fVCLOCK JtMCR Vol. XLI UNION COLLEGE, LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, October 13, 1966 No. 4 Lee Allen Resigns; Board Meets Today To Pick Successor Lee Allen, who has served as as- sistant business manager at Union College since June, 1964, has ac- cepted a call from the Nebraska Conference to become assistant treasurer for the conference. Mr. Allen, a 1962 Union College graduate, accepted the call around the first of October, but will con- tinue in his present position until the first of November. The Union College board is meeting today to consider a suc- cessor. Mr. Allen's duties as assistant business manager have included being in charge of student ac- counts and student labor. Prior to being named assistant business manager, he was employed as an accountant for the college. He has served as financial advisor to die ASB since 1963. As the first assistant treasurer the Nebraska Conference has ever had, Mr. Allen's responsibilities will mainly involve keeping church ac- counts. Other items the board will dis- cuss include a two-story library ad- dition. This addition, which will connect the library with the music hall, is the next step in the ten year expansion plan. The first floor of the addition will be used for additional library space while the second story will be shared by die music department and the library. The music department plans a new rehearsal room, several teach- ers' studios and classrooms for die addition. The board will also review the progress of the new high-rise men's dormitory. According to Dr. R. W. Fowler, all seven stories should be ready for die fall semester. Barring inclement weather, the roof should be on the building by Christmas, according to a report by Ned Saunders, construction su- perintendent. Today's meeting is the regular fall meeting of the school board. (photos by Bud Gooch) Gov. Frank B. Morrison as he discussed political issues with Union College students in the Student Center last Friday morning. Governor Addresses Students; Stresses Practical Christianity "Christianity must come to grips with its environment," said Nebras- ka's Governor Frank B. Morrison in his non-political convocation talk to the student body of Union Col- lege last Friday. The governor, currently Demo- cratic candidate for the Senate seat held by Carl Curtis, prefaced his remarks by stating that man was THIS SATURDAY NIGHT Midgley To Present Fill m&mmzi: Stan Midgley bicycles toward the Tetons in a scene from his latest film which will be shown at Union College this Sat- urday night. Stan Midgley returns to Union College this Saturday night with his personally narrated film, "Yel- lowstone Tetons and Glacier Park." Midgley is a graduate of Prince- ton University. For eight years he was a chemist in the pharmaceuti- cal industry near Chicago. His hob- bies were mountaineering, bicycle riding and photography. He soon became popular, not because of his chemistry, but because he rode his bicycle to work, forty-eight miles a day all summer long. Even more popular were the vacation movies he brought back from his bicycle trips in Colorado and other Rocky Mountain states. In 1946, he entered a movie of his bicycle trip through the Bryce- Zion-Grand Canyon region in a nation-wide contest. It won the first prize of $1,000. His hobby be- came his vocation and Midgley Chucklelogues are the result. He claims he has never been tempted to film abroad because there is so much beauty and inter- est right here at home, especially in the west. In addition to his photography, he loads his films with trick pho- tography and "gags." "Yellowstone Tetons and Glacier Park" features the northwest cor- ner of Wyoming including the gey- sers of Yellowstone Park. It will al- so include before and after pictures of the results of the destructive 1959 earthquake. given dominion over the land and animals by God. He said tiiat man faces the challenge of moral integ- rity in die exercise of diis dominion. "Christianity is no longer some- thing served just on Sunday," said Morrison, "or tossed around in the ivory towers." He believes that Christianity should be taken out of the ivory tower and put into prac- ' tice in the business and the political worlds. Turning to specifics, the gover- nor said that the bombing of inno- cent children and women in Viet Nam was not the exercise of moral integrity. In a KVUC sponsored interview that followed the convocation, Mor- rison told the Student Center au- dience that "There are thousands of little children in the ghettos to- day." Morrison inferred that these little children are no better off than those in Viet Nam. He blamed Omaha riots on "im- properly motivated people" ' al- though he said he didn't know why they were "improperly motivated." Morrison said that both he and A. V. Sorensen, Omaha's mayor, knew in advance that the riots in Omaha's ghetto would occur. Mor- rison was two thousand miles from Nebraska when the riots erupted but said, "We pulled the National Guard in so fast no one knew what was happening." The governor was asked what was learned from the Omaha riots. Morrison replied that the only thing he knew was that there was a ghet- to in Omaha. "I don't know the an- swers," he said, "and anyone who tells you that he does is too arro- gant to be of much value." On other subjects, Morrison said he favors federal aid to parochial schools, "It's something we've al- ways done. It's inherent in the American system," he said. He said he favored a voting age equal to the draft age. "If you're going to draft people who are 18 you ought to give them the right to vote." Coming, £ vent3 Thursday, Oct. 13 8:00 p.m. Community Concert —"Music of Richard Rodgers" —Pershing Auditorium -15th & M Friday, Oct. 14 7:20 a.m. Convocation — gym —J. F. Kent, publishing secre- tary, Central Union Conf. 4:25-5:25 p.m. Cafeteria supper 5:45 p.m. Dormitory Worship 5:49 p.m. Sunset 7:45 p.m. MV-church— Paul M. DeBooy, MV secretary, Central Union Conf. Saturday, Oct. 15 Sabbath Services College View-49th & Prescott 8:25 & 11:00 a.m. Emanuel Pederson, General Con- ference field secretary 9:40 a.m. Sabbath school Piedmont Park-48th & A 11:00 a.m. Norman Sharp 9:30 a.m. Sabbath school Northside-73rd & Lexington 11:00 a.m. Dr. Laurence Downing, professor of education 9:30 a.m. Sabbath school Capitol View-15th & D 11:00 a.m. Peter Luna, instructor in religion 9:30 a.m. Sabbath school Allon Chopel-22nd & Q Services at Sharon S.D.A. Temple, Omaha 4.25-5:25 p.m. Cafeteria supper 5:35 p.m. College View vespers 5:48 p.m. Sunset 8:00 p.m. Stan Midgley, film lecturer—gym Monday, Oct. 17 7:20 a.m. Chapel—church— Emanuel Pederson, General Conference field secretary Wednesday, Oct. 19 No classes—Missions Promotion Day 2 CLOCK TOWER November 169, 1966 $CCOCK JCWOj Opinions expressed in the editorial column are those of the editors. Viewpoints represented in the signed articles on this page are those of the individual writer. DAN PAUXJEN EDITOR BEVERLY BEEM MANAGING EDITOR KARLA KRAMPERT ASSOCIATE EDITOR BILL BLISS NEWS EDITOR Neglected cA£J3 3)uty: Representing the Students A student association should be more than a group of in- dividuals planning parties, banquets and convocations. This year, with a group of dedicated and hard-working ASB officers the challenge they face is to make the ASB a real "mouthpiece of the students." The ASB has a legitimate right to be concerned about caf- eteria hours, dormitory rules and, in fact, all phases of student life. ASB officers should be our representatives before the ad- ministration. In the past they have usually ignored this very important part of their responsibilities. As an example of this, the revised cafeteria breakfast hours have upset many dormitory students. Since the new chapel hour comes during the usual time for the second cafeteria breakfast, there is now no breakfast served after 6:45 a.m. on Monday and Friday. Since the 7:20 period on Wednesday is now a free period for approximately 90% of the students, it has created a giant "traffic-jam" in the cafeteria on Wednesday mornings. The cafeteria still operates its Wednesday second break- fast with only one of its two serving decks open and students who have waited in line for fifteen to twenty minutes or longer have come up to the deck and found all the food gone. A number of students have spoken to the editors about this problem. Most of them feel the administration has let them •down on this point. In speaking with administration officials, however, the editors have come away with a different view. On several issues administrative officers have told us, "We didn't know the students were upset about this situation." When approached about what measures were being taken to correct the second breakfast problem on Wednesday morn- ings, an administrative officer who has been closely studying cafeteria operations was not aware that there was a second breakfast "jam." Understandably, an individual student often feels hesitant about approaching the president of the college or the dean of student affairs with viewpoints about a problem. The editors believe that this is an area where the ASB should take the lead in presenting the feelings of the students to the administration. Change Is Possible Several of our administrative officers have come from other schools where cafeteria policies are quite different from those at Union College. They are not opposed to change per se. They need to be convinced that change is necessary and feasible, here and now. A single student's impact is not as great as that of the president of the ASB. Talk to your ASB officers, talk to the CLOCK TOWER ed- itors (write us a letter if you wish) and above all talk to the