Friday, May 1, 1964 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 si n7 r rVi hi; Miss Johnson Kenagy Eleven candidates have filed for Student Council from the College of Arts and Sci ences, the University's big gest college. There are seven candidate, Kathie Shattuck did not submit a platform to the DAILY NEBRASKAN. John Kenagy John Kenagy, with a 7.0 cumulative, pproves of dis trict representation with one major drawback. "With almost 6,400 students living in a wide area with no contact whatsoever with each other, an ordinary district sys tem is out of the question. As a Lincoln student I would be against any form of election that does not adequately represent the off-campus stu dent," Kenagy says. Kenagy suggests changes in the "inner workings of t h e Council to facilitate smoother legislation." He says commit tees could be limited to three members thereby allowing members to concentrate "more fully" in one area and giving associates more exper ience. Andy Taube District representation is al so supported by Andy Taube, who carries an 8.1 overall Taube says the committees he served on as an associate, the welfare and representa tion committees, "will be very influential in determining ma jor issues next year." "I advocate a re-vamping of the present system of repre sentation and emphasis on capable district, organization al and living unit representa tion," Taube says. Larry Frolik Larry Frolik, a sophomore vith a 7.8 cumulative, feels the present representation system is not "totally ade quate," but that it is "more desirable than any of the al ternatives yet proposed." "I feel that the Student wel fare committee should make a determined effort to find out what areas of student right and freedoms are being in fringed upon, and if it discov ers any, then take appropri ate action," Frolik says. John Cosier John Cosier hopes to see a fairer basis for student gov ernment and the elimination of college representation. Ac cording to Cosier, the problem of representing Lincoln stu dents is a problem no matter what living unit system is de vised. "I would advocate an expan sion of the quiz bowl program to involve more students. This could be accomplished by di viding the quiz bowl into divi sions based on accumulated scholastic averages," Cosier says. Susie Segrist Susie Segrist, who is up for re-election, says her service on the public issues commit tee "became a problem of dig ging up issues." She hopes that next year "student inter est and participation will justi fy delving into national and international problems fur ther." On representation, Miss Se grist sees a trend against "extra curricular activities being the deciding factor in student representation" Oth er progress she notes from this year has been the con tinuation of evaluating the constitution. "Many students fail to real ize that during the past year, 4he Council constitution has "jeen gone over with a fine Looth comb and many antiqui ties have been eliminated, such as class officers," Miss Segrist says. Jo Lee Hrnicek Jo Lee Hrnicek proposes that organizations and living Pam Hamer for STUDENT COUNCIL Teachers College I p.... 4 V VT,y E L- - mi.l X-..,,,.- fi J .-.-.. V- i L J LJ J Ll HiauA t-, .-, .,. ,lmi l J L J V-J I j"" 1 11 " 11 111 1 ' 1 1111 t m mil. "" ' i v yj v, L I I 1 jiimrt ftmnril fi-imi f 1 Miss McClymont Frollk . Cosier Scieinice units "not be cross-ranked" in matters of representation. "I would like to see the Coun cil be a true check and bal ance on the Administration," Miss Hrnicek says. She says the Administration has the "bulk of the judiciary power," makine the Council more of a coordinator instead of a governing body. The Council can attain "genuine power" if the students will have more to say through the council, according to Miss nrniceK. Vlckl Packard Vicki Packard, who carries a 5.8 overall, savs the nubile issues committee should not only inform the student body Dut snould take definite stands on national issues. Miss Packard calls for no changes in the representation, ana she supports organiza tional representatives because Council has jurisdiction over organizations. Joan McClymont Joan McClymont, with a 6.1 cumulative average, has been a Council associate. , Miss McClymont calls for more student interest in Coun cil meetings and action. She says the council can hardly re flect student opinion if stu dents do not express that opin ion. The Masters Program, ac cording to Miss McClymont, Few Lack Social Life This Week Spring formals, dinners and house parties set the mood for a busy weekend on cam pus. TODAY Alpha Delta Pi spring for mal, 7:30 p.m. to 12 midnight at the Lincoln Hotel. Delta Tau Delta formal, 6:30 p.m. to 12 midnight at the Cornhusker Hotel. Engineers Week Banquet, 7:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at the Lincoln Hotel. S e 1 1 e c k Quadrangle and Hitchcock Hall hour dance, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. Unicorns progressive din ner, 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Women's Residence As sociation Parking Lot Dance, 9 p.m. to 12 midnight in the Piper Hall parking lot. TOMORROW Alpha Tau Omega house party, 9 p.m. to 12 midnight. Beta Theta Pi house par ty, 9 p.m. to 12 midnight. Delta Upsilon Two-Yard Hop, 9 p.m. to 12 midnight at Antelope Pavilion. Cornhusker Co-op spring party, 7 p.m. to 12 midnight at Congress Inn. RAM record hop, 8 p.m. to 12 midnight in the Selleck din ing hall. Theta Xi house party, 9 p.m. to 12 midnight. Triangle formal, 6:30 p.m. to 12 midnight at Cornhusker Hotel. Pi Beta Phi formal, 7 p.m. to 12 midnight at Town and Country. Phi Kappa Psi formal, 7:30 p.m. to 12 midnight at Knoll's Country Club. SUNDAY Delta Upsilon banquet, 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. at Holiday Inn. Love Memorial Hall date picnic, 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. on the Love Memorial lawn. St. Paul Methodist Church 12 & M STUDENTS ALWAYS WELCOME Dr. Clarence Forsberg Preaching Services at 9:30 and 11:00 I - 1 " 1 I v I Miss Segrist "has turned into an outstand ing, unique and successful program. It isn't an issue but is certainly important and worthwhile e n o u g h to men tion. Kay Johnson Kay Johnson wishes to see the public issues committee consider the "housing prob lem" in relation to Negro and foreign students. Miss Johnson, with a 5.9 av erage, was an associate this cil Consfifunt Meefs Foil EDITOR'S NOTE: The fol lowing evaluation is the fourth in a series compiled by the Student Council reporters of the last two semesters. This article concerns the repre sentatives from Arts and Sciences. The fact that a marked similarity exists in the pre election platforms of nearly all college candidates for Stu dent Council provides an in teresting basis for the com parison of the work that Coun cil representatives do in ful filling their campaign promises. College representatives fall into three groups : some, learning that their platforms were too general, irrelevent or impossible, have gone on to distinguish themsleves in new areas; others have worked on committees that allowed them to work towards their stated programs; the third group, having promised little, remained obscure. The College of Arts and Sciences representatives pro vide enough examples for comparison to illustrate this method of evaluation. The Arts and Sciences representa tives this year were Susie Segrist, Tom Brewster, Glenn Korff, Kermit Brashear and Tom Kort. Their first plan, attempted as a college group, met with dismal failure, not because of any shortcoming of their's but because of a general lack of support from their college. They attempted to hold perio dic meetings with their con stituents, as Miss Segrist, Brashear and Kort suggested in their platforms. The idea was abandoned due to paltry attendance. Brewster's platform, as it appeared last spring in the DAILY NEBRASKAN, in cluded a sole point, the need to have "more careful thought on the part of representa SESlFKWFin ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Cotwnba Muna entt IMRENCE OF At? Aim ftv KOMKXOft' 3UC4 WUMUM It -ALSO- "BELIE SOMMERS" mm i Miss Ilrnicek Miss Packard year. She is in favor of the present representation system where "organizational repre sentatives are as important as college Council members." Janie Agee Janie Agee, with a 6.0 overall, says, "Taking a stand on the national and local prob lems is mainly beneficial because it informs stu dents of these problems and not because Student Council will ever be able to do any- tives" to avoid indiscrete mo tions. Evaluation of this plat form is particularly difficult in view of the fact that Brew ster introduced no motions during the year. He served as chairman of the social com mittee. A delegate to the Mid west Model United Nations last year Miss Segrist con tinued her UN work as a member of the Council. Delegates sponsored by t h e Council were sent to the Ne braska Wesleyan University Model United Nations April 24-25. Korff campaigned on im proving the associate pro grain and recognizing a need for "honest representation." Under his leadership, the program underwent several changes designed to improve the associates' efficiency and enthusiasm. Korff introduced a motion on Feb. 19 calling for Council action towards shortening the time between final exams and the release of grades. Korff made a thorough in vestigation of the problem and its causes. The success or failure of his motion will prove itself in future years. He was also a candidate for president of the Big Eight IS IS y ens YOUR ad in the DAILY NEBRASKAN will reach a $15,000,000 market!! 1 140 NO. 13TH . J 432-1 46S "Go ahead, Captain! hostilities on me! I Angie Dickinson FREE PARKING for after p.m. at: State 1330 N car Park Auto Park, 13th Q . 1144 "P" T. 432-312S E - ! lis. BEST ACTRESS of the YEAR Patricia Neal BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR Melvyn Douglas c7o iteming PAUL NEWMAN UULJ Miss Agce Taube thing about them. Therefore, I think the public issues com mittee should concentrate on campus issues." Miss Agee has a number of platform-ideas: eligibility av erage for Council to be raised from 5.0 to 5.5, clarification of the terms "revise and amend," allowing All Univer sity Fund (AUF) a seat on the Council, improvement of Ai pha Phi Omega book ex- change and investigation of the possibility of a campus DanK. Student Government Associa tion. Kort promised to work to wards more publicity for Council issues and making uniform reports to the student body. As chairman of the pub' lie issues committee, the first point of this platform was thrown into his lap. Hampered throughout the year by lack of interest, Kort's committee conducted the drinking polls and ar ranged the student-adminis tration forums on the problem Brashear's platform was In conformity with the rest with the exception of his interest In a scholarship aids commit tee to provide students with scholarship information. Coun cil President Dennis Christie told the DAILY NEBRASKAN that such a committee would overlap with the office of scholarships and financial aids. Brashear's work during the year centered around the elections, parking and repre sentation committees. II i s active participation in repre sentation debates, although sometimes as irrelevant as that of the rest of the Coun cil, indicated a strong in terest in improving repre sentation. DOORS OPEN 12:45 GREAT FUN! don't want V X an ulcer!" V . Bobby Darin Stuart and Nebraska Securities Self Park,, Garage, 13th a M and Rampark, 12th DOORS OPEN 12:45 WINNER OF ACADEMY AWARDS l PMUMOUNI RELEASE 01 4 i SjsoL.ia. , 3 "HOD ! J Geologist Hunt Will Speak To Academy Of Sciences The 74th annual meeting of the Nebraska Academy of Sciences will be held at the Nebraska Center today and tomorrow, Several hundred educators and scientists in the state attend the annual meeting to present papers in such areas as anthropology, the biologi cal and medical sciences, mathematics, chemistry, phy sics and geology. Dr, John Hunt, head of the geology department of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, Woods Hole, Mass. will speak on geochemistry in the Soviet Union at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. Lloyd Tanner, assocatc curator of vertebrate paleon- TODAY RODEO, sponsored by the Rodeo Club, will begin at 1:30 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m. at the State Fairgrounds coliseum. Admission is $1.50 per person. JAZZ 'N JAVA will be held at 4 p.m. in the Union crib. UNICORNS will have a pro gressive dinner party at 5 p.m. They will meet at the University park. SUNDAY BROWN PALACE will hold an open house from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Everyone is wel come. Married Students Wai University Park Apartments at 4300 Holdrege consists of four two-story buildings con taining 30 furnished one-bedroom units and ten partially furnished two-bedroom units. Only married students regis tered full time may qualify for residence. The waiting period is from a year to a year and a half. Applications must be made to the Universi ty Housing office, Administra tion Building. 1, I've been giving a lot of thought to the future-career-wise and goal-wise. I've been pretty busy working on my hook shot. 8 Material reward is important, too - so lone as the job is one of profound significance. I'm a terror off the boards. 5. How about you? What re your goals? I'd like to score 30 against Tech. For information about career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or write to William E.Blevins, Employment Manager. The EQUITABLE Life Assurance Society of the United State Home Office: 1285 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.I 10010 0 1964 tology at the University of Nebraska State Museum, wiD deliver the annual past pres idential address at the 6 p.m. banquet tomorrow. He will speak on "The Geologic His tory of Nebraska's Rhino ceroses." The Lincoln section of the Junior Nebraska Academy of Science will hold an open house Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon at University High School. Student displays will be open for public viewing. College Cool To Nudists As Tenants Mount Carroll, III. (CPS) The president of Shimer Col lege, who wants to rent out the campus for the summer, said last Friday that he plans to reject the offer of a nudist group. "Our campus fronts right on two busy highways and I just don't think it would be ap propriate," said Dr. F. J. Mullin. He added that there is no protective shrubbery. "We don't like to discrimln ate against anybody, b a t I think a nudist group would Just be out of place on our campus," he said. "Besides, we're right in town." Roger Clogher, executive secretary of the Perfect Chris tian Divine Way Inc., Holy City, Calif., said that the group wanted to rent the cam pus for seven weeks. He said that nudists from all over the nation would at tend the gathering and it would be "somewhat nudes worthy." Clogher said he read of Mul lin's offer, which was given nationwide publicity, in a San Francisco newspaper. Mullin said he has received inquiries from five education al type groups and will pick a tenant in the next week or two. 2. As recipients of a college education, I feel it is incumbent Xnuito work in areas which ( iv us to make a contribution to society. Watch me dribbV light around you. ' 4. What's more, the company I worl for must be forward-looking and encourage initiative. Notice the feather touch, on the ball. 6. 1 mean after graduation. Oh, I've got a swell job with Equitable. They've got everything you're looking for. And they're a good team to work with