"iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiniiitiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiM Sigma Chi Derby Dayl Friday, September 30, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Vol. 90, No. 11 A SLIP OF THE WRIST . for one of these two sorority pledges practicing the "egg drop" for Sigma Chi Derby Day Saturday. Moments after the picture was snapped, the girl on the floor had her worst fears confirmed, and the egg splattered across her face. Derby Day Approaches Derby Day has unofficially begun, according to the Sigma Chi's. Although the annual event is scheduled for Saturday morning, most sorority pledge classes are al ready competing for the Spirit Trophy. Sorority pledges and actives have serenaded the Sig ma Chi's several nights this week, said Steve Reed, a freshman pledge. One group stole a Sigma Chi active, but were forced to trade him for fbur of their Own members who had been captured by the Sigma Chi's. "I think it's great and I hope it keeps up," commented Joel Hagen on the girl's enthusiasm. He added that two houses have been calling the Sigma Chi house on the hour with a "cute little jingle about how they are going to win Derby Day." Nine pledges who will not be able to participate in Derby Day because of classes served at the Sigma Chi house Wednesday evening. Dressed in white jackets, they set the tables, served the meal and cleaned up under the supervision of the regular bus-boys. "It was really lots of fun," said one enthusiastic pledge. The boys seemed to enjoy it more than we had expected, she added. All Sigma Chi's wear their tradition al black derbies the week before Derby Day. According to Reed, several pledges and even some fraternity mem bers have unsuccessfully tried to take the derbies. Three sororities have put up signs on the outside and inside of the Sigma Chi house, Reed said. Lapel tags promoting spirit for Derby Day are being worn by members of several sororities. IDCC Receives Part Of Dormitory Budget Changes in a constitution for a proposed interddrm council were basically clarifi cations made by the Inter dorm Coordinating Commit tee (IDCC). A committee will review the changes before the next IDCC meeting. When the con stitution receives final con sensus from IDCC represen tatives, it will be submitted to dormitory residents for their approval. The clarifications made in the constitution call for a possible appendage for pro visional government. Under ers will serve their terms un til the next election second semester. Membership will be divided into non-voting (residences that do not approve the con stitution) and voting (fully accredited members). Also at the meeting IDCC chairman Jim Ludwig sug gested that one per cent of the dormitory budgets be al located to the IDCC. Social functions will be handled from separate funds, he said. Ted Suhr of Selleck made a motion that one per cent of each dorm's budget be al located to the IDCC fund. Celia Potter of Love Me morial moved that the motion be amended to read one per cent of the budget or five cents per person. The motion was carried. Ludwig reported that Mary Ann Deems, Cornhusker edi tor, spoke to the Cather ex ecutives Tuesday. She in formed them that there will be no group pictures of dorm residents in the year book but the dorms can pre sent suggestions for layouts. A committee meeting for a leadership workshop for ball officers was scheduled for Tuesday at 7 p.m. in Gather Pound conference room. IDCC social chairman, John Decker, announced that Cather, will sponsor a danca Oct. 8. . . means egg in the face Miss Potter suggested that Nettleton Manor, the off-campus housing for women stu dents at the Lincoln School of Commerce, be included in the IDCC as a residence hall. Nigerian Civil Servant Is FTP Student Of Month People to People has se lected Victor Umunna of Ni geria as the foreign student of the month. Umunna is in his second year at the University and is majoring in animal science. He has one year to complete before receiving his B.A. de gree. Before he came to the Uni versity, Umunna was a civil servant for the Nigerian gov ernment. He taught in the Veterinary College in Nigeria for two and a half years. Umunna attended second ary school for five years and the Veterinary College for three years before coming to the University of Nebraska. When he returns to Nigeria, Umunna will work five years for the government. He said that he will "likely go to the Veterinary College to teach or work on a livestock farm belonging to the government." Umunna said that he had a two-week orientation pro gram before coming to the United States. But he noted, that everything In America was not like he was told it was going to be. One example that he has noticed is that not all Ameri cans are as good and as friendly as he was told they would be. However, he said "this is found to be true all over ihe world and is not exclusive to the United States." "Nebraskans are not as In quisitive as people from oth er states," said Umunna. He said that when he was in Washington, people would Free Speech Forum ... stf " Hyde Park Speakers Discuss After a sporadic start, Thursday's Hyde Park forum picked up speed as speakers arose from the audience to state their views on such things as selective service, men's fashions, student bill of rights and apathy. This was the first of the weekly Free Speech forums of the year, sponsored by the Nebraska Union Talks and Topics Committee. One of the first speakers was Larry Grossman who spoke mainly on the concept of a student bill of rights, and especially listed some of the tenets of the Campus Freedom Democratic Party's (CFDP) bill of rights. "Students ought to have the final say in anything outside the classroom and we should be free of double jeopardy," stated Grossman. Copy Of Code Rick Mann criticized Uni versity Administraiton say ing that it has never stated specifically "what a student can or cannot do." He told of being called be fore a dean last year for "committing an offense against the University code of behavior." Mann said that he then asked the dean for a copy of the code and was told that it did not exist. Court To Decide On Apportionment Student Court will announce its decision next Monday or Tuesday concerning the prob lem of whether or not the reapportionment carried out by the electoral commission last spring was constitution al. Thursday night the court heard the arguments of Da vid Senseney, representing himself as plaintiff and Lar ry Greenwald, representing Bill Tooley, the defendant. In a suit filed last spring, Senseney, a student Senator from Professional College, claimed that Tooley, also a Professional College senator, had received a Senate seat unconstitutionally. The reasons which Sensen ey used Thursday, to support his statement were that the reapportionment wasn't di rectly proportional as pro vided by the ASUN constitu tion and that it had not been carried out before the come up to him and ask him where he was from, but in Nebraska, although the people would like to know the same thing, they would not speak to him voluntarily. He said that he likes "soc cer, tennis, football, and girls." He would like to play for the Cornhusker football team as a kicker because he said that he could kick a soccer ball 90 yards and he noted that a football is much smaller than a soccer ball. Joel Swanson, president of People to People, said that the student of the month. pre sentation is not an award, but is given to a wide range of students from all over the world. He said that the presenta tion is usually given to a for eign student with an "out going" personality and is in tended to further the relations of foreign students and the American people. NDEA System Changed The Office of Education has changed the system of pay ing National Defense Educa tion Act (NDEA) Title IV fellows, according to James C. Olson, Dean of Graduate Affairs at the University. Title IV refers to graduate students on NDEA fellow ships. Previously, stated Ol son, checks were sent direct ly from the Office of Edu cation to the student. As of September 1966, however, the Another speaker who spoke at length in favor of the stu dent bill of rights was asked if he thought it could be passed this year. "If the students want a fettl of rights then it has every chance in the world of being passed, but it depends upon every student educating him self as to the facts involved. I'm optimistic and think it will be passed," the speaker replied. When asked about the re sponsibilities that go a 1 o n g with rights, the speaker an swered that as students and citizens, everyone has the responsibility and the right to educate themselves as well as make their own mistakes. The speaker then stated that the Administration was too paternalistic, while not even being a good father. Ship Of Fools Associated Women Students (AWS) and women's rights received attention from Mann as he said that "women should have a' say-so in mak ing the rules they have to live by the rules should not be made by some king or ship of fools." Mann stated that all Uni versity students are governed by the same rules except women. The women, he said, April 1 deadline, as speci fied in the constitution Senseney charged that it, was not proportional because the three vacant seats within the Graduate College, from which reapportionment was made, should have been filled in the manner carried out by the Student Senate. "The action of the elector al commission was not justi fied because it was unconsti tutional and there was an in terest in the graduate college, as shown by the number of write-in candidates on the ballots," Senseney declared. Greenwald's arguments for the defense seemed to hinge on the fact, as he claimed, that since there were not enough Graduate College stu dents that ran and that there would therefore be vacant seats on the Senate, this prob lem fell beyond the provisions of the constitution, concerning how to handle the problem. He argued that when the electoral commission realized that there would be a short age of candidates to fill the Graduate College seats, the commissioner, Carol Bischoff, went to the presiding officers of ASUN. At this time, he continued, it was decided to remedy the problem by legislation. The motion passed by ASUN stated, in effect, that, if there were not enough applicants to fill the vacant seats within a college, that the seats would be apportioned to the original apportionment. Senseney presented as evi dence a Daily Nebraskan story, dated May 4, stating that three seats were filled on the Senate following a meeting "last Monday." This, stated Senseney, showed that the reapportionment was not carried out before Apr. 1. Greenwald called ASUN President Terry Schaaf to the stand. When questioned concerning Senate action, Schaaf said that on March 23, minutes show the senate passed a resolution providing for reapportionment of t h e seats in case not all were filled. University will pay the stu dents along guidelines set up by the Office of Education. The change of entitlement means that instead of receiv ing money semesterly, stu dents will be paid at the end of each month, receiving nine payments with a double pay ment in May, according to Olson. "Once the students are able to make the adjustment to the new system, it will work out well," stated Olson. are under a completely dif ferent set of regulations. Defending himself and his actions against the epithet of "apathetic", Al Barton spoke to the crowd about diversity of interest. Barton stated that he be lieves there is no such thing as apathy, merely a diver sity of interests. Apathetic "Just because I don't wave a flag or join an activity, why should I be termed "ap athetic," Barton asked. "I came to the University to get an education others may be here for other rea sons. My idea is not to im prove the Administration, but to improve my mind," he stated. Barton noted that he was not "making fun" of the cam pus politicians, Greeks, or radicals, but that he resented being called apathetic mere ly because his areas of in terest in the University d i d not coincide with these fac tions' interesst. A suggestion to end the University's budget problem was proposed by another speaker. Stating the reason that so much money must be put into dormitories and new classrooms was because of the large freshmen enroll ment, the speaker proposed that an entrance examination be instituted to eliminate so many freshmen, half of whom would drop out in a year any way. Memorize The Teacher In agreement with a letter printed in the Daily Nebras kan, Doyle Niemann stated f u ' t ' ' - f w n p j Z RICHARD MANN Liaison Committee Plans Opinion Poll, Senate File The exact role and direc tion that the ASUN Legisla tive Liaison and Research Committee will take in voic ing the student's opinion on the proposed University budg et is being formulated. Curt Bromm, chairman of the committee, stated that much studying and research has already gone into formu lating the role of the commit tee. At a committee meeting, Thursday afternoon, Bromm and his two co-chairmen, Marv Almy and Phil Bowen, presented their ideas and projects. Summary Report "In order to talk to t h e legislators, we must be ac quainted with the budget re quest and why it is needed," Bromm explained. "There fore a summary report of the budget has been prepared and copies will be available to the committee." In addition, information has already been gathered, ac cording to Bromm, through talking to Chancellor Clifford Hardin, Vice-chancellor Jo seph Soshnik, and John Quigley, physical analyst for the legislature. "We plan to talk to Dr. Mark Hobson of the Gradu ate College," Bromm stated, "lie is coordinating the fac ulty efforts towards getting the budget passed." that a student should not have to go to class to hear a professor read a book. "Often, the criteria for a grade is how well you mem orize the teacher," Niemann said. Niemann opined that a teacher should be hired part ly on his record and his rep utation with his colleagues, but also on student opinion. He deplored the emphasis on research rather than, on good teaching. The forum which was held tit llMiX'i'A:) DOYLE NIEMANN . . . student opinion should be criterion in hiring code doesn't Almy, who will deal prin cipally with the research as pect of the committee, ex plained that originally he had planned to begin work by poll ing various faculty members concerning their ideas on the budget. "However, now that the Faculty Senate is presenting the faculty's case, we plan to concern ourselves only with the students," he de clared.. "Starting next week, we would like to start poll ing the students." Student Poll He plans to contact students with various points of view, but particularly the vocal ones- "We want their opinions and complaints, such as long lines, closed or dropped cours- es, the shortage of library books, etc." Bowen is in charge of de veloping the contact between the state senators and the students. "We would like to organize a correspondence campaign by which we could get stu dents to interest their parents, relatives, and friends to write their legislators in favor of the budget," Bowen said. He foresees a speaking tour, composed of interested stu dents, who would cover the state. The students would speak to civic clubs about the budget, the University's prob lems, and why an increase is (I 'Rights' outside for the first time, re ceived favorable comment from the audience. "I liked It, it was really good having it out in the op en and it brought the audi ence together more," said one female member of the audience. Chairman of Talks and Topics Committee, Larry Grossman, thought that the first forum went very well and plans to continue holding Hyde Park outside as long as good weatiier continues. instructors. exist." needed in the budget. "We could show the citizens and the legislators that we, as students, take enough in terest in the budget that we will go out and talk about it," Bowen declared. Bowen would like to see students concerned enough about the budget to write let ters to their home town news papers explaining the stu dents' view on the budget. 'Senator File' Another project would be the development of a "sena tor file" which would contain background information on all the senators. "In this file we would place a record of how each legis lator has voted on various bills, what his interests are, and other information which would help us in talking with the senators." Plans for this week, in ad dition to the polling of stu dents, according to Bromm, include the compiling of a Ne braska map which would show each legislative district and its respective legislator. Bromm stressed, in conclu sion, the necessity of hearing from students about bis prob lems. "This semester we will be compiling the facts and de ciding upon our role; second semester we will do the real work of contacting the legislators."