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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1967)
MMNMMMttMttKw THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1967 The Daily Nebraskon Page 3 FIVE COLLEGES ... at the University have dropped these in women's modern dance and men's fj At A i ' f ?f ' - ' ' .f ' O il l" Cultural Activities Planned For Semester Foreign films, op art, entertainers, sculpture, a ballet group and a trip to Europe are among the cul tural features offered by the Nebraska Union this semes ter, according to Rich Scott, Nebraska Union Program Director. Speakers and entertainers this semester will be the flamenco guitarist, Sabiscas, NBC U.N. correspondent, Pauline Frederick and the cartoonist, Jules Feiffer, he said. In addition, the First Chamber Dance Quartet will appear here on March 21. The group's dances run the spectrum from satirical dance to serious, classical ballet, he said. The Nebraska Union will also bring in a number of art exhibits. These will in clude a student sculpture display an op art e x h i b i t, and drawings by John Sing er Sargent, according to Scott. The annual Student Art Sale will be held May 4-5. The foreign films being shown this semester are: The Shop On Main Street (Czechoslovakian), A Wom an is a Woman (French), Dear John (Swedish), The IF - m to attend Summer School at your own College or University MONTANA STATE UNIVERSITY SO out-of-state FEES iuring Summer Quarter -Week Session June 19 -Aug. 18 Two 4 l2-Wk. Sessions June 19-July 19 July 19-Aug. 18 Study and JFH In the Big Sky Country IV2 COOL Mountains, Girls, Boys, Yellowstone Pk., Glacier Park, Rodeos. Brewery (theatre). Write: Admissions Montana State Univ. Bozeman, Mont. 59715 i Overcoat (Russian), Juliet Of The Spirits (Italian), Al pha ville (French), Darling (English) and Kwaidan (Japanese). Scott said that the Hyde Park Forum will be h e 1 d again this semester though the Talks and Topics Com mittee may cut down the number of forums. Apparently the absence of such speakers as Carl Dav idson and Steve Abbott and time conflicts cut down on the number of speakers and listeners, he stated. The third annual Miss University of Nebraska con test will be held in late March. Finally, Scott said, the Nebraska Union will sponsor the Summer Euro pean Flight for the first time this year. AUF Interviews To Begin Sunday Interviews for all Univer sity Fund (AUF) chairmen and assistant chairmen will be held Sunday starting at 12:30 p.m. Application forms are available outside the AUF cubicle in the Nebraska Un ion, Room 345. SPYDER'S and A-GO-GO FRIDAY NITE (jJaduiifisd. TkM low-coat rata avplf all elaslflei adurtulnf la la Dally Nabrasaaai tandarsl rals at ie far word and minimum charts al Ma Mr classifies: luartlk. rarmaiw, tar tana ads win lad lata twa cattforlM: (1) ads raanlat las than a week la aaerasslra mast ka said lor ofloro lasartloa, (I) ads ruaalaf lor mora lhaa a do wool will so paid wklr. To alaro a classified advarttarmrnt tall lha Calrsrsitr of Nsbraaka al 47)4111 and ask lor Iko Dallr Nobraakaa aiders or owno to Boom (1 la the Nebraska I'nloa. Tka elaaslflad adTortlalat manasrs malalala l:N la 1:M kaslacss hoars. Plaaao allomat to place roar ad during Ibeee keen. FDR RENT Three room apartment. Utilities paid. Ofl-etreet parkin. Men preferred, pri vate Entrance. US for two. Rooms: 1411 L Street. Six blocks. Older students approved. After 4. MISCELLANEOUS "Stud year abroad la Sweden. Franca. or Spain. Collrse prep.. Junior year abroad, and grsduate oroframmea, tlJOO luaraMxes: round trip night to Stockholm. Paris or Madrid, dorml tnrlee or apartments, two meals daily, tuition pared. Write: 8CANSA. 80 Rue Proa per Logouts, A 1 to a y Paris, their physical education requirements. Classes such as swimming may be voluntary in the future. Colleges Drop P.E. Requirements By Jim Evinger Junior Staff Writer In the last three years, three of five colleges at the University have dropped physical education require ments for men and women. A Board of Regents vote three years ago ended a mandatory ROTC require ment for men. This has left the decision for a physical education re quirement up to the indi vidual colleges. Teachers College and the College of Agriculture and Home Economics have retained p h y s. ed. requirements which can be met by ROTC. A faculty vote in the Col lege of Arts and Sciences last spring resulted in drop ping the physical education requirement, effective since September 1966. "The compulsive nature of the requirement was at stake and not the value of the course," said Gene Harding, assistant dean of the Arts and Sciences Col lege. He said that although the faculty felt that phy sical education was valu able to a student, it should be taken on a voluntary ba sis. A uniform decision by the College of Architecture and Engineering one year ago, ended the physical edu cation requirements for its majors. The decision was based on the college's view that students did receive enough exercise in the year and that even one semester hour each term of physical education crowded the schedule of architectural and engineering students, said Prof. Murlin Hodgell, director of architecture. Business Administration was the third college to drop the requirement which originally stemmed from a federal regulation that all land grant colleges had to require ROTC for men in order to qualify for fed eral support. Teachers College d i d keep the physical education requirement, but altered it. ROTC is allowed as a sub stitute for men for the physical education hours. Physical education has been a long-standing re COMBO GIRLS 9 to 12 folumn. Alaa Watts Seminar. April 1 and 1. Open to a limited number of Inter ested people. Por Information write Box AMI, L'ocoln. Nebraska. Great Plains Cafe, S7th It Cornhusker Hiihway. Open M hours Specials So il, t os. club steak li.tn. II os. rib steak fi n. n oi. sirloin KB. Shrimp ti n. Chicken It.SS. Cleanliness our motto. Arnold Palmer Deluxt Shirt Service 21st &0 13th & F quirement according to Dr. Norman Thorpe, assistant dean of Teachers College. All education majors are required to have four se mesters of physical educa tion. "We believe that peo ple who are going out to teach, especially elemen tary teachers, should be physically well prepared," Dr. Thorpe said. Dr. Marvin Twiehaus, chairman of the veterinary science department, said that the physical education requirement, which may be met through the ROTC pro gram, will not be changed for Agriculture College stu dents. The Regents' decision to end mandatory ROTC did effect the programs of the army, navy and air force. Major Edgar Garrison, assistant professor of mili tary science, said that the army ROTC program has not been burdened by men interested in meeting only a physical education re quirement over the last three years. The end of mandatory ROTC put an added burden on the physical education department for men. Cou pled with increased enroll ment, the department had to add extra staff mem bers, according to Charles Miller, chairman of men's physical education. At one time, the Univer sity offered the second highest number of intra mural activities for men in the nation, Miller said. Di minishing facilities due to University building and ex- pansion have put a strain on the department. SCIENCE EDITOR This individual should have a thorough grounding in the sciences. He should be able to communicate effectively, to enjoy meeting and working with people, and to respond to the challenge of de veloping new ideas. He should have a good fundamental grasp of literature in a variety of scientific fields. The man selected will be actively concerned with planning and developing ideas for new areas of science publishing, and will do some traveling to locate and determine the need for book manuscripts. He will join an active academic press with an expanding line of trade and technical titles located in a thriving university community. Good salary and benefit program. Reply to Director, Iowa State University Press, Ames, Iowa 50010 TRYOUTS FOR KOSMET KLUB Production of IRMA-LA-DOUCE Sat., Feb. 4 1-4 P.M. Sun., Feb. 5 1-4 P.M. Mon., Feb. 6 7-10 P.M. SKRIPTS AVAILABLE IN PLACEMENT OFF. 3RD FLOOR NEBR. UNION No Prevhut Experience Necesnary f llllll MIIIIIII7'IIIII 3MII I r I IIT 11 1 If f 1 1ll t If III II INFV Classes Set H NehMrt.'rnCI!, fr.N'h",s Free University classes will be held in the I :s Nebraska l.mon February -l0 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. S r iv1'5?' wtlich beEin the third week in February, may be altered I f Murtd by dam participant, accordins to Gene Pokorny. member oi the Coordinatins Committee for a Free University nri HiUSP ,m.aLv chn"se their own meen! limes and places, but the place "na ,m, of lhe initial meetinB has been decided. g ah free University courses and their course offering are: sz Intellectual Commitment In The University (Stephen Hilliardl i- .i FHttp sses the conditions in the University of Nebraska and ii m. I ,l"'cn' community which eneourare or thwart intellectual commit- S rz mem. Discussion and comparison with other universities will be the main course content. The first meeting it Feb. 16. 4 p m.. at 1025 So. 19th St.. Apartment 2. I I Scientific Investigation in the Social Science (C. R. tirnner) Scientific practices as applied to the social sciences will be the topic of discussion. Such topics as basic scientific method, probability versus cer- "on.'y. and I predicting beyond the data of an experiment will be discussed beginning Tuesday, Feb. 21. 7:30 p.m.. in Room 105 of the Temple Building. Theories of Communism S ' (Ivan Vjlgyes) s student will examine the theories of Communism from the Utopians : g to modern Chinese Communism. The first meeting will be in the Wesley : H foundation Student Lounge, 640 No. 16th St., Thursday, Feb. 16, 7:30 p.m. S r Modern Kxislentlal Theologians E E (Council on Religion) The ideas and implications of modern theological thought Is the topic E 'or this group. Discussion may center of theologies of Tillich, Buber, Bon- j is hoeffer, Mauritan, Bultmann and others. The first meeting is Tuesday, Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m., in the United Campus Christian Fellowship Student Lounge, 333 No. 14th St a General Aesthetics 5 (Bob Erirkson) Course content, largely determined by the group, may include an ap- 2 proach to the theories of aesthetics, existential art and literature, art photography and the Oriental approach to Nature. The group will meet in St. Mark's Episcopal Student Lounge, 1909 R St., Tuesday, Feb. 14 at E 7 p.m. The Art of Practical Politics IP' Sigma Alpha Cathie Shnttuck) Discussion will include the problems of bringing to public attention cer- tain candidates and issues through the use of all phases of the mass zs media. Classes will be led by experts from the fields of fcm r-alism and S advertising, from both major political parties. The first meetir ; is Wednes- a day, Feb. 15 in the Nebraska Union. Radical Needs In Education E (Steve Abbott) The class will discuss various thinkers who have moved society, with special emphasis on how radical ideas can be put into practice. The first meeting is Saturday, Feb. 18, 9:30 a.m., location undecided. rr Physical Research j E ((ieorge Rejda) The course will be an Introduction to psychic phenomena, including extra- sersnry perception, mental telepathy, mediums, clairvoyance, phantasm r:,ia poltergeists ighnsta) The first meeting is in the Wesley Foundation S Student Lounge. 640 No. 16th Sts.. Wednesday, Feb. 15, 7:30 p.m. s Film Techniques (Nebraska I'nion Film Committee) r The class will teach principles of film techniques to give students practical experience in critical judgment and in film making. The first meeting is Thursday, Feb. 16, 8 p.m., in the Nebraska Union. "Dieirirh Bonheoffer" S (Alvln M. Peterson) 5 A study of selected excerpts of Bonhoeffers writings will be the course material. Boiihoeffer (1906-1945) was a professor, pastor, scholar, s theologian and martyr. Meetings will be in the Lutheran Student Center, E 535 No. 16th St.,Thursday, Feb. 16, at 8 p.m. i Toward a Genet al Theory of Material Culture (Richard A. Krause) The class will examine the relationship between persons and material s things, and the two maior ideologies in the world today that are violently competing foi the loyalties of men The first meeting is in B-13, Burnett E Hall, Monday, Feb. 13 al 7 p.m. Human Reproduction (Theta Nu Medical Honorary) s This course will outline the most complex human system, the repro- E ductive system. The approach wiil be factual, with disregard of the moral and social implications. The first meeting is Tuesday, Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m., location undecided. j Ana'vsls ot the Stigma cl Being a Black American (Hughes H. Shanks) ; The course will Be structured to give the student an insight of his own S antipathy towards being a Negro w.ith a discussion of Negro history in- i eluded. The place of the first meeting is the United Campus Christian z Fellowship Student Lounge, 333 No. 14th St., Thursday. Feb. 23, 7:30 p.m. A Survey of Buddhism lE : (Terry T. Tilford) I The course will acquaint students with the fundamentals of the history, : beliefs, and practices of Buddhist philosophy. Discussion will include the : Buddhist Metaphysic, and varieties of Buddhism in the Far East and the : : West. The first meeting is Thursday. Feb. 16, 2 p.m. in St. Mark's Episcopal Student Lounge, 1309 R St. Surrey of the Old Testament: Genesis to Esther : (J. Richard Arndt) : The course will acquaint students with the Old Testament by direct : reading and study, using a modern translation of the record. The first : meeting is Tuesday ,Feb. 14, 7 p.m. in the Residence Director's apartment : in Abel Hall, South. Dynamics of the Vnderdeveloped World E (Dana A. Deeds) ; This course will cover problem areas which have impeded social and EE : economic progress in "Developing" nations. Particular attention may be : given to Latin America, but discussion oi patterns common to all under- : eloped areas may develop. The group meets Tuesday, Feb. 14, 7:30 p m., i in the Lutheran Student Center. 535 No. 16th St. E Psychology of Humor s (C. R. Gruner) Different topics concerning humor will be covered, including how "wit" : differs from "humor." the effect of humor in communications, and the : persuasiveness of satire. The first meeting is Tuesday, Feb. 21, 7-30 pm 3 : in Room 105 of the Temple Building. Literary Studies (Larry Grossman) - A special attempt will be made to relate literary works to the arts, politics and sociology of the culture in which it was created. The works to ; be studied will be determined by the group. The first meeting will be S Tuesday .Feb. 14, 7:30 p.m. at 110 So. 28th St., in the basement. The Psychedelic Drugs (Terry T. Tilford) Students will study the psychedelic experience, and examine the effect S of the "mind-manifesting" drugs. Legislation surrounding these substance drugs will be discussed. St. Mark's Episcopal Student Lounge, 1309 R St., will be the site of the first meeting, Friday, Feb. 17, 1 p.m. Cultural Impact of Mass Media EE. 'C. R. Gruner) Students In this course will discuss the various aspects of the impart of radio, television, magazines, newspapers and advertising. The first meet ing will be Tuesday, Feb. 21, 7:30 p.m. in room 105 of the Temple Building. Edge of Wisdom (Donald Imming) This course will be an Inquiry into the nature of religion, faith, sin, God and other theological topics as viewed by Tillich, Niebuhr, Fromm, Buber, Herberg. The group will study The Edge of Wisdom, a sourcebook of religious and secular writers The first meeting will be Thursday, Feb. 16, 8 p.m. in the Newman Center, 320 No. 16th St. Group Discussions (Professors John Davidson, Floyd Hoover, William Torrence) These University professors will meet regularly with a group of students to discuss a subject determined by the group. The times and places of the first meetings are: Prof. Davidson, Monday, Feb. 13, 640 So. 40th St., 7:30 pm.; Prof. Hoover, Thursday. Feb. 16, 3737 C St. 7:30 p.m.; Prof. Torrence, Monday, Feb. 13, Wesley Foundation Student Lounge, 640 No. 16th St., 7 p.m. Till i .IK IllliilllllMII JiiClillJIill MIIiilllM 1MI I1M I M 1111 tlTTiTilf f rillllll IIMlIIIIIIIIlf 1 JIM 111 11 1 ITl ttlllilllllliitlitilllllllMtlllU lill IIIIUtlKKirillllllllllJIin YOUR FAVORITE PIZZA j I (This offer good thru Sunday, Feb. 5) j I BRING THIS AD TO EITHER PIZZA LOT ! 489-4601 i:iS. I II ; t i-i t 322 So. 9th zM I 432-6364 ' I Election Date Tentative ... Appointments, Elections Main Business Of AWS The appointment of a con stitutional convention chair man and the scheduling AWS board election com prise the main AWS busi ness this semester, accord ing to Pam Hedgecock, AWS president. Although ASUN has not set a date for the AWS general elections, "the board will ask for the second Wednesday in March as election day," Miss Hedge cock said. The primary election date will also be announced shortly, Miss Hedgecock added. With the new elec tion procedures established by AWS in December, can- THURSDAY VINCENT PRICE Lunch eon, 12 p.m., Nebraska Union. PLACEMEN T OFFICE, 12:30 p.m., Nebraska Un ion. A.W.S. WORKERS, 3:30 . Nebraska Union. VINCENT PRICE Lec ture, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. COUNCIL FOR Excep tional children, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. RED CROSS Malone Center, 4:30 p.m., Nebras ka Union. U.M.C.A., 4:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. UNION CONTEMPOR ART Arts Committee, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. PI LAMBDA THETA, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. Y.M.C.A. - Cabinet & Advisory Committee, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. A.W.S. COURT, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska union. A. S. U. N. BOOKSTORE Committee, 4:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. INTER-VARSITY, 7 p.m., Nebraska Union. MATH COUNSELORS, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. k'SllO-A AV . -J .f at your bookseller aV. Cllfrt NOTES, INC. tw2w(w' 0mmm 0 iitkans Status lineoln, Near. IC30S r1Zrr'vJ- didates for board positions will no longer be slated by the outgoing AWS members. Instead, any University woman who meets the .'re quirements for participation in extra-curricular activi ties and has an accumula tive average of 2 3 is eligi ble to run for a board po sition. Following a primary elec tion the candidates receiv ing the most votes will have their names placed on the general election ballot. NTo more than two candidates per office will run in t h e general election, Miss Hedgecock explained. AWS presidential candi dates must also have a 2.3 accumulative average and meet the University requirments for participa tion in extra-curricular ac tivities. The president must have junior or senior standing for the year she is to serve and must have been an AWS board member at o n e time during her college career. Miss Hedgecock added AWS will also establish guidelines this semester for the constitutional conven tion which will meet next fall and operate concurrent ly with the AWS board until a new constitution has been written. "I will appoint a c o n stitutional convention chair man within the next two weeks," Miss Hedgecock said, and the board will de termine how consitution representatives to the con vention will be selected. Romano's Pizza & Sandwiches Free Delivery On Campus 226 Mo. 10th 432-5961 Dickens can't scare you when you'rearmed with Cliff's Notes. As you read "Tale Of Two Cities,"your Cliffs Notes will provide a complete explanation and summary of every chapter. It will do won ders in smoothing the "rough" spots and in creasing your under standing. And don't stop with Dickens. There are more than 125Cliff's Notes ready to help you make bet ter grades in every lit erature course. rranoe. Tijkj. ?aa