Paga6 Daily NebP.skan Thursday, September 27, 1934 ff . "STOOGES WEEKLY SPECIALS 4 ! -' iuiij lUiiir.iMim .is f Wef r-S?rt Contest a ml -BTS o m p a a a r a a m CD P I a $150 1st Place Prize $50 2nd Place Prize r it OTOOGEO GPEOIALS ES' NIGHT m 2 o H 111 O o o a o o O en O O a HAM r DRINKS 8-9 p.m. for everyone! STOOGES GPEGsALS & BOYLESQUE MALE . REVIEW v STTE(3IES' 826 P St. TON GHT 8-0 FRIDAY LAO 7 SVI I X ir-nmr- i hmtt imw'it a NI O.UU o i X f A ASUN senators reinforce support for mid-term student grade reports By Jann Nyffeler Daily Neferafcn SUff Writer The Association of Students of the University of Nebraska rein forced its support of mid-semester grade reports Wednesday night. . Earlier this month, the ASUN Senate voted to recommend con tinuation of the voluntary pro gram, but decided that they need ed more information on it before making recommendations to UNL's Faculty Senate. Academics Committee Chair man and Sen. Ken Bukowski re ported that grade rosters are hand-delivered to academic de partments during the sixth week of classes. Instructors have six days to record students' grades and return the rosters. On or about Oct. 11, grade reports are issued. Grade reports are sent out then because students cant drop a class after the eighth week without instructor approval, Bukowski said. Part of the information the senate gathered came from a 20 page report of a questionnaire completed by 455 UNL students and another survey completed by 419 UNL administrators and faculty members. The surveys, conducted in faH 1982 by an ad hoc committee of Mid-Term Scholastic Progress Reports, indicated that students wanted instructors to continue issuing reports. If the Faculty Senate votes to eliminate mid-semester reports, the measure will likely be per manent. Bukowski said. ASUs recommendations to the Faculty Senate include: issuing grade rosters twice during the semester, shewing students' grades at that time by using their social security num bers and posting the roster near the instuctor's office sending reports to all stu dents with D3 or Fs in a course and requiring a studentinstruc tor conference creating a grade report form that instructors could send dir ectly to students any time, elimi nating the admissions and advis ing channel ASUN suggests that these proposals be mandatory for alll professors and courses. ex roles difficult to balance! EyBlllCssarl Daily Nebraskan Staff Writer While some people change their sex role attitudes, others revert to traditional male-female stereo types in today's society. This was one issue discussed yesterday at the Wellness Week program, "Masculine, Feminine or Androgynous: Current Sex Roles in Society." UNL assistant psychology pro fessor Natalie Porter and Dr. Jim Pipher led the discussion with a question "What are the easiest and hardest things about being a man or woman in 1984?" Porter and Pipher separated the 46 people in the room into all-men and all-women discussion groups. About 15 minutes later, everyone got back together to compare answers. One group of women discussed balancing a job or career. Some men said it was hard to know how to act in certain situations. Such as whether or not to open a door for a woman at the risk of offending her. Porter said people were more, androgynous 15 years ago than they are now. Porter said one of the hardest things to balance is the conflict THE WATERBANK Contemporary Christian Concert 1UUAY at :3U p.m. St. Paul United Methodist Church 12th & M St. C - Don't Put Your Decision to Buy Health Insurance on Ice. between a marriage and career. j Another group of men talked about how to be sensitive and still be considered "male." I In terms of specific sex rolesj most of the group agreed that it was easier to conform to a group norm than to be an individual, j Porter said the idea that women may be able to get a job easier; today is misleading. Women may get jobs, but they dont necessar-j ily move up in a company or organization. ! Pipher said th at to avoid seeing people in traditional sex roles,1 people should not be complacent and not accept things the way they are. He said it is easy to think you're a liberal person and ther fall back on stereotypes. Pipher said a good way of coping is tc avoid typecasting people. People need to be freer to express feel ings and emotions, they said. Lincoln police; proud of staff) training class! By Mike Georgs Daily Nehr&skan Staff Writer "We take pride that the Lincoln Police Department has the best" professional staff in the land,"! said Dean Leitner, chief of the: Lincoln Police Department, to mem-f bers of the Lincoln Chamber of Commerce Wednesday. Are you willing to gamble that you won't have any medical bills during the remaining school year? Why not buy Student Health Insurance and decrease your odds for financial disaster to illness or accident? After October 1. 1934 all enrollments are FINAL! Visit the Student Health Insurance Office, Room 103 at the Health Center by Monday, October 1st. A Student Insurance Representative is available to answer your questions Monday through Friday. For more information call 472-6000. P.O. Box 803027 Dallas, Texas 75380 1-800-527-0519 Since 1057, Leitner told the; Chamber the police force has, changed from requiring a ne-f week training course and a highj; school diploma to requiring enroll ment in a 9-month training pro gram and recommending some form of higher education. Leitner said 70 percent of the officers on the force have a degree. There are 296 LPD employees, 227 of which are commissioned officers. Leitner also said women and ethnic groups are now filling more ' positions at the department. Ac cording to Leitner, 22 women and 12 blacks are now on the force. He said the possibilities for advancement are unlimited, Leitner said one of his main objectives is for the police depart ment to continue to help people protect themselves against crime. "If we do not receive help from the people, the police force alone will be defeated by the criminal element," Leitner said. Leitner said his major concern is the problem of youth and nar cotics. To combat this, the LPD has set up the narcotics unit. Although it's existed for less than three years, there have been 2,497 cases involving narcotics. Of these, 5S0 cases resulted in arrests and more than $1.6 million in illegal substances has been confiscated. i t f