when President Nathan Pusey called on the police to clear University Hall of agitators. Therefore, faculty foes of the radicals generally oppose any forcible interference with the demonstrators next Tuesday as playing into their hands. But the alternative has its price. If the radicals are permitted to occupy the Center without in terference, the legitimacy of authority at Harvard will have been eroded still more deeply. To some gloomy "conservative" faculty members, this means the small, disorganized, fac-ctlonally-dlvlded cadre of radicals has life-and-death power at Harvard. That appraisal will be essentially correct until such time as the faculty majority jcgins to view an Invasion of University Hall or the Center for International Affairs as Uie prelude to an invasion of its own classrooms. It is Harvard's misfortune that this time ia nowhere in live foreseeable future. VENDETTA In case you missed it, fans, our state was the fortunate locale of one of the most impressive gatherings of the decade recently. A trio of na tionally known celebrities crusaded for a better America before cheering throngs of citizens. No, I'm not talking about James Farmer, F. Ie Bailey, or Shirley Chisholm. I mean Dave Martin, Roman Ilruska, and are you ready? Barry Goldwater. Barry Goldwatoer, whose mouth makes Splro Agnew's look like Cal Ooolidge's. Bar. ry Goldwater, the equalest egalitarian of all. Barry Goldwater, who we all thought was relegated to history's scrap heap five years ago. Barry hasn't changed much. He still has dreams of mushroom clouds and he still conceives of himself as the great master of a plantation called America, where field niggers know their place and house niggers wait on him hand and foot. For Barry Goldwater, the epitome of American conservatism, knows only one set of values: property and pride. It's pride, you see, that's at stake In Vietnam. "I'm for peace, but . . .." Barry says charac teristically. Goldwater considers saving face more important than saving legs or arms or lives. And the worth of a man is measured by his property. Goldwater's philosophy Implies that our basic human rights are not intrinsic but must be earned. by Fred Schmidt Barry subscribes to the freedom-loving tradition of William Howard Taft, William McKlnley. and William the Conqueror. The best should rule, Barry seems to be saying, and we all know who's best, don't we? Of course, had he been elected, Barry would have wn the war long ago, even though it was his own policy that Lyndon Johnson instigated shortly after the election. Maybe poor old LBJ just lacked that magic Goldwater touch for making blood smell like perfume. And you can bet your Inst dime Barrv wouldn't have put up with any sass from students who never earned a cent in their lives. Instead, the nation's youth would have been revitalized by the Young Americans Freedom while the Nigrah problem would have been contained by good old law and order. Inflation would have been checked by eliminating Social Security, thereby liquidating elderly spenders. And In Nebraska with Marti Ro.man It sounded as though Barry's back In the saddle again. He may never be President but he figures he can still save this country, yesisir . . ... ... w qxism mm Kill IV ttIU John Mitchell s lists of names, plus the myth of a silent majority, and who knows? A new Atil'a may yet arise!