monday, September 8, 1375 daily nebraskan Hon - . 3 ! m jxm 11 0 y Wanted soon: oneaammiSTrator to fill Brecken ridge empty shoes Dear editor, The article captioned "Nigerian hopes coup solves economic, tribal woes' (Daily Nebraskan, Sept. 5) made interesting reading. But John Ofie Ukandu, who wrote the article, erred on four points. the second coup, wjhich he describes as "brutal and unwanted, was not directed agamst "the Ibos of Biafra." The truth is that the second coup, which brought General Yakubu Gowon to power, wss directed against all the people of eastern Nigeria. Statistics reveal that minorities in the east suffered more casualties than the Ibos. Top military officers of minority origin in the east were slaughtered alongside their Ibo counterparts. Nigeria is not the third largest supplier of crude oil to the United States: it is the No. 1 supplier (Time magazine, Aug. 4, 1975). Nigeria overtook Canada and Venezuela, who were first and second suppliers, respectively. Finally, it does not matter to whom Nigeria's economy is attached. As an economist, John should realize that Nigeria, being in the "sterling zone," is bound to attach its economy to that of Great Britain, its former colonial master. What John, I and other Nigerians should concern them selves with is equitable distribution of wealth to 80 million Nigerians. Whether or not Nigerian economy should be attached to the British seems immaterial. Brune Ekaidem To not much of anyone's surprise, Adam Breckenridge was named acting UNL chancellor Saturday by NU President D.B. Varner. Breckenridge, a capable teacher, surely will be as competent as acting chancellor. After all, he s had plenty of experience as interim administrator in a variety of UNL offices. But while Breckenridge is the acting Zumberge, who will be the acting Breckenridge? The vice chancellorship for Academic Affairs stood nominally empty for 13 months before the search committee's nomination of Breckenridge was accepted. Now Varner says he may ask the veteran UNL official and political science professor to "wear two hats"-or, in more appropriate metaphor, fill two persons shoes-until a yet-to-be-selected search committee for chancellor fulfills its task. Such a move could affect the quality of Breck enridge's leadership in both positions, especially if the search group, despite Varner's Dec. 1 deadline, bogs down as. badly as did the Academic Affaire cornrnittee. We hope the process of selecting a search com mittee for chancellor will be rapid and wish good speed to the group in choosing a replacement for James Zumberge. However, we hesitate to support Varner's sug gestion that Breckenridge be asked to shoulder a double burden. Though naming an interim replacement for Breckenridge in Academic Affairs would prolong UNL's game of musical administrators, of which we are all tired, it might be a favor to the new acting chancellor-and to students at UNL. Rebecca Brite The Daily Nebraskan welcomes letters to the editor and guest opinions. Choices of material published will be based on timeliness and originality. Letters must be accompanied by the writer s name, but may be published under a pen name if requested. Guest opinions should be typed, triple-spaced, on nonerasable paper. They should be accompanied by the author's name, class standing and major, or occupation. All material submitted to these pages is subject to editing and condensation, and cannot be returned to the writer. HARRY, LOmVMEM SEE. WHERf .HAE YOU emi keepi Ma vouasaa J a Km WELL, FUR-UP, IJWEE EY EEILLS WI7H THIS PIECE OF UNA fitlO decdep to arc? aw LOO IT flG? COUftSfte. SHE GAIE M THE &6 ROT SO 1 CROISZQ WHO CEMENT Cm UNTIL THIS 600KFBEP STARTED I SEE iBms nmr. 1 Pirsig 'sacrifices quality for quantity' But it is possible to produce reductio ad absurdura Vw dis,ance bcimsn people has nothing to do SK--"' ' ' ""E & to be nitpicking If logic was between arts and rds Dad, h tumbling down himself with a named nonentity, not with a person T , ,uthor claim8 that no one except himself has turned ted for the fiction 7 ' upo, KXlu 1 his oraggadoclo only. reveals nrsig 1 J&4Jivc tj jucn twent eth renrurv nhilosopners w PirsigH fundamental ohilosonhieai n.,il 1- .... tudwig Wittgenstein. Rudolnh Cirnan or AJ. Aver and the kU I: Wween 8ubJect, 8y Bruce INelson Autumn's touch has graced the campus. The melancholy rain and extra greenness in the grass portends the death of summer. Hopefully that natural death will take with it the summer fads. One of those fads is a book entitled Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance by Robert Pirsig. When 1 arrived on campus two weeks ago, I found it the 'In" book to read. And as with many books, once it became a fad, no one will look at its critically except nasty dd cynics. Pirsig! paperback attempts several things, and in the process sacrifices quality for quantity. The major theme is one of reconciliation: the father with his mentally un balanced past, with his son and with society. The narrative lurches between advancing the plot-i.e., traveling from town-to-town-and philosophic reflections. The constant traveling, upon which everything is hung, reminds one of Ketouac's On the Road or Nabokov's LoUta The author disavows the book as a novel, calling it instead "An Inquiry Into Values. This was wise, for fictionally it is weak. ' For sxamnle. Pirsis write! tht tw . . The plot and philosophy jump back and forth with little . are useu, inductive and deductive," Induction is "reasn i integration, and of the book's page read like a consumer from particular experiences to general truths DelHru protection manual-Informative for the cyclist, perhaps, but inferences do the reverse." ' wcaucuve boring for the rest of us. But anyone who has read the Logic 110 texthn t Even worse, many of the narrator's reflections are as Choice and Chance knows this is "one of th profound as a Sunday School teacher's platitudes. For widespread misconceptions of logic." m example, "Buy good tools as you can afford them and , lite author errs again referring to reductio ad fiK., youll never regret it." or, "If you want to save money, "This form of argument rests on the troth ihTif T dont overlook the newspaper want ads. And, "Its para- inevitable conclusions from a set of premises r k 2 doxical that where people m the most closely crowded. . . then it follows logically that at least one of the L.mi the loneliness is the greatest. The explanation, I suppose, is that produced them is absurd." pnuses til - rH I L nmo cynics corner If the phucophical lectures compensated for the fiction w! its problems could be overlooked. But they don't. f logical posiUvists, object, classicism-romanUcism and rationalism-empiricism ,ReardlcM. lg finally works out his thesis-anUthesU In discussing these dilemmas, the author manages to diaJectLlc Md ca" hi synthesis "quality," QuaUty is the commit faccual errors and logical mistakes. something by which we know what is good and Perhaps the logical mistakes hurt iha m t. uuj- beautiful. It precedes intthfngi nA .nvtial thoufiht. calling it prides himself on his logical mind. Indeed he brags of his . Hs is 811 3 tells us. !ie refuses probably earlier self as a "knower of logic." h 1 to define quality because In rfHnin mmcthlnz becomes suoiect to the rational process. k dos not want to do this despite his earlier thought wat anything undefined, does not exist. Oh well! Kobert Pirsig's underlying problem is that, as most people, he wants to reduce everything to good or bad, right or wrong, black or white. When this doesn't work ft0 tnei force it. How many times must it be said that lite IS more COmnle than kn Cyrtic'i Quote of the Wetk-Polonius: What do you read, my lord? HamletM Words, words, words, (Hamlet, IW