FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1967 The Daily Nebraskon Page 3 WLC Votes To Approve 2 Ratification Methods By Mark Gordon Junior Staff Writer An amendment to the In terdorm Association (IDA) constitution allowing resi dence halls to choose be tween two methods of rati fication in the scheduled Feb. 21 vote, was passed Monday night by the Inter dorm Coordinating Commit tee. The measure, proposed by IDCC chairman Jim Ludwig, states two ways a dormitory can ratify the revised constitution that was defeated six to four by the dorms in an earlier election last semester. The first method of ap proval is the dorm voting individually and counting Its vote by itself. In this case the constitution must be approved by a majority providing that over 30 per cent of the eligible voters vote, or 15 per cent of the The Church Directory first Baptist Ckorck Llaeste, Baptist Student Fellowship: 9: SO a.m. Worship: 10:45 a.m. Evenlnf Fellow ship: 6:00 p.m. 134C K Street. 477-4198. First VQr.ffUcal Covenant Church, Worship. 11 a.m. ana 7 p.m. Collet and Career Fellowship: a-U p.m. Kui L Street. 489-1999. First Methodist Chorea. Worship: 9:90 and 10:55 a.m. Church School: 9:30, 10:55 a.m. J72S No. Mth. 466-1905. First Presbyterian Chareh. Wor ship: 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Collegiate Class 9:30 a.m. 17th and F Street. 435-3271. Holr Trlnltr EnlseepaL Holy Com- p miunoa: a.m. r amify service and w scnoa: iu:ju a.m. owl A Street. 488-7130. St. Fail Methodist Chorch. Wor ship: 9:30 and 11 a.m. Church School: 9:30 a.m. 12th and M, 477-6951. Christian Science Church, 1st Chnrch, Worship: 11:00 a.m.. 12 L Street, 432-3680; 2nd Church Service: 9:30 ajn., 62 k O Street: Collet Groups: 6:30 p.m. Thursday Cotter School Religion, opposite Love Li brary. Trinity Mfthedlst Chareh. Worship: 1:30 and 11 a.m. Church School: 9:30 ajn. 16th and A. 435-2946. One Methodist Chnrck. Worship: :S0, 9:30, and 10:45 ajn. Church School: 9:30 a.m. Tri-Cs (for Uni versity students)! I p.m. 27th and R. 432-4776. MsmoIs) Friend Meetmc (Quakers). Worship: 19 a.m. Adult discussion and Sunday School tor children: 11 a.m. 3319 So. 46th. 488-4178 or 488-6977. READ NEBRASKAN WANT ADS Befor you decide on the job that's to start you on your professional career, it's good to ask a few point blank questions . . . likei ' Will this job let me rub shoulders with engineers doing things that haven't been done before, In all phases of engineering? Will I be working for an engineering oriented management whose only standard is excellence? Will I have access to experts in fields other than my own to help' me solve problems and stimulate professional growth? Will I be working with the widest range of professional competence and technological facilities in the U. S.? Are engineering careers with this company stable ... or do they depend upon proposals and market fluctuations? Why not ask these questions about Bendix Kansas City when Mr. R. E. Cox visits the BENDIX KANSAS CITY Excellence the eligible voters will be re quired when less than 30 per cent vote. The second approval me thod states that any num ber of dormitories may hold a joint vote on the consti tution, provided they have the consent of their resi dents. The constitution must be approved by a majority vote provided that 30 per cent of the eligible voters vote, or 15 per cent will be required for pass age if less than 30 per cent vote on the measure. The amendment also stated that the constitution shall be ratified if seven dormitories approve it be fore March 1, and the IDCC passed an addition to the original amendment stating that all the dorms shall hold the constitutional elec tion on the same day. Catii er Hall had originally planned to have their elec tion on March 7 because of a conflict with the Hall SPYDER'S and A-GO-GO FRIDAY NITE The low-cost rites apply n claslfied advertising la the Pally Nebraska) standard rat t per word and minimum chart ol 50e per classified Insertion. Payment tor these ads will fsD Into two eatetoiies: (1) ads running less than ene week In succession must be paid lor before Insertion. (2 ads running for more than on week will be paid weekly. To niaea a classified advertisement sail the University ef Nebraska at 477-1711 and ask for the Daily Nebraskan offices Colon. The classified advertising mansgera Pleas attempt I place your ad during those FOR SALE On black hardtop sportscar. Call 475-1486 or 432-5766. Cheap. I960 Rambler. Stick. $225. Contact at 1409 No. 21. FOR RENT Three room apartment. Utilities paid. Off-street parking. Hen preferred. Pri vate Entrance. $65 for two. Roommate needed to share three bed room prefab between campuses. $92 $36 per month. Call 432-5619. MISCELLANEOUS Bellevu carpool to University. Evans. Phone 291-5173. Ear! Alan Watts Seminar, April 1 and 2. Open to a limited number of inter ested peopl. For information writ Box 6041, Lincoln, Nebraska. LUhere doss on GRofn&op iiitrn ? University of Nebraska campus February 8 & 9, 1967 Or you may write Mr. Cox ati Bex 303-MQ, Kansas City, Me. 64131 MIME CONTRACTOR FOR THE AEC Bendix Kansas City, prime con. tractor of the Atomic Energy Commission and equal opportunity employer, produces and procures electrical and mechanical non-nuclear components and assemblies for bombs, missile warheads and experimental weapon device. elections, scheduled for the same time. Ludwig said that at the next IDCC meeting, sched uled Feb. 8, final constitu tional discussion would be held, a review of the elec tion procedure would be held and he would try to have copies of the revised constitution printed in large quantities for distribution to the various dormitory residents. 'Irina La Douce' Try outs Schedule Kosmet Klub tryouts for the spring show "Irma La Douce" will be held in the Union on Feb. 4 and 5 from 1 to 4 p.m. and on Feb. 6 from 7 to 10 p.m. according to Joe Carraway, publicity chairman. All persons interested can pick up scripts in the Union placement office all this week. COMBO GIRLS 9 to 12 r com I Boom SI In tb Nebraska maintain 9:39 t 1:39 business hours. hours. "Study year abroad in Sweden, France, or Spain. College prep., junior year abroad, and graduate programmes. $1,500 guarantees: round trip flight to Stockholm, Paris or Madrid, dormi tories or apartments, two meals daily, tuition payed. Write: SCANSA, 50 Rue Prosper Legoute, Antony Paris, Franoe." Great Plains Cafe, 27th 4 Cornhuskar Highway. Open 24 hours. Specials 96c $1. 8 oz. club steak $1.50. 12 oz. rib steak $1.75. 12 os. sirloin $2.25. Shrimp $1.35. Chicken $1.35. Cleanliness our motto. Arnold Palmer Deluxe Shirt Service 21st fir O 13th & F world depends on slfl i:tfflllIIIiIllltli:!MIIM(lltlllllllliEfliririlll1lllllll(M(tlMl?tIIIIIITIIlflflllTltUMnilMM Ml M II llil tri ItlllML Girls Learn How i To Give By Jim Evinger Junior Staff Writer All campus males should take heed there's a small group of coeds who might surprise some unwary guys on a date. With the course these girls are taking, it might be the guy who takes the orders! And the girls will know how to give them! Six coeds are currently enrolled in the Air F o r c e ROTC program and take the same aerospace courses as the men working for their commissions. The on ly difference is that they labs, and are not eligible to receive commissions. Sue Shimonkevitz is start ing her second semester in the program. She says that she takes ROTC because she's interested in knowing what her father does. He's been a career officer in the Air Force for 23 years. "I don't think any of the guys in the class believed it when I walked in. Some thought I was just there because of the boy-girl ra tio. But I really am inter ested. I'll take as many years as they let me," Miss Shimonkevitz said. Hyde Park Date Not Set The date for the first ses sion of Hyde Park lias not been selected because the Nebraska Union Talks and Topics Committee which sponsors the program is in the process of reorganiza On Campus IT'S A NORTH WIND THAT BLOWS NO GOOD Crushed between the twin millstones of January weather and final exams, you are saved from total des pair, poor devils, only by the knowledge that winter vaca tion will soon be here. Where will you go this year? Will it be Florida again, or are you tired.of jails? Then how about Puerto Rico? A most excellent notion, say I. A balmy and bounteous island with long white beaches and blue, blue skies and green, healing seas. And, most pleasant of all, the warm and gracious people of Puerto Rico ! You don't even have to know Spanish to communicate with this friendly folk. Just learn three simple phrases and you'll get along splendidly : "Buenos dias" which means "Good morning," "Gracias" which means "Thank you," and "Que sera terd" which means "Your llama is on my foot." In order to help you enjoy the fabled land of Puerto Rico it would be well for me to supply a bit of historical background. (It would also be well for me to say a few words about Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades be cause the makers of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades pay me to write this column and they are inclined to sulk if I omit to mention their product. Of course, they don't stay gloomy long, for they are kindly, cheery men fond of Morris dancing, spelling bees, and temperance punch fine, upright types, as true and gleaming and durable as the blades they make. And if you've tried Personna's, you know how true and gleaming and durable that is ! And if you haven't tried Personna's, poor devil, you've cheated both your purse and face, for Personna's last and last, shave after luxury shave, close, clean, nick less, hackless, tugless, gougeless, scratchless, matchless. Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades come in Double Edge or Injector style and are made only by the makers of Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades.) But I digress. Back to the history of Puerto Rico. The island was discovered by that popular discoverer Chris topher Columbus. Incidentally, considering Columbus' popularity, it's odd we know so little about him. What do we really know ? Only this : He was born in Genoa on August 25, 1451, the son of Ralph T. Columbus, a knee-cymbal vendor, and Eleanor (Swifty) Columbus, a low hurdler. He was an only child except for his five brothers and eight sisters. From early childhood he was an avid reader and spent all his waking hours immersed in a book. Unfortunately, there was only one book in Genoa at the time Care of the Horse by Aristotle and after 18 years of reading Care of the Horse, Columbus grew restless. When rumor reached him there was another book in Madrid, off he ran as fast ' as his little fat leg3 would carry him. Disappointment, alas, awaited him there. The only book in Mud rid was Cv.idarvn Cdballo, which proved to be noth ing more than a Spanish translation of Care of the Horse. Then one day Columbus heard from a traveller that there were millions of books in India, and he was in stantly ablaze to set sail. Off he ran on his little fat legs to the court of Ferdinand and Isabella (Columbus, though more than six feet tall, was plagued with little fat legs all his life) and, as we all know, he persuaded the Span ish rulers to outfit him with three stout ships, the Flopsy, the Mopsy, and the Cottontail, and the rest is history 1 Well sir, now you know all about the origins of Puerto Rico. So get packed and get going ! You'll love it ! Stroll the beaches, swim the coves, breathe the fragrance of hibiscus and bougainvillea. And remember always that the friendly Puerto Ricans are delighted to show you their customs, teach you their language. Why, I'll wager you'll soon know far more Spanish than the three basic phrases. You'll know "Hastalavista",which means "See you later." 'Tor favor" which means "Please," and "El tren par6 en las est a ei&n" which means "Your llama has eaten my passport" CllMK. Mu Shalmu Gracing from the maker of Per$onna for (living our bladei $uch a cordial reception, and, par favor, how about trying another of our luxury lhaving products Burma Shave, regular or menthol? Orders Rosemary Bowers said that her instructor treats her just like another cadet. The only exception made for the girls is that they are required to write a term papei instead of tak ing the lab test. 'There were 57 guys in class last semester and two girls," Miss Bowers said. Miss Shimonkevitz said she once walked into an orien tation for freshman cadets and found herself alone with 200 men. Janice Cejka enrolled this semester but dropped be cause of a schedule conflict. "I thought it'd be a good experience. I also had a girl friend who took it last semester. Besides, my ad visor told me I could meet my physical education re quirement that way," Miss Cejka explained. Captain David Roberts, assistant prof, of aerospace studies, said that girls in his classroom didn't have much effect on his teaching method. Three girls were enrolled last year. Coeds have just started taking the Air Force ROTC program in the last two years, ac cording to Roberts. tion, according to Rich Scott, Nebraska Union Pro gram Director. Scott said that the sched ule announcement will be made next week. with By the author of "RaUy Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie GiUis," etc.) A&S Advisory Board ... Student Interest Needed Making the campus popu lation take the Arts and Sci ences advisory board se riously is the biggest prob lem facing the board ac cording to its chairman, Gene Pokorny. "Students should be se rious in becoming involved in the education they are receiving," Pokorny stated. "A manner in which they can do this is through the Arts and Sciences advisory board and the establish ment of similar boards throughout the University." Pokorny said that the de velopment of advisory boards under the direction of the student government could be one of the most far-reaching ideas initiated in the history of ASUN. "The spring elections will decide another possible threat that faces the board," he stressed, "which is whether or not the board becomes another part of the collegiate 'game.' " "The board's establish ment will be answered fa vorably in the spring elec tions if we get good people, whose concern is education and not personal aggrand izement in collegiate hon ors, to run for elections," he declared. The present board, estab lished temporarily, is con sidering which of many projects it will work on for c UHSRJJ7 Youth isn't wasted on the young. And the young don't waste their time at Celancse. Our top people are never old-fashioned about any new idea, whether it comes from middle management or from our youngest college grad. We have a master plan and the vitality to make it work. Marketing is way-out and zeroed right in. Finance knows that we have better things to do with our money than let it grow barnacles... shelled out $465 million in capital expenditures over the last 3 years. In the scientific department, we combine technical insight with an unusual grasp of marketing dynamics. Thinking young explains how we chalked-up one of the most impressive corporate rebuilding jobs in recent history. How we turned what was basically a one-product business into a solid and diverse international corporation dealing in chemicals, miracle fibers, plastics, paints, petroleum and forest products. How we multiplied sales 5 fold in 10 years. How we now have 100 plants in the U.S., Canada, Latin America, Europe, Africa and Asia. Possibly we could afford to relax a little. But success makes young blood run even faster. Which means that the ambitious college grad couldn't find a more provocative opportunity anywhere else in American industry. Accountants, Chemists, ChEs, MEs, Physicists, MDAs Our representative will be on your campus soon. Contact your placement director to make an interview appointment. Or write for a brochure outlining more specific areas of job opportunity to Mr. J. B. Kuhn,. Manager of University Recruitment, Celanese Corporation, 522 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10036. CHEMICALS FIBERS PLASTICS COATINGS PETROLEUM An Equal Opportunity Em ploy sr (M4f the remainder of the semes ter. "One of the ideas that the board has been discussing is getting interested stu dents, who are participat ing in the honors program, together to determine how the program could be im proved," Pokorny stated. Pokorny believes that at the present time, the Arts and Sciences college does not have an honors pro gram. "I would hope that such a group of interested students could decide how to establish a true four year honors program at the Uni versity," Pokorny ex plained. The board is also consid ering investigating the pos sibility of developing an inter-disciplinary approach to education in the Arts and Sciences college. Pokorny explained that the effect of an inter-disciplinary approach is to pull various departments into developing one course. An example would be the es tablishment of a course on urbanization in which the sociology, psychology, his tory and anthropology de partments could work to gether. Somewhat related to the inter-disciplinary approach is the possibility of "team teaching." This would in volve more than one person teaching a course. 1ELANESE Another consideration of the board is investigating the role of survey courses offered to freshmen. Pokorny stressed that taking a survey course does not always provide the stu dent with an insight into tne discipline; the student knows about the subject but doesn't understand the dis cipline involved. Pokorny said that a re designing of the survey courses in various subjects would eliminate students taking a topic for a major and later finding out it is not what they wanted. The board is also consid ering whether or not to sup port those who are in favor of establishing a depart ment of religion at the Uni versity. "Presently, 90 per cent of the institutions throughout the country have such a de partment or offer courses in religion," Pokorny stated. One project that the board is definitely going to take on is to try to estab lish "Senior Seminars in Higher Education." Pokorny said that under this plan, each department within the college would es tablish non-credit seminars between seniors who have a major in the department and the department staff. FOREST PRODUCTS