FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1967 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 KK Show: What To Do With lima? "Even though the Kosmet Klub Spring Show IS the story of a . . . uh . . . woman of ill repute," Soring Show Chairman Dick Weerts blushed, "it's not really a 'bad' show." Behind Weerts, in the Ne braska Union Ballroom, the cast of Irma la Douce were revelling in sin, debauch cry, drinking lemonade at a real bar. and even watch ing real go-go girls. When asked how Kosmet Klub got official permission to put on a play like this in "the city of churches" he re plied: "We did think we might have some trouble getting permission from the Uni versity to put on a play with such an unusual sub ject, although Irma la Douce is actually a very decent show," Weerts said. "The University officials we talked to indicated that there would be no problem since Irma la Douce ap peared on Broadway and was made into a movie," he continued. Weerts added that Kos met Klub "did have a prob lem with indecency in the Fall Shows back during World War II. The people who wrote the fraternity skits would throw all sorts of grossness in the day be fore the show after the fin al rehearsal." FRIDAY (All meetings are at the Nebraska Union unless otherwise noted.) ENGLISH DEPART MENT, 12 p.m. PLACEMENT Luncheon, 12:30 p.m. A. PH. A., 1:30 p.m. BUS. ORG. -"Dr. Max Fuller." 1:30 p.m. TWELFTH NIGHT T r y outs. 3:30 p.m. COMMITTEE on Student Affairs. 3:30 p.m. FACULTY GRADUATE CLUB, 4 p.m. TWELFTH NIGHT T r y-. outs, 7 p.m. PALLAD1AN LITERARY Society, 8 p.m. VARSITY DAIRY CLUB Dairy Royal Dance, 8?30 p.m. UNION SPECIAL E VENTS Basketball Dance, 9 p.m. SUNBEAM FLORAL COMPLETE FLORAL SERVICE 1711 Van Dorn Dial . , . 423-2337 (3iifl! The lw.nl rale. .. le .11 la.lflee ed.rrti.lai te a U.II, standard rate To plane ot le ft wnrd no minimum i fl...llf.o advurtlwitiMK U and auk lor Ike llninli. The flamllled Hd utTrrllnlne munmxr. Vlrmm altmiot to H during thoar amir. all advfirllieiiittW niual Be prrniaid before ad apiwara, FOR RENT Shnre nti doutili" room nenr aaat cam pun. CiKiklnti, T V. luilvurtlty approved. ATUVJHH. rrfm.'i Hie. H"" 'or runt, wiwknri ot wkniiiht. Two rnllen uth ol Lincoln. CIMSM. FOR SALE Muhlli- home. KKKi. r-xcellMH. Wadher, doer, iwniral air. aludy. 47V427U. tmiill unnrtmont hmw rente to male mnrtcnta. Nete iamunUi. Will pay mir way throuuh achim!. All (urnleh hb h.oluded. Small down payment. WMHSIi. WANTED Teacher or atwienta. Hurttlme now and available to work entire aummor on 1'iwnt to eoMt lurnlture mmlm Muel be iiv..r 21. innd pael drivlnu record, and koikI mferencea. Contact Hod lud lev. Dudley 'IrHnanontlnentnl Movara. 4;i.i-j:w:i. Hhne HlwMiian. Experience prelorrecl. Purl lime till June. Full time aummar work. See Mr. Kcbwenk, The Shoe Boa. J.-I17 "O" Street. MOTORCYCLES New and used cycles. have new cycles starting from under , I We $250 We have financing facilities cna are to take cycles in trade. eager KURLBUT cycle shop B.S.A. HONDA B.M.W. 7331 Thayer YD Petition J PETITION SIGNER , . . registers op position, on a Young Democrats petition, By 4 p.m. Thursday Young Demo crats had collected nearly 400 signatures of students who oppose the proposed tui tion hike, according to Bruce Mason, act ing YD president. Plans are now being made for a for mal presentation at the Statehouse, but details have not been worked out yet, said Mason. Housing Panel ... Snyder: 'Parental Consent Isn't Reason To Live Off-Campus By Jim Einger Junior Staff Writer A panel of students, ad ministrators and a repre sentative from the Board of Regents appeared be fore a large crowd in the Nebraska Union Thursday to discuss the controversy over the University's hous ing policy. Roger Doerr. first vice president of ASUN, mod erated the discussion. Pan el members included Ed Schwartzkopf of the Board of Regents; Dean and Vice Chancellor for Student Af fairs G. Robert Ross; He len Snyder, associate dean of student affairs; Terry Schaaf, ASUN president; and Marv Almy, chairman of the ad hoc committee on housing policy. Ad Hoc Committee Stressing that the ad hoc housing committee was working as speedily as pos sible towards reaching re pressed optimism that "progress will be made" with changes hopefully go ing into effect, next fall. Almy said the committee was considering the needs of the University 10-15 years in the future. He added that the com mittee was looking at hous ing from its educational val ue, realizing there were dif- nasaan im.r.. .1 mm v. the llvr.Hy f NebrMk. at m-tm malntala t:M IM OimImh mim. ICST bet of car key, northeaat corner Bur nett Hall. l"lee return to Herman Department olllue. m Burnett. MISCELLANEOUS Plenty of CUFF Street. pipe at aMCKk. plenty HHUf. half price. lM "O" YfW LUCKY VW OWNKRK! Keep your Volkawaann youni. Hend l.wi lor Mi pane catalos on wuya to Increuw the vulue and uelulneea of your VW. Vwlte to RONNfMART. P.O. Bon 7S, Tremon tun, UUh B4XT7. Fly Frontier Alrilnea 4M reduction with a "21" dlMiounl card. Cloud on muet major atrllnm. tontaot Bobyn Broek. Xl-Tjm. Bldera to Mlnneaota aprlM vacation, tall 477-WIS. Share mpenaa. i'KRE developing, block white roll Him Mureh fhrnuah March 17. UNI VERSITY BOOKSTORE, Nebraaka Union. lower leval, Karata. coed anuba, IHnuvlnB leaaona atartliK at YMCA. 4-ISl. lh : P. 466-9977 Opposes Tuition Hike ts I n iA , - m y - f "e - - L , 1 ISSli ferent needs for different people. He gave the exam ple of most freshmen need ing University housing, and most seniors needing to get out on their own to make their decision- 'Good Cause' Present University hous ing policy states that a "good cause" must be sup plied to permit an exception that women live elsewhere than U.'versity housing. Miss Snyder said that no ob jective criteria could be es tablished to define what "good causes" are. She stressed that each case in volved an individual and was therefore unique. Miss Snyder and Mr. Schwartzkopf agreed that parental consent was not reason enough for a wom an to live off-campus. He said that often a parent is not in a position to under stand or know the reasoning behind ill University rules and regulations. The ad hoc committee plans to look into the eco nomic aspects of housing upon the individual and the University. It plans to investigate what approved off-campus housing really is and will consider the ele ment of who should make what choice about the stu dents right to live where they choose. RENTS New 1967 Cars for less! SPECIAL WEEKEND RATES Only $4.00 a day and 6c a mile One low price includes gas, oil and insurance. Ph. 489-6222 1732 0 St. t sur: mm Free to Nebraska Students 25 to others A new booklet, published by a non-profit educational founda tion, tells which career Add lets you make the best use of all your college training, including liberal-arts courses which tareer field offers 100,000 new jobs every year -which reer field produces more corporation presidents than any other what starting salary you can expect. Jusi send this ad with your name and address. This 24-pagc. career-guide booklet, "Oppor tunities in Selling," will be mailed to you. No cost or obli gation. Address: Council on Op portunities, 550 Fifth Ave., New York 36, N. Y, ?! - if - v ' J.- '11 rH to tuition hike proposal. YD President, Bruce Mason, oversees the signing. "We plan to send a copy of the pe tition to every state senator, as well as to the Board of Regents, since they are the group which ultimately sets the tuition rate," Mason said. Petition sheets will be circulated through campus housing units, and stu dents will be able to sign today at the YD booth in the Student Union. Almy expressed confi dence that results of the committee would be ac cepted by the Administra tion, the students and the Board of Regents. Schwartzkopf, speaking for the entire Board of Re gents, said that current housing rules are flexible and that the University has "loosened up," citing sen ior keys as an example. He felt the ad hoc com mittee on housing "is a positive and constructive way to implement change." He was confident students would come up with the right solution when they knew all the facts involved. Rules' Development Miss Snyder traced the development of the housing rules, saying that they eventually came to include an unwritten but "specific interest in the total devel opment of individuals in the process of getting an in tellectual education." She termed this concept "total education," defining it briefly as experiences social, activities, student government, the exchange of views and experiences with others as a supple mentation of classroom learning with practical ex periences. Sh e also ex pressed willingness to work for changes to meet needs. See Pontiac's Magnificent New F I n E B I R D On Display Now! t:niiii;iiiiiHiiiiu : iiiii!!tiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiw'n iiint iGalendar iSocial State basketball t o u r nament hoopla dominates this weekend's social events. FRIDAY BETA THETA PI. House Party. 9:00 p.m.-12.00 p.m. CATHER 8 & 9, Open House, 6:00 p.m.-lO.OO p.m. CORNHUSKER COOP LOVE HALL, Hour Dance, 7 p.m.-8 p.m. COUNCIL ON RELI GION, Conference, 4 p.m., Nebraska Center. VARSITY DAIRY CLUB, Dairy Royal Dance, 9 p.m. 12 o.m. PI KAPPA PHI, "R e d Baron Bash", House Party, 9 p.m. -12 p.m. SIGMA NU, "Pigge For mal", 8 p.m.-12 p.m. SATURDAY ABEL 13, Open House, 1 p.m. -5 p.m. ALPHA GAMMA RHO, House Partv, 9 p.m.-12 p.m. ALPHA TAU OMEGA, 9 p.m.-12 p.m. CATHER HALL, Open House & Dance, 2 p.m.-12 p.m. CHI PHI, "Fireman's Ball" House Party, 9 p.m. -12 p.m. DELTA SIGMA PHI, House Partv. 9 p.m.-12 p.m. DELTA TAU DELTA, House Partv. 9 p.m.-12 p.m. DELTA iPSILON, Gas light Partv. 9 p.m.-12 p.m. FARMHOUSE, House Party, 9 p.m.-12 p.m. gion, conference 4 p.m., Nebraska Center. HOME EC EDUCATION ASSOCIATION, Brunch, 9 a.m.-10:45 a.m., Hovland Swanson. KAPPA SIGMA, "Inferno Party", 9p.m.-12p.m. SIGMA PHI EPSILON, A-Go-Go. 9 p.m.-12 p.m. THETA CHI, House Partv. 9 p.m.-12 p.m. THETA XI, House Party, 9 p.m.-12 p.m. SUNDAY POUND HALL, Open House. 2 p.m.-6 p.m. SANDOZ HALL 6, Open House & Dance, 2 p.m.-5 p.m. Dallas Isolates Public Records The Dallas Bureau of Vi tal Statistics has e I i m i nated access to routine pub lic records on the deaths of principals in the assassina tion of President Kennedy, the Dallas Times Herald said Sunday. City Attorney Alex Bick ley said the press is in cluded in the restrictions which have been in effect for some time. He said the ban prohibits copying the death certif icates or any information from the records on Pres ident Kennedy, assassin Lee Harvey Oswald and Os wald's killer Jack Ruby. ALL GRADUATING SENIORS: VAHICE POffilAC WILL DELIVER A BRAND NEW PONTIAC CIO, TEMPEST,. CATALINA or any other model Tiger you choose or a late model used car NOW to qualified seniors for $10.00 down and $10.00 PER MONTH. First regular payment starts 30 days after graduation. BUY YOUR CAR NOW First Regular Payment 30 Days After Graduation it Deal With Confidence With People You Know Establish "A Good Credit Rating Start Now Financing With First National Bank in Lincoln VAN ICE PONTI AC-CADILLAC, INC OPEN 111 9 PJNL MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY 12th AND 0 ON THE CAMPUS 432-7677 J Inadequacies May Make Prosecution Difficult The inadequacies in both the Nebraska statutes and federal court decisions deal ing with obscenity might make it difficult to prose cute William Steen, the owner of the Heroic Book store, an attorney of the American Civil Liberties Union said Wednesday. Speaking before a small gathering at Abel Hall, Pat rick Healey, one of the di rectors of the Nebraska ACLU, said that Steen was making a challenge to the obscenity. Redeeming Merit Healey said that since the statute makes no spe cific mention of the phrase "redeeming social merit" as is required by the Su preme Court, the state may have to appeal to other laws to convict Steen on the obscenity charges he faces. The need of a redeeming social merit clause first appeared in a Supreme Court decision on the book Fanny Hill, which reversed an earlier ruling of the Massachusetts Supreme Court, he said. The Supreme Court ruled in this case that a b o o k which has an literary val Fallen Society Depicted In Waiting For Godof The avant-garde play "Waiting for Godot" opens Friday evening, March 10 in H o w e 11 Memorial The atre. The play is written by Samual Beckett, a pioneer in the modern absurdist movement, according to Dr. William R. Morgan who is directing the play. "Waiting for Godot" attempts to tell the story of a discordant and decayed society. It is highly allegor ical and symbolic, with a setting created by elec tronic music, sounds of jets, and junk sculpture. Two Tramps The production opens with two tramps waiting beside the only tree on an empty plain. They are wait ing for a mysterious person named Godot, even though they don't know Godot nor why they should wait for him. Besides the two tramps, named Estragon and Vlad imir, the cast includes Poz zo, a pompous taskmaster, Lucky, a laborer whom slavery and unquestioning acceptance have reduced to Playing Roles near idiocy, and a messen ger from Godot. i ue cannot be barred he ex plained. Variable Obscenity A Supreme Court deci sion, that could be used against Steen, described variable obscenity, Healey said. This decision in the Ginz burg case states that re gardless of the book's con tent, if the manner of ad vertising implies sexual overtones are prevalent in the book, then the book can be barred he said. In this case, he continued, the seller is not prosecuted, but "the book suffers the fate of being suppressed." Another Supreme Court verdict in the Roth case, under which Steen could be tried, gave the following vague definition of obscen ity: if the book's dominant theme appeals to the pruri ent interest of the average person applying contempor ary community standards, then it's obscene, he said. Healey criticized the rul ing as being "vague, im precise and simply appear ing as a general concept" Charges Against Steen Healey, who has prac ticed law in Lincoln for al most ten years, said that Steen is charged with sell- The two tramps will be played by Clint Jakeman of Fremont and Dave Clark of Lincoln. The tyrant and his slave will be played by Steve Gaines of Grand Is land and Gary Hill of Lin coln, and Dan Weymouth of Lincoln, will play the mes senger. "Waiting for Godot" will be presented at 8 p.m., Friday and Saturday in Howell Memorial Theatre. It will also play April 14-15, April 28-29 and May 12-13. PLA-MOR Model's Combo Friday Nife KOSMET KLUB PRESENTS "IRMA LA DOUCE" MARCH 17, 18 PERSHING AUDITORIUM TICKETS 3 ff TAKE TIME-OUT V 0HLY 45c j , Also Fresh-hot Pizza j 1 Your always a winner at... Pizicco Plsce I llrh&Q 3& FREE Delivery ffOlS- coll . . . v- 432-7720 432-7726 ing three specific nudist " magazines, "which aren't as suggestive as some of the others I've seen," the controversial book "Candy," and a book "Lesbians in White." While he didn't express an opinion about Lesbians in Whit e," he refused to classify Candy" as obscene terming it a "funny book which is a satire of d a i 1 y life." Healey didn't know if the state would prosecute un der the Roth verdict, the Ginzburg decision or anoth er decision. Easiest To Defend In the trial, still pending in court, Healey said Can dy would be the easiest to defend, the nudist maga zines would also be defensi ble, but that the other book concerning the white slave trade might be a little dif ficult to defend. "I don't feel any book in the area of sexual commu nication should be banned unless there is a clear and conduct which can be per ceived from the book." He said that censors feel that 'nice' people don't re act to sexual overtones, while it's the person who is likely to be led astray by the book that causes it to be banned. "Psychologically, there is a great deal of doubt if banning the book will real ly prevent crime, fear and sexual responses," he said. "There is no evidence that the book will or will not cause dangerous reactions , when read by certain per sons." " He said writing about hu man sexual conditions in deed has merit and that "there is much to be said about sex not being the dir ty concept that people view' it as." OPEN DAILY 1 PJL Pool Tablet ... Snooker Tablet ... Open Rowling . . SNOOKER BOWL N. 48th A toaley 9 to 12 IN UNION