Monday, September 26, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 AWS Starts 'Home Away From Home' A "home away from home" program has been Initiated by AWS to accommodate Uni versity women who live great distances from the campus. These women are forced to use their allotment of out-of- towns when returning home for week-ends, according to Helen Snyder, associate dean of student affairs. Women may establish unofficial resi dences with relatives resid ing in the vicinity of the Uni versity and obtain unlimited week-end permissions to their relatives' homes, explained Miss Snyder. "Residences within the state or in towns such as Sioux Falls, S.D., will not re ceive permission to partici pate in the program," added Miss Snyder. Permission for a "horns away from home" slip must be obtained from Dean Sny der. This slip is then given to the AWS representatives in the girls living units. "The circumstances in volved in individual stiuations will be the major factors in gratning "home away from home slips," Miss Snyder said. She cited as an example a girl with a permanent resi dence in Guam who applied for a special permission slip "She didn't have any rela tives in Nebraska," Miss Sny der stated, "but she did have close family friends who live in the state. Under the cir cumstances I gave her a per- j mission slip." I College Teachers Seek Tax Relief WASHINGTON (CPS) De spite the election-year popu larity of aid to education a move to give tax relief to teachers may fall victim to the rising costs of the Viet Nam war. A number of bills to give teachers exemptions for t h e expenses of post-graduate ed ucation have been introduced before the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee, but indications are that the tills may never get out. The proposed legislation would ease the financial bur den on teachers of pursuing advanced degrees a course of action necessary in many school districts if teachers are to gain pay raises. But indications are that the Johnson Administration will support the IRS guidelines because of a need for revenue to combat inflation and to pay for the Viet Nam war. President Johnson has warned Congress to cut down on do mestic expenditures and has sought to place blame on Congress for excessive feder al outlays of funds. Other opponents to teacher tax credits call the benefits unfair for favoring one group, may be in severe trouble be cause the chairman of the Finance Committee, Senator Russell Long (D-La.), Dem ocratic majority which, may pigeon hole the bill if the Johnson Administration takes a stand against tax exemp tions for teachers. The bills were introduced to Congress in response to Internal Revenue Service pro ThcM low-coat ritet applr to all nlinlflnd advertlalnf la tha Dallr Nebraakami abuMUrd rati ot te per word and minimum charaa til m per claaalfled Inertlon. ParmrDt l theM alia will Ian Into two catuorlea: (1) ada runuinr leaa than cm watik la auooaaaloa mull be paid lor bclora Insertion. Z ada ruiuilna lor man than ana weak will ba paid weeklr. To plana a claaallled advertiaanwnt call tba Univeraltr of Mebraaka at 477-6711 aid auk lor tba Dallr Nebraakaa offlnea or come to Uoom El In the Mebraaka Union. The elaaalfled advertlalni manaanra maintain :3U la I'M bnalneaa houra. rieaae attempt to plane rnur ad dnrinc ihoae houra. FOR SALE Toniwau 1WJ-19C5 Corvette.. 489-3713. for Sale. 1W2 Honda Dream. Windahield, Saddle baea. Call 4MMB72 any evening. For Sale. 26" men a bicycle. 128. Save on aa. Call 477-4B23. Two JuU-lenath coats, rur. Black vel vet. Size 14-16. 11". 434-WDS alter 6. BOOKS Great lantaar adventure novel: of Iahtar". bookirtore, 820 fi. 12. 'Ship Sexua". "Ptotua", "Nexua", "Tropic of Canoer". "Tronic ol Capricorn . bookatore, 220 M. 13. FOX RENT 727 Fairfax. Private Upper Duplex. New refrUerator, atove. drapea. 406-1M. WOULD YOU BELIEVE. Private. XJn fuiniahed houae. Range and refrigera tor. Bring rnommatBB. 1712 N. 2Wh. MHO per munth. School term. Extra nice baenmont. rurnlahud. Car peted. One bedroom. Una of dP frwKf!. Weal lor couple. 323t ti. 12. 477-8M8. CHAD BTODKM'S Efficiency apart ment near camnua. All new luriuah Inn. wall to wall cariwt, etc. Shown br appointment only. Call 4M441 or Grossman Plans Films, Speakers Controversial films, nation ally known speakers, Hyde Park and panel discussions will complete the schedule of events programmed by t h e Nebraska Union Talks and Topics Committee, according to Larry Grossman, newly-selected chairman of the group. Grossman, a junior in the College of Arts and Science, stated that one of his commit tee's major goals this year Is to "cause as much discussion as possible." He said that he will try to promote personal contact be tween campus speakers and students. The first program arranged by the committee will feature the two candidates for Ne braska governor, Phil Soren sen and Norbert Tiemann. The program will be in the f o r m of a question and an swer period and will be held Oct. 13 in the Nebraska Un ion. Other speakers throughout the year will include Art Buchwald, noted political satrist; Jules Feiffer, car toonist; Pauline Fredericks, correspondent f or t h e United Nations; and film star Vin cent Price. In addition, Grossman noted that the committee would arrange several panel discussions on vital problems. Birth Control, student po litical activism, Black Power, drugs and American foreign policy are some of the sug gested topics for the panel discussions. Hyde Park will begin its posals to eliminate all tax deductions where taxpayers gain job advancement from their educational expenses. The IRS suggested the new regulations on July 7 to tight en 1958 guidelir.es allowing such exemptions. IRS issued the new regula tions to prevent taxpayers, and teachers in particular, from deduction' more income from their taxes that the 1958 rules allowed. If instituted, the IRS rules would bar ex emptions for educational tra and provide tax relief only for expenses necessary for maintaining employment. Congressional reaction to the IRS suggestion was im mediate and intense. Forty five senators have introduced bills to bar the new IRS rules and the move has gained similar momentum in the House. This is not the first time that IRS has attempted to eliminate tax exemptions for teachers. Ever since the broad 1958 guidelines were put into effect, the IRS has been contesting tax deduc tions for teachers. Some years ago, for example, the com mission ruled that a Virginia school teacher could not de duct her expense in attend ing s u m m er school, even though she was required to take summer school courses or risk revocation of her teaching certificate. But the IRS action overruled by the Fourth Circuit Court of Ap peals and held the expenses deductible. Ideal for College Student. 10 SI' Detrulter Deluxe Mobile Hume. Sky View Trailer Kancn, 1030 Mo. 4U, Lot 73. LOST AND FOUND Found: One Law Book. Owner pleaaa Identify. 477-11484. Loat: Blue trench coat white button.. Found: Blue trench coat aailttr collar, belt. At Dean'a Tea. Pound Hall VIS. 477-11271. MISCELLANEOUS BUS BOY OR GIRL or Tea Room. 11 a.m. -2 p.m. 61.25 per hour plua lunch. Apply Mia Irvun. Second Floor. BOV-LAND-SWANBON. PAT'S TYPING SERVICE Rguaonable ratea Phone Pat Owen 423-2001 Loat. Baaketball key chain. If found contact Lan Blacker. 477-b7b. Real part time lob. Car naoeaaary. Call 4:12-41146 auytime.l Wanted: Artlat to work part time: Silk aureenlng. Plume 46M7I16. FOREIGN CAR OWNERS Factory Trained Moiihumca Tune upa to complete overhaula Complete Stock of Genuine Part STANDARD MOTOR CO. im "O" 432-4277 second year under the spon sorship of the Talks and Top ics Committee. The popular soap-box for um of last year will be moved outside to the south steps of the Nebraska Union in good weather, according to Gross man. Hyde Park will begin this Thursday at 3:30 p.m. Grossman stated that h i s group will also be active in promoting teach-ins, perhaps working with other campus groups already sponsoring such programs. In another effort to stimu late controversy and discus' sion, the committee will se lect special films to be shown with a discussion period fol lowing. Last year one of these films dealt with the House Un- American Activities Commit tee hearings in San Francisco. Brochure To Name Talented Talent Mart, sponsored bv the Nebraska Union, will be held Saturday, Oct. 8. All types of talent are in vited to perform. Contestants will be graded by a panel of judges from different areas of interest. All entrants will have the name and a descrip tion of their act published by the Nebraska Union Program office in a brochure, Talking about Talent. The brochure, which pro vides publicity for the en trants, is a good opportunity to show what talent is avail able on campus and is sent to interested people in the community. It is available in the Nebraska Union Program office. Entrants are asked to sign up in the Nebraska Union Program office before 4:30, October 6. Talent Mart will be held in the Nebraska Union Small Auditorium from 9 a.m. till 12 noon. There will be a $1.00 registration fee to cover print ing of the brochure. Astronomer Talks About Star Forms A prominent English astron omer who built his first tele scope from rolled linoleum and mail order lenses when he was 14 will speak at the Nebraska Union Monday eve ning. Dr. Ian Roxburgh, reader in astronomy at the Univer sity of Sussex, Sussex, Eng land, and now visiting at the California Institute of Tech nology will speak "On the Formation of Binary Stars," at 7:30 p.m. in the Nebraska Union auditorium. Dr. Roxburgh is a fellow of Churchill College, where he did graduate work in theoret ical astronomy, and a mem ber of the International Astro nomical Union. He spent the academic year 1964-65 on leave from King's College, where he was a lecturer. His work in California this summer has been concen trated on the problems of ro tating and close double stars. TODAY'S BARBERSHOP QUARTET IS A TRIO RAY FRANK DICK Sorry, we don't sing. Can't even name the top 10 on the Nifty Fifty. However, we do. know all the newest haircuts. Razor cuts. Ivy leagues, flat tops. We find the best way to achieve perfect harmony with our customers is to keep up on our bartering business. Come in and see us soon. We're right up the street from the campus in the Stuart building. Call 435-2000 For Appointment BOB'S BARBERSHOP 1315 P Street Van lleusea available of . WELLS 1134 v- " r(if OFXf 'FATHA'S TRIO . . . clowning on the steps of Sheldon. Tatha' Hines Tours Soviet Union The Russian people love jazz said Earl "Fatha" Hines of his recent state department tour to the Soviet Union. The famed jazz musician who performed at the Univer sity Friday, was one of three musicians selected from the country to take part in the cultural exchange program. Smiling and extending a warm handshake to all back stage visitors after the con cert Friday, Hines answered reporters' questions concern ing his Russian tour. Sex Is Basic Concern Of New Morality Code The new morality is an es cape from marriage, accord ing to Dr. Walter Mueller, Dean of Academic Affairs at Concordia College. Mueller stated that if you love you have concern for the individual. Then the new morality says you may live with someone and not marry them, then you are escaping from the concern and respon sibility aspect of love and at the same time escaping from marriage. "The new morality says if two people love each other, anything they do is a moral act. This is not a new idea, but rather found in the litera ture of the Middle Ages." ex plained Mueller at a meeting of the Gamma Delta religious orgznization. "The fallacy in this so called new morality is that if you love somebody it should never end. for if it does, you have never loved them. Real love does not depend on what you receive in return," he continued. "Evervone that has a mind has a system of morals. Mor ality is an idea or a system within one's mind. Variance from what we as individuals believe to be moral is viewed by us to be immoral," Muel ler declared. "Therefore what is moral to one person, is thought to be immoral by an other." "To say that we have mor ality is to sav we have a code. The code is a series of ideas planted within our minds. The morality is the way our actions are related to these ideas." There are many different moral systems, according to Mueller, but one thing that they all have in common is "417" FROST "0" Hines told of the tremendous crowds that would gather to hear American jazz during the six week tour of Russia. With him on the tour were six side men and a girl jazz singer. "We played rain or shine and the people sat there rain or shine," exclaimed Hines. ' "They would send us flow ers every night and we even needed police protection try ing to get through the crowds after performance s," he added. that they deal with man and hi.s relationship to something outside of himself. The new morality, as seen by Mueller, is associated chiefly with sex. Anything else that it deals with is on the fringe. "The new morality was erected because people thought that the old one wasn't working anymore. Rather they thought too many of us were pretending to be moral to what they caU 'old morality', " Mueller clari fied. "Rather than trying to make it work , they just dropped the old morality for a new morality," he com mented. "What they should have done was try to make the old one work." "The talkers and writers have dones us a service by showing how hypocritical we have been towards our old morality. But they have not done us a service by dropping this morality for a new one," Mueller concluded. ROTC Majors Get USN Officer Info The United States Navy Of ficer Information Team will be at the Student Union Octo ber 4 through October 7 to inform all interested under graduate majors in R.O.T.C. of their opportunities as an officer in the Navy. Juniors and seniors may make arrangements with the Team to take the Officer Qualification Test on campus. VAN UEVSEH "417" TRAVELS WHERE THE ACTION 1S1 For the man on the go, a shirt that can get him there in carefree style... "4 17" Vanopress. Permanently pressed, this traditional fashion never needs ironing. V-tapering assures elegant fit and sharp, virile lines. Precisely-cut tab or button-down collar gives a finishing touch for action! for added tell u$ turanee, try I- f i irk" ? j v i 11'' 1! 'hi I VAN HEUSEN' Hines said that most of the Russian people in the cities he toured, had never really heard jazz. They have records, but he noted that an album there costs from twenty to thirty dollars. According to the jazz pian ist, the standard Russian music is mostly orchestral in nature. But other than that, Hines observed that the peo ple there have much the same entertainment as people everywhere. Hines has been signed for another State Department Tour in Hong Kong and Tokyo in the near future. He said that he enjoys playing for col leges, but is now heading for a night club circuit. Drugs, Job Corps Are Lounge Series Topics A highlight of the East Cam pus Union activities this year will be the Lounge Series, which each month will present a series of discussions about a controversial topic. The September series will center on non-addictive drugs. The November series will explore the topic of the Job Corps. It will present Job Corps officials, law enforce ment officers, representatives of churches and business and city officials who will discuss the impact of the Job Corps on the city. An art lending library, a new activity on East Campus, will be held in September and January. Another September activity will be a trip by bus to Oma ha to see "The Blue Max" at cinerama.Entire expenses for the evening will be $4.50. A Sadie Hawkins dance in November will feature the theme "Sadie Hawkins Goes Mod." In December the East Cam pus Singers will present a Christmas chorale and a tree lighting. Hotel reservations will be made for East Campus stu dents who wish to attend the International Livestock Sales in Chicago over Thanksgiv ing. A Spring Jamboree will be 8fl 360 the influential line of men's toiletries. You'll go for its brisk, clean scent and rugged overtones I uoir by ittif Creativity Not A Factor In Judging Applicants Medford, Mass. (LP.) - Measured creativity is not a useful "third factor" in judg ing college applicants, accord ing to a research project completed at Tufts University by Dr. John Newell of Tuft's Education Department. Dr. Newell, who has been working on a U.S. grant in education, was looking for something to use in addition to high school averages and SAT scores in the formula for selecting students. It had been found that so called "high risk" students (those who did not perform that well in high school or on college board exams, but had some other qualities that ap pealed to the committee on admissions) actually perform about as well as students called "low risk." During last fall's first week of school, the sophomore class was given a test in creativity, a compound of sample ques tions from three standardized creativity tests. Dr. Newell discovered that the results of the exams contributed no ad ditional information. Stu dents who had done well on SAT tests also scored high on creativity. Every candidate for Tufts is assigned a predicted grade point average by the Admis sions Department. "High risk" students have a median average lower than 2.0. Actu al figures after the first year showed that the averages of "low risk" students are very slightly higher than those of "high risks." Dr. Newell says this is not held in Feb. and in March the Union will present a talent show. An annual highlight of the East Campus program is the penitentiary tour. Students eat with the inmates, and pre sent a talent program after touring the buildings. Another April event will be the All-Ag Picnic. The Spring Choral in May will feature the East Campus Choirsters. Other events will include knitting lessons, several cof fees, films and documentary films, Jazz n' Java, several Christmas events and a house mothers bridge party. ( y'!vl IfU f4 . . . it's a new, young feeling in junior and juntar petite fashionsl From our "after-five" collection, silver rayonmylar gliter knit with long torso nd flip skirt, $19. UNIQUE SECOND surprising because the Com mittee on Admissions spends a great deal of time studying the "high risk" students. It examines their extracur ricular activities and recom mendations more carefully than it would for a student who had performed very well in high school and had high scores on college board ex ams. These "high risk" stu dents are actually calculated successes. Dr. Newell's study also showed that "high risk" stu dents tend to overestimate themselves, and "low risk" students tend to be more re alistic." "Even after they have done poorly their first year, 'high risk' students tend to be over ly optimistic," said Dr.' New ell. "Terrific recovery rates are very rare, and the pat terns students set in the be ginning, carry through ill their college year s." Don Love Library Seen By Nephew Of Benefactor The grand nephew of Don L. Love, benefactor of Lore Memorial Library, was a visitor to the University Thursday. William F. Love visited the library while in Lincoln on a business trip. Love said be didn't know why his great uncle chose to will a grant to the University for a library. "It's embarrassing to be caught in ignorance of one's own family," he said.- His grandfather and great uncle had homesteaded in Iowa. Don Love had been a prominent Lincoln lawyer, banker and was twice mayor of the city. The library was erected in 1943 from a gift of $850,000 from Don Love's estate. Dur ing the war it was used as an Army barracks and was re converted to a library in 1945. It was formally dedi cated Oct. 5, 1947. Love said that Thursday, was the first opportunity he had had to browse around in. the library. He is district manager for United World Films, pro ducers of educational films.