i i . a J ''-I . 1 t 1 1 Poge 4 New Guide I Expands On NU Policies ' An expanded section out lining the University's expec tations of student conduct and the exclusion of AWS rules constitute the only major al terations in the 1966-67 edition of the Campus Handbook. The handbook's pre face states that its purpose is to "serve as a reference book during the time a student is attending the University. All incoming freshman re ceive a Campus Handbook, which explains in detail ad ministrative and academic functions, student housing, campus organizations and ath letics. G. Robert Ross, vice chal cellor for student affairs, said the reason for the handbook's exclusion of AWS rules is that the AWS B oar dupsab lished a handbook specifically for the purpose of defining University women's rules. . Ross stated the purpose for the lection on student con duct is to "provide a more clearly defined and more us able handbook." The segment should illus trate the University's stand on illegal drug usage, demonstrations and picketing and proper utilization of fire alarms and equipment, he noted. Registration Revamped Next semester a student may not have to send in a registration form. Instead, a form with his personal infor mation will be sent to him. Ted Pfeifer, systems co-or-dinatbr for student affairs, said that by next semester, it is hoped that electronic computers can be used to fill out registration forms. The forms will contain all the personal information pre viously supplied, he added. The student will check the printed information and send back the registration only if corrections or additions are needed. Pfeifer said the University hopes to build up an infor mation file so that a student will fM out a complete form only once in his college ca reer. This information may be used by the scholarship and housing offices and the Juni or Division, he continued. He added that there is less chance for error if the infor mation is recorded only once. With the present equipment, approximately 2,000 registra tion forms can be printed in one hour. A machine is on order which will do the print ing twice as fast, Pfeifer said. "We are also working on a system to eliminate h a n d pulling of cards," said Pfei fer. Regents Winners Honored At Tea Alpha Lambda Delta, the freshmen women's honorary, is sponsoring a tea for win ners of the Nebraska Regent's Scholarship. The tea will be held at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Nebras ka Union. Nebraskan . Want Ads TkM few-Mil mlM aaplr la all elaaal fl4 laXrtiilnc In the Dally Ntbraikan: HaDdard rat of be per word and mini- mum charge f f) pr claiilrled Inaar- lloa. Parmani for theaa ada will fall Into Iw calatorlet: (II ada running kaa than a aa la aaccaiaioa mart b paid for hefora Inaartlon. U) ada running for mora thaa one week will ha aald wecklr FOR SALE CORNmiSKER BILLIARD SUPPLY, 1020 "P". Come play pool with ua. One piece and two piece cuea for aala. FOR RENT For Rent. Gentry Houae 3140 Orchard. Unlvertlty approved. Nice clean urn lehed apartment (or 4. 2 each. Alao double room, cooking, TV. 4774268 Roommate to ahare houae. Male, 140 No. 26th. 432-1846. I p m.10 p.m. MISCELLANEOUS R'al part time Job. Car neceaaary. Call 477-2340 after 9 p.m. We art In the proceaa of organizing a email group of mature, pre-achoo; children for a program of play and liutmcUon that complemente and en rtchee nuraery echool and kindergarten experience. If you think your pre echooler would be Intereated In euch an activity two afternoona a week, call Alan or Meg Booth to learn more about this opportunity. Telephone 4DS-717S. HIGH INCOME JOBS ON CAMPUS Cat a high paying Job In aalea, dlttri butlon or market reaearch right on your own campus. Become a campus representative for over forty ma sa lines. American Airlines, Operation Match, etc. and earn big part-time money doing interesting work. Apply lialtt awayl (Xlegiate Marketing, Dept. H, 27 E. 21 St., New York. N.Y. 10010. 191 BSA Lightning Motorcycle MO cc. dual earns, 2700 miles. Sea at SU No. 24tk day. Commuting daily from Omaha. Call Richard Wlsmont 731-9t.M for informs Uon. rrn wr . II.U III liil III! I I 'Usl University Plans Construction To Meet Enrollment Demand By BOB HEPBURN Junior Staff Writer Due to a rapidly increasing student enrollment, the Uni versity has besun a vast ex pansion program of construc tion which is hoped will meet the demands of the student body. Heading the construction hnnm is an $8 million dormi tory complex located north of Nebraska Hall. George R. Miller, administrator of t h e physical plant division of the University, said that the new complex will consist of three nine-story towers plus a din ing hall and will be completed in the fall of 1967. Two of the dorm towers will be for boys and one for girls and will accommodate 1500 students when finished. The complex, which is designed Daily Nebraskan Staff Puts Out Bigger Paper The Daily Nebraskan staff has been enlarged this year to permit a bigger paper, ac cording to Daily Nebraskan Editor Wayne Kreuscher. Kreuscher is a junior maj oring in journalism. This is his fourth semester on t h e Nebraskan. He has served as a reporter, copy editor and news editor. He has also worked on the Lincoln Star as Sunday state editor. The news editor is Jan It- kin, a junior majoring in journalism, in her two semes ters on the Nebraskan she has been a junior and a seni or staff writer. She has also served as regional editor for a youth organization publica tion. Bob Ginn. business manag er, is a junior majoring in journalism. The managing editor is Lo is Quinnett, a senior major ing in journalism. She in terned this past summer on the Sioux City Journal and is also a columnist for the Oma ha World Herald. The sports editor is Bob Flasnick, a junior majoring in journalism. Night news editor is Bill Minier, a senior majoring in English and physics. The senior staff writers this year are Toni Victor, a sopho more majoring in journalism; Randy Irey, a sophomore ma joring in business admini stration; Julie Morris a juni or majoring in journalism; and Nancy Hendrickson a junior majoring in journalism. The junior staff writers are Cheryl Tritt, sophomore; Cheryl Dunlap, sophomore; Bob Hepburn, junior; and Triumph Austin Healey NOW ON DISPLAY and Ready for IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Standard Motor Co. 1731 "O" 432-4277 f 7 zjj V. 1I1I FOOD SERVICE CENTER. by Clarke and Anderson, will be similar to Marie Sandoz Hall and will be financed by revenue bonds. Stadium Ready Despite a seven week con struction strike, Memorial Stadium will be ready for this coming Saturday's football game. Miller said that the new addition will accommo d a t e 11,000 spectators, in creasing the stadium's capac ity to approximately 63,000. He said that the $350,000 cost of construction eventually will be paid for by ticket sales. The construction of a new women's P.E. building to be located on 14th Street north of Vine Street has just been announced. Miller said that construction will begin short ly and that it should be fin- Eileen Wirth, sophomore. All are journalism majors. The copy editors are Jane Ross, a junior in journalism; Barb Robertson, a senior ma joring in English and journ alism; and Peg Bennett, a senior also majoring in Eng lish and journalism. Members of the staff are selected on the basis of inter views. The Publications Board chooses the editor, news-editor, managing editor, sports editor and business manager. Schaaf Cont. from Pg. 1, Col. 2. "We don't have the right to secede from the state just be cause we feel we are denied something. If we are denied a right, let's formulate a Bill of Rights. If it is a privilege we are denied, let's earn that privilege," Schaaf continued. Schaaf stated that if the proposed Student Bill of Rights of the CFDP party Is passed, he would not agree with it but would support its adoption outside the Senate. "I am opposed to the sec tion of the CFDP Bill which has to do with students gov erning themselves outside the classroom," Schaaf stated. "I believe this is not a right, but a privilege to be earned." "We have been provided the materials and the men to build upon the foundations of student government estab lished last year. It must now be determined whether stu dent government will be a shack, which will not last, or a mansion which will st'nd for years," Schaaf concluded. READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS AUTOMATICS WRINGERS DRYERS Lincoln Maytag Co. 360 No. 48 St. 434-7491 ' DEPED ABLIE "v The Daily "'a . . for dormitory complex. ished in the spring of 1968. A federal grant will pay about one-third of the expected $2 million cost with the state paying the remainder through revenue bonds. Changing the skyline of the campus will be a 12-story of fice building which will be built between Bessey and Bur nett Halls. The bids for the project will be let in November and it is hoped that it will be com-: pleted by the fall of 1968. The building, to be used for fac ulty and administration of fices, is designed by Davis and Wilson and will be con structed at a cost exceeding $2 million. The Nebraska Union will also be expanded with an ad dition and the enlargement of first floor. In the plans are provisions for more student meeting rooms, expanded caf eteria and Crib facilities, ex panded lounge areas and an improved north entrance. The cost of the expansion will be $1.5 million dollars and is scheduled for comple tion in the spring of 1968. Con struction will begin some time this fall. The first part of a two phase project concerning the new music building is just about complete. Miller said that the first building will be finished in about one month, and in the meantime, classes will be limited to the first floor of the two-story struc ture. The state legislature appro priated $1.5 million for the building in the 1963 session. The building is designed by Hazen and Robinson. Upon completion of the new music building, the current building will be torn down and a $500,000 music recital hall, the second phase of the proj ect, will be built in its place. Also proposed for the city campus is an eight-story, $8.5 million chemistry building. It will be located due north of the Geography Building and will contain almost a quarter million square feet of lab and classroom space. Bids will be let in the spring and the scheduled completion date for the building is the spring of 1969. On the East Campus, t h e PHI DELT ADDITION . ta - i t 1 wtwi Whatever color horse you're driving this year, hitch him up out front of The Hitchin' Post. We don't have oats for the nag but the best men's traditional college clothes in town. 119 North 14 Nebraskan building of the new Dental College is well under way. It is scheduled for completion in the fall of 1967. The new building will have seminar rooms, classrooms and 84 semi-private stations for clinic work, as well as a research laboratory and ani mal headquarters. There will be facilities for closed circuit television to al low several students to ob serve another student. Laboratory sciences held in this building will be oriented toward dentistry. Presently dental students take labora tory sciences with other stu dents. When the college moves into the building. 56 freshmen dental students will be able to enroll, an increase of al most 35 per cent over t h e present freshman enrollment. A federal grant of $2.5 mil lion and $1.85 million in state funds will pay for the $4.4 million structure. The build ing is designed by Henning son, Durham, and Richard son of Omaha. An animal science research building is planned for the East camous at the cost of $1.5 million. Bids will be made this fall with the com pletion date set for approxi mately the summer of 1968. On the Omaha campus, the construction of a new hospi tal and clinic plus a basic sci ence building will begin this fall at the cost of $15 million. A federal grant will pay for nearly half of the cost, with the state supplying the other half. In the plans are the remod eling of several hospital un its, with a resulting 200 bed increase in hospital capacity. The project is scheduled for completion in the summer of 1969. The proposed fraternity and sorority complex adjacent to 16th Street is presently under design, Miller said. He said that the first stage of the complex will consist of four buildings and will be begun in the late spring of 1967. Phi Delta Theta fraternity also under went construction work this summer as an ad dition was added to their house, enlarging its capacity from 44 to 78 men. m . . enlarged living capacity. 432-3432 NU Students In Good Standing Will Not Be Drafted, Says SS "We are not drafting from the classroom," reported Col. Francis Drath, deputy direc tor of the Nebraska Selective Service, easing the mind of virtually every male student at the University. Drath said that unless a student is flunking or is not a full-time student, there is almost no chance of his be ing drafted. He said that "full-time" is determined by the individual schools, but he stressed that "many local boards are de fining 15 hours per semester as full-time" and advised all students to carry that load if at all possible. Even if a student is doing poorly academically and is ordered into the service, he will first be classified 1-S and deferred until the end of his academic year. Drath pointed iniii i iiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii illiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiillliliiiiiliiiliwiiiiiiiiiliiiiliiij Fine Arts Series Swings To Jazz The classic of jazz musici ans, Earl Fatha Hines, will open the Nebraska Union fine arts series in an outdoor con cert on the steps of Sheldon Art Gallery September 23. Hines and his trio will pre sent the annual jazz concert at 3:30 p.m. on the Sheldon lawn, Friday, Sept. 23. "Hines is credited with having the greatest single in fluence on jazz piano," Ne braska Union Program Di rector Richard Scott said. Hines has been named the most famous jazz pianist in the world. Scott described Hines as a classic of jazz since jazz got its start. He played with the great NU Theatre To Present 5 Comedies A Series of Comedies marks the second year in repertory for the University Theatre. The season, which runs from October through May, offers five comedies ranging from plays in the Renais sance tradition to recent con temporary productions. Included in the repertoire is "As You Like It," a Shakes pearean comedy which will be performed Oct. 21-22. John Osborne's "Look Back in Anger" completes the first semester's repertoire . The play's debut, under the di rection of Joseph Baldwin, is Oct. 28-29. "Gianni S c h i c c h i" and "Rita," two Italian one-act operas, will be staged by the music department and will run Feb. 1-4 only. Concluding the season are Brenden Behan's "The Hos tage" and "Waiting for Go dot," Samuel Beckets con troversial play. Season tickets are currently being sold for $6 at the Uni versity Theatre box office. Ticket holders are entitled to five reserve seats which may be used at any given performance. 1966-67 Nebraska Union Fine Arts Series Presents: - u m Ml v J J, ' V:, - Miiniiii. -" "-'-r"t - - -' -1 out that this rating will be given only once to the stu dent. To be eligible for a student deferment, Drath said that the student "must have scored either a score of 70 on the Student Deferment Test or be in the upper one-half of his class at the end of his first year, upper two-thirds at the end of his second year, or up per three-fourths at the end of his third year." A graduate student must be a candidate for a degree, be carrying at least nine hours and either score 80 on the Student Deferment Test or be in the upper one-fourth of his class to be eligible for student deferment. Drath stressed that this was an "either, or s i t u a t i o n" whereby a student had only to qualify in either the Stu- names of jazz, including Lou Is Armstrong, and then led bands himself with famous musicians, Srab Vaughn. Dizzy Gillespie and Jonah Jones. Downbeat magazine voted Hines the jazz musician of 1966 and he has recently been elected to the jazz hall of fame. He has just returned from a tour in Russia spon sored by a cultural exchange program between the U.S. and Russia. Also high on the list of Ne braska Union activities this fall are trips to the Iowa State, Wisconsin, Colorado and Kansas football games. The Union-sponsored trips to the out-of-state games will be made by bus. The num ber of tickets and spaces available are limited, Scott said. The cost for the trip to the Iowa State and Kansas games is $14 and includes bus fare and the game ticket. An overnight trip will be made to the Wisconsin and Colorado games. The $33-fare includes round trip transpor tation, insurance, lodging and the game ticket. The Union Fine Arts Con vocation Series will continue October 13 with a debate be tween gubernatorial candi dates Lt. Governor Phillip Sorensen and Norbert Tie mann. Union activities for the re mainder of the semester in clude Art Buchwald, political satirist and columnist, who will speak October 20. The East Campus Union will sponsor a trip to Chica go November 24-27. The Swingle Singers, who have taken Bach's music and turned H into a jazz score will present a concert Decern ber 6. The Union also sponsors he foreign film society and the weekend films. The art lending and record lending libraries are to be annoenced in tne Union at a later date. At the end of the semester the Union will sponsor a ski trip during the semester break to Winter Park, Colo rado. Frday, Sept. 23, 3:30 p.m.. West Lawn of Sheldon Art Gallery FREE Thursday, September 15, 1966 TWormpnt Test or aca UCHL Jl1 demic standing to have a stu dent deferred status. He said that there were two main reasons for the Student Deferment Test. First, ho noted that some studf.its do well in the classroom but not so well in exams and that the Test is a means of equaliza tion for these students. Secondly, the Test enables the Board to determine how the students of certain schools, such as Harvard, stack up against the students of other schools such as Ne braska.hecontinued. Drath said that the Student Deferment Test will be given again in November and strongly urged all students who have not taken the test to do so at that time. Another stipulaion for de ferment is that the student must be in a recognized school. Drath noted that in re cent years this has come to mean everything from barber colleges to business and voca tional schools. The draft quota for Nebras ka in September and October is 160 and 246 respectively. This represents a slight de crease from the same two months last year, the former figures being 235 and 260. Sheldon Features Sports Paintings ThrPfi new exhibitions of paintings, photographs and prints are on display at Shel don Art Gallery. The naintines by James Eis- entrager, associate professor of art, depict tracs ana ase bail scenes. One of them was selected to rmresent Nebraska in the State of Washington Govern or's Show which is now tour ing the United States. A ohotoeraphic exhibition hv Am Guler emphasizes life scenes in Turkey, particularly m Istanbul. A nrint disolav bv David Driesbach, a member of the art faculty at Northern Illi nois University, portrays life scenes. Men's Honorary Certificates Here The Certificates of Mem bership for those initiated into Phi Eta Sigma, national scholastic fraternity for fresh men men, in May 1966 have arrived. They can be claimed in the geography office, Room 103, Geography Building during office hours, 8-12 a.m. or 1-5 p.m., according to Leslie Hewes, faculty advisor. WANTED 50-60 UNIVERSITY MEN TO SELL AT ALL HOME FOOTBALL GAMES APPLY ROOM 109 COLISEUM Convocations The JAZZ Incomparable il II NINE and TRIO "JtW'Mj y"--1 fyi trv'.