The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, April 23, 1964, Page Page 3, Image 3
Thursday, April 23, 1964 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 Pre c Evaluation Of Council Difficult; Platforms, Results Compared By Frank Partsch Senior Staff Writer EDITOR'S NOTE: The fol lowing evaluation is the first in a scries compiled by the Student Council reporters of the last two semesters. This article concerns the repre sentatives in the College of Agriculture and Home Eco nomics and the Colleges of Engineering and Architec ture. The obvious way to evalu ate the work of individual Student Council members is a comparison of their elec tion platforms printed last spring in the DAILY NE BRASKAN with the work they have done during the year. Council President Dennis Christie, however, explained that this method is not al ways accurate for two rea- Civil Rights Rally Starts At Capitol; Includes Concert An Interfaith Civil Rights Rally will be held next Tues day "to express religious and moral concern for civil rights legislation," according to Rev. Ralph Hays of the United Christian Campus Fel lowship (UCCF). The rally will begin at 7:45 p.m. on the north steps of the Capitol at 15th and K streets with a band concert by the Lincoln Pius X High School band. Five speakers, includ ing Governor Frank Morrison, will talk to rally participants. Freedom songs will follow the speeches. "We would encourage stu dents and faculty alike from the University to attend in or der to get as good as repre sentation as possible," Rev. Hayes said. Other speakers include Bish cp James Casey of the Ro man Catholic Diocese of Ne braska; Bishop Russell Rau scher of the Episcipal Diocese ef Nebraska; Col. Paul Ad ams ret.) of the Air Force, now a graduate student in Teachers College; Rabbi Maurice Pomerantz of the Tif ereth Israel Synagogue. tllliMIIMfl r I Illillllfllii 1(11 MM1IIIIM MI MMltllllt 111111 I Nebraskan The University Bridge team wras one of the top teams in Region VIII of the Association of College Union 1064 National Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament. More than 145 colleges, universities and junior colleges participat ed in the tournament this year. Sharon Inner, sophomore in business teaJier educa tion, was selected Miss Fu ture Business Teacher at the second annual state conven tion of the Future Business Leaders of America, which met at Midland College in Nebraskan Want Ads FOR SALE: Mut sell $70 tux, ohnup. Worn twice, (.'oat iiizr 40. free alterations. Call tM.a(H)7 after 7:1)0 PM. Two wwd 10 sol. amiarlums. Just the thinfi lor the fraternity house. Phone 4Zl-6:iti. lWi2 MGA convertible, red. Immaculate. Must aell. Beat offer buys. 4ti(.-4i. 1K3 Ford MOXL. Burgundy, black In terior, bucket aeata, 477-45SB. JOBS: NEED EXTRA INCOME? Several cam pus roeds needed to assist me in my taut fro win business. Met your own hours In this year round busitiRss. X!an rnnvert to full time work during sum mer either locally or In your home town. Apply in peraon only Saturday, April 25, B:30 AM at 4211 O St. INTERESTED IN A BUSINESS CAREER? We are aeekinf young men between 21 and 26 to train for Manasement of Branch Offices. Openings in Fremont, Norfolk, Lincoln, and Omaha. We can place men with one or more years oi' college. This is the ideal position for the atudent who is in good scholastic standing gul is unable to continue In school. Several positions also available for college graduates. These positions offer: A carefully guided career training pro gram leading to Branch Management In 3-3 years. Good starting salary bile you learn aw future earnings above average. Rapid advancement based on Merit. Complete employee benefits Including profit aharlna. ALL JNUUIK1ES CONFIDENTIAL. STOP IN AND TALK IT OVER TODAY 1 POSTAL FINANCE COMPANY, K. V. Both, 125 So. 12th. 435-3294. . ATTENTION: India Association presents the Spring Cultural Program on Saturday, April 35, 164 at 7:30 PM. Plana: Ballroom at the Student Union. The admission is free. EVERYONE WELCOME! LEARN fO FLY. Start today, plan. Arrow Airport, 466-2308. budget Hme. July and August. Student Art Colony. Living expenses $3 'day. Classes sta gallery available In new Kki Vaoa area. For information: IH-. Jerry fjteas. Ore Bucket Lodge, Crested Butte, Welo. Jobs available. The Ruckles ans Mr to Ft. Lauderdale. sons: the member might not have been appointed to a com mittee where he could follow his platform or the platform itself could have been outside the goals and possibilities of the Christie Administration or the responsibilities of the Council as defined in the con stitution. This method has its merits, however, in areas not exlud ed by Christie. Examination of the records of the repre sentatives from the Colleges of Engineering and Architec ture and Agriculture and Home Economics indicates that some campaign promises were never introduced on the Council floor or mentioned as a possibility for the Council to investigate. The representatives from Engineering are Jim Klimes and John Lydick. Klimes' platform included improving Uie associates and Masters program and starting an an nual Masters Week at the University. He serves on the Masters program was im proved and the associated modified, Klimes fell u n d e r Christie's first exemption. Lydick ran on the recom mendation that minutes be after each meeting and that the possibility of an honor code be investigated by the Council. Lydick told the DAILY NEBRASKAN that both of these programs had been tried the previous year and neither proved success ful. The honors code commit tee was dissolved after the 1962-63 Council adjourned. As chairman of Uie Masters committee, however, Lydick justified the platforms of SKIRTING OTHER Editor Hits Immaturity An editorial in REACH published by Colorado State University, had this comment about CSU students. CSU is a very immature campus. By that I mean that the experi ence of many of our students is very definitely limited in scope. Most of us come from !llf IIIIIIIll 1II41IIMJIIM1IJ IIIM 1 1111(111 JltlMI lllllllliriflir Applauds I Fremont April 8 and 9, More than 200 high school and col lege students attended t h e convention and competed in the various contests. T li e team of Fran Williams, Ron Kuehner, and Barbara Sieck, University students in busi ness teacher education, placed second in (he vocabu lary contest. Ann Bartholo mew, business teacher edu cation senior, presided over the two-day convention as state president Helen Laird, a graduate of the University School of Mu sic in 1947, will head the vo cal music department of the Sun Valley Music camp for the second year this summsr Mrs. Laird attended Julliaid School of Music in Now York, and for the ast five years has sung leading roles in the opera at Kassel, Germany. She has also studied voice for three years in Basil, Switzerland. Brenda Blanker.beckler has been elected president of The ta Sigma Phi, national jour nalism honorary for women, for the coming year. Other of ficers elected were Jane Mill er, vice-president Vicki El liott, secretary, and Susan Smithberger, histcrian. Carol Jaeger was re-elected treas urer. Installation of officers will be Wednesday at 6:45 p.m. in the Student Union. Gary Fick was elected pre sident of Alpha Zeta, agricul tural honorary. Other officers are Doyle Kauk, iee presi dent; Daniel KnieveL secre tary; Leroy Cech, treasurer, DoK'tvon Benson, chronicler; Rolen SelL ag executive rep resentative. A'dvisors are Dr. L. K. Aowe and Dr. L. K. Fischer. Rolen Sell has been elected president of the varsity dairy club at the University, suc ceeding Lee Volker. Other newly -elected officers in clude: Ken Kast, vice presi dent; Val Warman, secretary-treasurer; Dave Robert son, program chairman; and Dick Drueke, ag executive board representative ; and Dr. L. K. Crowe, University dairy department staff member, club advisor. many of the other candidates with an impressive expansion and improvement of the Mas ters Program. The program, begun last year, was enlarged from five to 11 Masters and one of the Masters will speak this year at the Honors Convocation. Lydick is also on the Honors Convocation committee. The Agriculture represen tatives are Galen Frenzen and Lori Kjer. Frenzen stated last spring that the Council should follow the constitution as true representatives of the ! student body. He served on the Peace Corps committee, and was a member of the constitutional evaluation com mittee, which rearranged the Student Council constitution and by-laws to corresond to the model constitution re quired of all organizations. Frenzen was also a delegate to the Nebraska Student Gov ernment Association conven tion in Crete Nov. 22-23. Miss Kjer campaigned on placing a bus stop shelter on ag campus, allowing home ec students to live on city campus with less red tape and providing more city classes for home ec majors. The introduction of the cam pus bus system has alleviated the need for a bus stop shelter on ag campus, and the ad ministration of the College of Agriculture and Home Eco nomics is making arrange ments for home ec classes in Nebraska Hall. Neither of these projects was initiated by the Council or Miss Kjer. Miss Kjer is a member of the masters committee and the Student Tribunal. CAMPUSES one of two area; rural, in and around small, outlying towns and middle-class sub urban, primarily Denver. " Let me hasten to say, hopefully precluding the cries of insult and injury, that I do not think people from these areas are in any way inher ently 'inferior' or 'bad.' But the fact remains that in neith er type of background can one find the sum total of all experience. In other words, Denver, or a ranch-neither place is the whole world. This may seem obvious, but it only sounds that way." The MINNESOTA DAILY reports that Professor Harold Orton, University of Leeds, is compiling a dialect atlas of England. In interviewing sub jects throughout England, "the field workers did such things as sticking their tong ues out and standing with their legs spread, asking the subjects to describe what they were doing. Depending on what part of England they were in, the latter was ailed 'standing astriddle,' astrut,' 'open, 'strideled out,' 'open legged,' or 'splaw." "Independents should quit beating the old dog," accord ing to students at Oklahoma State University. Students have banded together to "end minority control and stop the Greeks, " and stop the campus split between Greeks and in dependents. Campus police at the Uni versity of North Carolina have a solution to the noise prob lem, according to the DAILY TAR HEEL, They have placed cables behind the dorms to keep cars and motorcycles from creating noises and dis trubing the residents of the dormitories. - Colleges are failing to pro duce leaders according to a committee of ten prominent educators at State University of Iowa on a special study of ""The College and World Affairs". This announcement was made in the DAILY 10 WAN. The committee feels that if liberal education is to meet the requirements of a n e w kind of world, it must under- pilllllUIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIIItlillilllMllltH 1 Scoreboard Farmhouse US, Kama Mama H . - S Sltma Ma 126. Hanpner Hall E E 1 Beta Theta PI 15E. Kappa Kap- S aw tiamma Ml. Theta :hi II 1211. Theta XI pledges ftf. fiutrasto of "Campus Flat 176, PI Hela fill lf. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH (Srflairibrt TODAY HOME EC CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Food and Nutrition building. STUDENT TRIBUNAL will meet at 5 p.m. PHI BETA LAMBDA will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 308 Teachers for election of offi cers. HOME EC CLUB will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Food and Nutrition building. STUDENT TRIBUNAL will meet at 5 p.m. PHI BETA LAMBDA will meet at 4:30 p.m. in 308 Teachers for election of of ficers. BUILDERS tours commit tee will meet at 4:30 p.m. in the Union south party room. SPRING DAY MEETING will be held at 8:30 p.m. All living units must send a rep resentative. Men's units will meet at Beta Theta Pi, wom en's living units will meet at Delta Gamma. UNIVERSITY YWCA will sponsor a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. in the UCCF building. Cost is 35 cents. TOMORROW ALL AG PINCIC and street dance will begin at 5:30 p.m. at the Ag mall. It is sponsor ed by Ag Union. JAZZ 'N JAVA will be held at 4 p.m. in the Union Crib. "PERIOD OF ADJUST MENT," week end film, will be shown at 7 p.m. and at 9 p.m. in the Union small aud itorium. Admission is 25 cents with student identification. go one of those fundamental overhauls that have kept it alive for centuries . . . There must be a re-formation of purpose. Two chimpanzees, Marcie and Dea, will take part in thermal research at K-State's new environmental labora tory, according to the KAN SAS STATE COLLEGIAN. They will be trained on op erate techniques never before tried with chimpanzees. It will be their duty to discrimi nate between different tem peratures. Manuscripts Due May 1 The deadline for submitting entries to the literary contest sponsored by the English de partment is May 1. The three events consist of one spon sored by the Academy of American Poets which has an award of $100 for the best poem or series of poems. Sec ond, is the lone Gardner Moyes poetry contest for un dergraduates with only two awards of $50 and $25. The Prairie Schooner Fic stitutes the third event which and undergraduates. Three awards are being presented of $50, $30, and $20. Detailed instructions for preparation of manuscripts are available in the English Department office, 221 An drews. The contest is being administered by Be mice Slote, Marjorie Loehlin, Fred erick Link and Hugh Luke of the English Department Li? Good for $1 credit on $6.95 $6.95 $4.95 OK RECAPS 6.0011 . OK WHEEL ALIGNMENT OK SHOCKS Good for $2.00 credit towards OK SEAT COVERS OK NEW TIRES .. $ 8.00 $10.95 4.70-15 7.5M4 OK BATTERIES $8.95 VaT t. O. HAAS "Vote for T.O. too" OK Dlst. 500 West "O" 435-3211 Use If 1 your ' k I.D. " I J u tara .00 Engineering Candidates favor Reflecting 'Beneficial' Opinion All four Student Council candidates from Engineering and Architecture College g:ve their support to reflecting stu dent opinion if it is "benefi cial" for the University as a whole. Bill Coufal Bill Coufal, with a 5.9 av erage, says Student Tribunal should be "changed to give the students a fairer chance." Coufal told the DAILY NE BRASKAN that the Tribunal was not fulfilling its purpose. "A court consisting of facul ty and student members should be set up so as to give a student the right to a trial by jury," Coufal said. Coufal suggests a number of other changes including the abandonment of college rep resentation on the CounciL He proposes representation "by districts on campus" and keeping only organizations "which are of extreme im portance." Although he did not bring up any specific con stitutional changes, Coufal says a constitutional conven tion, possibly next fall, should be held. Donald Voss "The Student Council should judiciously guide as well as represent students," says candidate Donald Voss who has a 6.1 average. Voss advises against changes in representation and the constituion until the Uni- Fairgrounds Rodeo Set For May 1-2 Dust will fly at the State Fairgrounds Coliseum May 1 and 2 when the sixth annual Nebraska Collegiate Cham pionship Rodeo brings togeth er hard-riding students from Nebraska's colleges. The event, sponsored by the University of Nebraska Rodeo Association, includes a w i I d cow race this year in addi tion to bronco riding, bulldog ging, calf roping, and other traditional rodeo contests for cowboys and cowgirls. A queen contest will add the feminine touch. Judges will be university graduates Jim Schooler, a former member of the Rodeo Association, and Jim Svobo da, now: ASCS office mana ger in Burwell. Bucking horses and cattle will be furnished by Art Fritcher of Henderson, Iowa. Competition will begin at 7:30 p.m. May 1, and 1:30 and 7:30 p.m. May 2. Michael Harding is presi dent of the Rodeo Associa tion, Russ Jackson is vice president, and Doug Downs is treasurer. SPECIAL STUDENT DISCOUNTS npoli liars .oo The Finest Gijt v.u. itu ssoo.oa AL.O TO tlSOO A perfect diamond is a jift of beauty and brilliance ... for ever. The lovely setting- add to the lasting eatisfaction of receivins: a genuine register1 Keepsake diamond ring. HnaiMiijriia"A i Mil 1332 "O" St, . 2-5126 Pill I Iter jhZ I jp-r -C. Coufal Voss Engineering Engineering versify can "can adapt to its recent tremendous rate of growth." He calls representa tion a difficult procedure that "needs reorganization inmany areas", but not before the Uni versity an adjust ot its "grow ing pains." Voss says that constructive programs like student dis count were ignored this year beacuse "blown-up issue," student drinking, was domi nating the Council. William Hansmire William Hansmire, the can didate with the highest aver age, 8.0, is especially com plimentary of the public is sues committee this year. He says the committee has not neglected any important is sues in "this difficult area." Constitutional changes could include elimination of duplica tion on some committees "namely that of student wel fare and the public issues area." Dave Fairchild Dave Fairchild, if elected, hopes to see "more effective communication between Coun cil and the College of Engi neering and Architecture." Fairchild, with a 6.2 cumu lative average, says the Coun cil should represent the stu dent body more proportional ly, rather than representing activities or organizations that have small membership. He also wants no change at pres ent in the constitution, but thinks it can be better ap- LeRoy Asher In the College of Agricul ture, where four are cofpet ing, LeRoy Asher feels the public issues cofmittee is wmmmm 11 HP iwii m.., Li The franc is local currency in France. So is this. v v. lntik fit l ii11iai.mn miiihwim..imus mnmmmmmmmmmmmammmammmmaammm Whether the bill is in francs,or !ira,oryen,you can pay with BANK OF AMERICA TRAVELERS CHEQUES known and accepted wherever you go throughout the world. Loss-proof and theft-proof, they're the kind of money you never have to worry about; money only you can spend. Sold by leading banks everywhere. WM ar aiaw miuwu. imik w savisss uiocwic-ik uau Wfoia uiis smwwiis. s - f 4t 11 Hansmire Fairchild Engineering Engineering Asher Agriculture Swoboda Agriculture "differentiating itself from the Council." He proposes public issue activity carried on outside of Council in the various student organizations. Asher says more enthusiasm can be generated by the or ganizations than by Council. Asher, who carries'a 6.1 av erage, notes that council members must make their own judgments when student opinion here is "hard to tell." Asher predicts college and organizational representation is going to lose effectiveness as the University grows. Some definite changes will have to be made, he says, as "more emphasis on student welfare as a whole" comes about, Don Swoboda Don Swoboda, with a 6.3 average, is running because he believes 'ag and city cam puses "could be tied in clos er .. . through better informa tion from Council action.' The DAILY NEBRASKAN "alone" cannot be expected to perform this function, Swo boda says. Susan Wiles and Rodney Johnson, third and fourth Col lege of Agriculture candi dates, could not be reached yesterday, but their platform views will appear tomorrow. . t i Hi w i,s 1 Atttmra fi "