Vol. 81, No. 51 The Daily Nebraskan Thursday, Dec. 16, 1965 N2 AsJ It? xcV 'K r i Photo by Tom Rubin INTERN ATION AL STUDENT . . . Of the Month, Asad Ali Khan, stresses the importance of personal relationships International Student Says . . . 'Contact Essential To Understanding' By Steve Jordon One of the largest blunders that foreign people make, ac cording to November's Inter national Student of the Month, is to group together and not try to make sufficient contact with other people. "You can't expect everyone to come to vou." Asad A 1 i Khan, from Peshawar. West; raiusian saia. iou must try to make friends, to inter-mix I wun omers. ' made w ith Americans during monev than what the Sena Khan is a student at the' his stay here. I tors realized. Schaaf said that Iniversity. working on h i s : "Anv big thought starts with-in his opinion whoever tries doctoral dissertation. He was an individual." he said. "You ' to arrange the European selected by People-to-PeopIe j must make an effort to get to ' flights will have trouble find as the International Student know each person as an in-1 ing enough students inter of the .Month. j dividual. When I go downtown ! ested. ! in Lincoln I am surprised if Presently holding th r e e j I don't see a dozen people that I Sen. Don Voss argued in bachelors and three masters I know or that know me." ' favor of the plan and said that degrees. Khan is working to j i in talks w ith a Lincoln tourist finish doctoral work for a Ph. '-The main thing is to know : agency he had received t h e D. in Education Administra- that we are all human be-' impression that the Lincoln ll0n- ! ings." Khan said. "We have ' "Mv dissertation is on in-1 service teacher training in ; Nebraska and how I can adanf ; it to life in Pakistan," he said. Khan came to the United States on a six-month Full bright Scholarship sponsored by the Department of State and decided to stay in Ne braska to study. "During my siv-weck stay at York. Xehr., I decided to go to the University of Ne braska," he said. "It had the smallest amount of fees, but more important. I had friends close to Lincoln." He had gained admission to John Hopkins and Columbia universities in New York, but "there I knew nobody," he said. "It makes a great differ ence to know that if I need help I can call on someone." Khan said. "I have several families who will do almost anything for me I ask them." Since 1961 when he arrived In the United States. Khan has been visiting American families in New York, New Mexico. Illinois and Nebras ka. "I have been to well over a hundred homes." he said. "The difference between home life as it is really and as it is in the movies is very great." Khan han made over 350 speechei in his fhe years in the United States, talking to audiences of adults, teenag ers and grade school children. He taught high school in Pak- Puna M t'im Kuiin FIRST I'LACK . In " ' U ,.,., fAmM-m V V ' I K ft 1 ;, '5 U,t V.N k U ' ; istan for 12 years before leav ing his homeland. When his dissertation is completed in August. Khan plans to return to Pakistan and his wife and children. "I will be able to do more for those people to whom I belong." he said. "Anv little bit you can contribute goes to the "nation as a whole. I want to do my bit." Khan emphasizes the per sonal reiauonsnins ne nas tne same type of feelings of ; good and bad, love and hate; 1 our w ishes, desires and needs are verv similar. "The onlv difference is that there are different wavs of jp tackling problems." he said. ; gQSOl UTIOH "No one individual could say; that his way is best. He may; Ken Keller, assistant Uni be benefiting others, but he is J versity public relations direc also getting benefit at the, tor, said Wednesday that a same tune Odd Jobs Pay Khan's passage to Pakistan wiil be paid as a part of the, Fullbright Scholarship which he won over 15.000 Pakistani; applicants. During his s t a yj nere ne nas Dt-en wurhing ai . I I 1 . 1 ' A odd jobs to pay for expenses. ' Khan Is an original mem ber of People to People, a for-, mer president of the Dehan Lmon Literary Society and a :lor Clifford Hardin's personal member of the Nebraska In-Uequest concerning the stu ternational Association. j dents' recommendation will During Christmas vacation. all be published in news form he will be in Minneapolis t for the faculty. Seminar on cultural, social and educational topics, spon sored by the International In stitute of Education. rirmbwv K r Phi Pi Kiw-r. Th-tji Pblttrl. I.Zi p.m.'. (fimmj I'd! fP-t 2 ... Bt 11M I'l t. 1 i I mm., nappa wixmj if. fi. roi iwm , mm.i KnptMi mpfca !Vn 1 rv Fmr Or4jnarfcr, ft -li p m. n.rnu Hr fmur. 14 p m.: Pfci Gamma 1 1 In 1 n. IriaMtlr. t:S p.m.i fCf i.ni I . Pi J Vml X W p m.i PImu Prur r. tim ( mi 1. t .ii p.m. Vim nc tbrmrnth mr mad jrptfi hf 7 pro.; tram lirt Ikrcnvk rtckl t-T p.m. the Selleck Quadrangle window Student Flight Plan Rejected By Senate By Wayne Kreuscher Senior Staff Writer Student Senate voted Wednesday against a plan for low-cost student chartered flights to Europe this sum mer. Dave Fairbanks, a Univer sity junior, presented the plan to Student Senate last week and he asked the Senate to sponsor, the flights. Senate tabled the motion until yes terday's meeting. In discussion on the Senate floor various senators ques tioned the plan's details and the Senate's responsibility in responsibility in providing publicity and financial back ing for the flights which would have begun this summer. Sen. Cuz Guenzel said that the plan's details did not make it clear who exactly would be paying for publicity and other parts of the trip. She ex plained that if ASUN is to merely give its name to the plan "fine." But if Senate has to take an active part in planning the flights "this is not a proper function of stu dent government." Sen. Terry Schaaf also said he thought the Senate's con nection with the plan is un clear and that the plan would possibly take up more time and cost the Senate more Bulletin To Publish summary of the Student Sen ate's recommendation to Fac ultv Senate concerning Jan. 3: will be published in this week's Bulletin Board, Keler eXpiained that in ff,rm3,if.n f.f)ncernin? the rec nmmo,Knn ihst nrnfocenrs ,. n-t;,,, cinHontc rotum. in? home from the Orange Bowl game laXe Facuitv cna40-c ainn anH rhanroi- after Facuitv Senate tabled the students' recommenda ! tion, that teachers try to be j cooperative with students who do have trouble getting home from the New Years Day game at Miami in time for ! classes Jan. 3. Dr. Pearse To Speak At Theta Nu Meeting Dr. Warren Pearse will speafc at the Theta Nu, pre rrtnrlifvl "lt.llcai honorary meeting at 7 p.m. tonight in the Ne braska Union. Pearse is pro fessor of obstetrics and gyne cology, and assistant dean of the Nebraska College of Med icine. decorating contest went to agency would handle all de tails and finances of the plan. Voss noted that the ASUN is the only University group large enough to sponsor the flight plan because anyone who might take part in t h e flights would have to be a member of the sponsor organi zation. "Technically all Uni versity students are members of ASUN," Voss explained. Sen. Liz Aitken also spoke in favor of the European flight plan and pointed out that many schools smaller than the University have such plans for students. The plan would have pro vided round-trip flights to Europe for University stu dents, faculty members, staff members and members of their immediate families for approximately $275, accord ing to Fairbanks. International Students Find Serious Housing Problem By Julie Morris Junior Staff Writer The foreign student at the University has a pronounced housing problem, according to M. Edward Byran, housing director. Byran. who spoke at a meeting of the People to Peo ple Committee yesterday, said foreign students are generally not able to secure on-campus housing because their accept ance to the University norm ally comes after all dorm space has been filled. Need Good Samaritan tnat oreign stu(jents could be ! foreign students have d:f- ed astrav. in beijevjng that; ficulty knowing where to live;,isted hosing is necessarily! in a strange city. Byran said They don't know what exactly i availahlo or what thov i .i u r : i .- ' ? r "u.u.r Samaritan" to help them find housing and to assist them in getting settled, he added. "I would suggest that some- one be assigned to help them n ci(,tJ" d,- c,t He said that such initial con - tact with a newlv arrived foreign student would benefit both parties in the friendships formed. Bvran sited a foreign stu- dent's various problems in j finding suitable housing, not- ing communication in the! initial contact with the land- ;'ra irausponauun difficul- DeMars, Guemel First 'Outstanding' Nominees Jim DeMars and Cuz Guen- zel are the Daily Nebraskan's j first two nominations for Out-1 standing Nebraskan. J The letter explains t h a t j De.Mars, a senior in political science, has contributed some j thinz to his school in almost every possible way. "He's not ail clJU w uc inc nisi nuu All University Fund secre-j The letter stresses that De tary, Cornhusker copy editor, Mars ..isn-t afraid to work" ASUN Masters chairman, IFC publications chairman. Continued page 3, column 7 RAM Council Selects first Contest Winners Winners have been announced in the first annual Selleck Christmas window decorating contest. They are Susan Moseman and Gayle Malmquist, first place; Bon nie Hay and Barb Veulek, second place; and Trish Thompson, third place. Prizes of $15, $10 and $5 will be awarded to the win ners after vacation, according to Ted Suhr, RAM activ ities director. "We certainly appreciate all the displays." Suhr said. "There were 47 entries from the 120 windows show ing some type of decorations." The entries were judged Tuesday afternoon and Tues day night to make sure that the winning windows were outstanding night and day, Suhr said. "The entries were judged on originality, appeal, ap propriateness and workmanship," he said. "Some entries showed up well during the day but not at night, while some looked good at night but not during the day." Only six of the entries were from boys, who were handicapped by the design of their windows, according to Suhr. The windows in the men's buildings of the dorm are divided into small squares, unlike the large picture windows in the girls' rooms. The contest was sponsored by RAM Council. Disss By Beth Robbins Junior Staff Writer To show their dissatisfaction with present AWS rules, a group of University coeds is planning to sit in on the AWS House of Representatives meeting this afternoon at 4:30 p.m. The girls will "go over there en masse," according to Georgia Hiner "to be there, show that we are inter ested, and that there is dissension." To Offer Suggestions Although most of the girls will illustrate their opinion merely by their presence, Miss Hiner said that several will offer suggestions for rule changes. "We're not going merely to criticize," she said. AWS has been collecting data comparing women's rules on surrounding campuses, and has said that the regulations are quite comparable to those at Nebraska. But. Miss Hiner said, most transfer students say Ne braska rules are more confining. "We want to ask for an analysis of what they (AWS) have been receiving in this study," Miss Hiner said. The suggested rule changes are a combination taken from change," she added. ties, high cost and irregular ities of diet. He said a strange diet could greatly hamper a foreign student who is at tempting to adjust to a strange country. Supply is not a problem in foreign student's housing, By ran said, noting that there are 4.651 students living off campus in apartments. The housing office lists virtuallv all of the available! housing in the area, but the fact that it is listed by the University does not mean it is !annrnvpH"hniisin. Rvran said! approved housing. -The housing agency can't iact as a rental aeencv we're a listing agency." he said. j lg Housing Study i "Someone has to help the 1 international student make appropriate judgments, and I 'would advise vou to studv this1 , c r. n n t " Bmni ! said. He stressed the need for , someone who would help for- ei'gn students get around the, citv and find out what is available in housing. Suggestions have been made that space in the dorms be reserved specifically for for- eign student housing, the hous- ing director noted. Such a Young Democrats vice prcs-i ident, Spring Day assistant over-all chairman and former vice president, Spring Day assistant over-all chairman j chairman and former Theta j Xi president, secretary and vice president were a few of ; the positions noted by thei niiici ui uc.uoia "w" For Window Decorations fflSflC estfloui plan would make it possible for foreign students to be as sured of dorm space no matter how late their regis trations were accepted. The plan, however, has been opposed on the grounds that it would take space away from Nebraskans who wanted to attend the University. Byran noted that it is alreadv difficult for out state students to get into the University and said, "If peo ple can't see the value of intermixing state to state, I can't see much hope of inter mixing country to country." Several members of People to People presented possible ; solutions to the problem which ranged from setting aside a section of Selleck for foreign student housing to sending a a list of available housing to students along with their ac ceptance. But Byran suggested that none of the n ,c , foaciulo ' ... People to People did not pass a formal resolution on the subject, but President Joel Swanson said the housing committee plans to b e g i n a program of personal contact with foreign students who are looking for housing. He said a number of foreign students will be arriving to be gin the second semester and that the committee will be contacting them on a personal basis and offering their help in finding suitable housing. msmsm. mmmmmmmmmm msmmwa fc-.T Isdumi mm mmmmm. nmmt mmthM NT, 1" i y i v s f H . i . f r,, . ,i i- fL . , X JVtN L , irg Vh'iUt toy Tfwn Ruhin SIXOM) AND THIRD PLACES Nativity scency respectively. Suggestions to be proposed at today's AWS meeting include: hours for freshmen, 10:30 p.m. first semester, 11 p.m. second semester; sophomores and juniors under twenty-one, 12 p.m.; seniors and all those over twenty one, no hours with a key system. To Propose 2 a.m. Closing The group will propose 2 a.m. as the closing hour on week ends, with present 2 a.m. nights extended until 3 a.m. Sunday closing hours would be 12:30 p.m. "due to the difficulty some girls have getting back to the dorm on time due to bus schedules and the like." Weekday visit ing hours would be changed to extend from noon until 11 p.m . "Of what we know, our demerit system is one of the strictest," Miss Hiner said. Under the proposed system, a. campus would come after 15 demerits, with one demerit given for the first five late minutes, and three for each ten minutes following. Girls would receive one demerit for not signing in and one for not signing out. "The purpose of signing in and out has been lost," Miss Hiner said. She felt it should become a convenience to the girl who wants to let friends know where she will be rather than a necessity. Proposed rule changes for campuses of girls include giving them free run of the dorm, except the lounge area. This would include use of the phone. "There is no reason to place the girl in the corner like a little child," Miss Hiner said. "After the tension of a week of classes, it's psychologically hard on her." To Lower Hostess Age The age for a hostess for an overnight would be lowered from 25 to 21, and the rule forbidding girls from going to apartments without adults "thrown out complete ly." "It is constantly being broken as if it doesn't exist," Miss Hiner said. "The whole point is," she said, "everybody is break ing the rules now and cheating and lying about it." Why not change the rules to something that will be obeyed, she asked. Suggestions for rule changes have come from many people, Miss Hiner said, but the list to be presented today was compiled mainly by herself and Polly Rhynalds. "There is no point in dragging this out," Miss Hiner said. Those advocating the changes expect action within a month. Similar dissatisfaction among students at the University of Wyoming brought new rules in one week, she said. Women's clothing rules were changed last year after six to eight weeks of discussion. Miss Hiner said "This is "ridiculous." "This is not a personal gripe." she added. "I have never been in trouble with the AWS or been campused while I've been in college." Spaces Available! Applications Available c . mm j For 'Nebraskan' Staff For Union Trips ! Applications for second se. There .are .15 . available I mester senior staff positions places for the Union Ski Trip' en the Daily Nebraskan are which will take place overj due Monday. Jan. 3. at 5 p.m. semester break, according to j Interviews with Publications Richard Scott, Union program ! Board will be held the follow manager. The deadline for! inS Saturday morning. Jan. 8. registration is Friday at 5j The positions to be filled are p.m. I editor, managing editor, news A S75 registration fee must j editor, sports editor, and bus be paid at the time of regis-1 iness manager. The new sen tration. The fee covers every- j ior staff will then select the thing for the trip to Winter j rest of the Daily Nebraskan Park, Colo., except entertain-; staff, upon approval of the ment and tow charges. The : Publications Board, trip is scheduled for Jan. 26 Applications for both the to 30. I senior and junior staff may There are also a limited j number of reservations avail-! able for the Union-sponsored' Orange Bowl trip. ' tsmmsm ww"a mi-,mmmm mwm mmmmm mm immeixmm 4 h -A, s Mm . . 3 . . In the contest were be obtained in the newspaper office. Room 51 Nebraska Union, or the School of Jour nalism office. 2 171 CI S3 Xk 123 err "3 1 m-mmm mm t n i mi nnu. mm won by the top and bottom t' n til