1 tit. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1967 University of Nebraska VOL. 90, NO. 95 'Hot Nuts' To Appear Spring Day The nationally known re cording group, Doug Clark and the Hot Nuts will appear at the Spring May Day Dance at the Coliseum, according to Phil Bowen, Nebraska Union Special Events chairman. Bowen said there have been "a lot of stories, most of them rumors" circulating about the group, which has on occasion appeared at dances in scanty clothing or nude. The Hot Nuts "will be fully clothed" for the University appearance, Bowen said. The "Hot Nuts" originated In 1955 in Chapel Hill, NC. as the Tops. The Tops got together to play for fra ternity and sorority parties in the area. A year later the group disbanded and with a slight reduction in personnel . they regrouped as Doug Clark's Combo. The present name devel oped from a song "Hot Nuts," which they popularized dur ing their campus appear ances. Bowen said admittance to the dance will be limited to University students because of the large crowd an ticipated. He said University identification cards will be checked at the door. Executives Formulate Programs ASUN executives are cur rently formulating a commit tee structure to execute the Senate programs next year. Most of the c o m m 1 1 1 e e chairmen will be appointed this spring, ASUN president Dick Schulze said, so the Sen ate should "have a head start" for organizing its pro grams next fall. The Bill of Rights will have priority at present he said, and a group will meet with the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs next week to discuss the document. Review Rights The faculty committee will review the Bill of Rights and make recommendations to the Board of Regents. The Bill "will be incorpor ated as amendments to the ASUN constitution," Schulze said, provided it receives ap proval from the Regents. They will probably make a decision within two or three weeks. Opposing Amendment! He added that no further action has been taken con cerning the two opposing housing amendments in the Bill which both received stu dent approval at the Senate elections. Senate executives will also reorganize the Advisory Board Committee. This com mittee will work . with both the colleges which have ad visory board constitutions and with those which will be draft ing constitutions in the near future. Student Employes A Student Employe Com mittee will be set up, Schulze said, to "investigate the com pensation of student employ es" at the University. This new committee will also "handle student griev ances". He said the committee will also "handle student griev ances," concerning wages. Study Expenditures Another committee will be established to conduct a study of "the expenditures of stu dents fees and dormitory rev enue," he continues. The groups will make sug gestions on how "this money could be better allocated, Schulze said, when Univer sity officials are figuring the budget this summer. An Incorporation Committee will also be set up to explore the projects ASUN could un dertake now that Senate is legally incorporated. The Publicity Committee will be subdivided, Schulze said, and one group will be concerned with ASUN public relations within the state and another group will focus on Senate publicity on the campus. Rodeo fillip (Kj s- Afi&MWW illiill Kill Jgfi WESTERN ATTIRE ... and a trophy as well lends evidence to Jane McDowell's claim of being the Rodeo Queen for 1967. Miss McDowell was crowned Ro deo Queen at the University Block and Bridle Rodeo Saturday. Committee's Analysis To Face Discussion By Julie Morris Senior Writer The report of the Ad Hoc Housing Committee, released a week ago, faces discussion and votes by faculty and stu dent groups in the next two days. ASUN deals with the report Wednesday and the Faculty Senate Subcommittee on Stu dent Affairs begins discus sions on the 11-page report Thursday. Ad Hoc Committee Chair man Marv Almy was confi dent Tuesday that both groups would approve the report. If such is the case, the commit tee's recommendations which took six weeks to complete, will go to the Board of Re gents for final approval. If the Regents okay the report the recommendations will become University housing policy. Seek Support ASUN President Dick Schulze said Tuesday "The re port represents real change, IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIII!llltl!III!lll!IIIMIIIHilllllJ I Nominations j Deadline Set j i Letters of nomina- I tion for the 34th "Out- standing Nebraskan" s I awards are being ac- I cepted at the Daily Ne- 1 braskan office. The deadline for nomina- I tions is noon May 5. The award is given at the end of each se- 1 mester to one faculty 1 member and one stu- 1 dent. First semester f honorees were former I 1 YR president Cathie Shattuck and registrar emeritus Dr. Floyd Hoover. I 1 The "Outstanding I Nebraskan" award I I originated in 1950. It is given for "meritori- ous service in promot- 1 ing the welfare of the I University and the Uni- I versity community." I Originally the award was called the "Best 1 I Husker" award. Among the outstand- I ing faculty members I and administrators I honored in the past are: Chancellor C. R. I 1 Gustavson, the first re- 1 cipient of the award, i Dr. Robert Manley, Dr. 1 Robert Hough, Dr. Ber- trand Schulz, R. Neale Copple, Donald Olsen and Karl Shapiro. I Past student winners have included: Larry I Frolik, Jim DeMars, s John Lydick, Don Fer- I guson, John Lonnquist g and Karen Peterson. I Winners of this se- I mester'i awards will be announced in the May 8 Daily Nebras- I kan. I IiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNHiiiNiiiiiMiimiiimiiiiiiiis Queen I am going to ask the solid support of ASUN." G. Robert Ross, vice chan cellor and dean of student af fairs, said he could not pre dict the Faculty Senate com mittee action on the report. "My initial reaction is fav orable. The committee dealt with housing policy in a very realistic manner," Ross com mented. Freshmen Required In a list of ten recommen dations the 11-member com mittee advised Universi ty housing policy be altered to require all freshmen to live on campus. All women stu dent? are now required to live on campus. The committee also recom mended that sophomores live on campus or in "specially approved" (such as Nettleton Manor) off-campus housing and that junior and seniors could choose any housing as long as it was at least "gen erally approved" University E-Week The 55th year of Engineer's Week begins Thursday with two events set for the first day and three events sched uled for Friday. E-Week's major display, the open house, to be held in Ferguson, Richards, Stout and Bancroft Halls, Avery Lab and the M & N Build ing from 2-10 p.m. Thursday, will feature scale models of everyday engineering pheno menon. Display Projects Each engineering depart ment will display a project at the affair, which attracted over 10,000 persons last year, Dennis Schulte, an E-Week committee member, laid Tuesday. Displays include a model well constructed by several agricultural engineers which traces the underground path water takes into the well, enA an inertia welder, sponsored by the mechanical engineers, which uses friction to weld metals together. Highway Model The Civil Engineers will display a cross-section model of an interstate highway showing the different layers and materials used in its con struction, while the electrical engineers will sponsor an ex hibit containing a keyboard combining different sound waves, to produce musical tones. Schulte added that the En gineering Mechanics Depart ment will display five exhib its in Bancroft Hall testing items such as concrete and beams. E-Week continues that night with an hour-long television program sponsored by the E Week Executive Board and Junior M ay Receive Key Privileges AWS Board passed a mo tion, Tuesday, expanding the present senior key system in order that all junior and sen ior women and all women over 21 who meet the eligi bility requirements may par ticipate in the system. "Each girl who is eligible to participate in the key sys tem and who desires to do so will pay AWS a deposit of $1.60 as soon as she receives permission to participate in the system. Permanent Fund "This money will be put into a permanent fund to pro vide for replacement of cylin der and keys in the event that a key is lost from a living unit," according to the mo tion presented by senior key chairman Mimi Rose. The philosophy behind the senior key system presents a two-fold problem when the program is expanded, accord ing to Miss Rose. Senior Privilege? It must be decided "wheth er the senior key system housing. Students 21 and over would be allowed to choose any housing, while those under 21 would need written parental permission to live off campus. The report was prepared by a joint faculty-student com mittee formed as a result of ASUN resolutions asking for clarification of University housing policy. Four of the committee members presented minority reports. Ron Pfeiffer, Susie Phelps and Dr. Floyd Hoover drafted a minority report arguing that freshmen should be urged, but not required to live on campus. Assistant Dean of Student Affairs, Helen Snyder, has reportedly prepared a one member minority report. The report has not been general ly distributed and Miss Sny der was reported unavailable for comment on the document Tuesday. Features Displays, Open the Nebraska Professional Engineers who will explain several of the outstanding op en house displays beginning at 9 p.m. on KUON-TV. Convocation To Be Held The following day an engi neering convocation will be held at 10:30 a.m. in the Ne braska Union ballroom feat uring Walter Eehlen, presi dent of the Behlen Manufact uring Company of Columbus. Behlen, whom the Behlen physics laboratory is named after, will speak to the convo cation on "Space Age Engin eering in Nebraska." Engineering classes will be dismissed for the convocation and for the rest of the after noon to attend the Field Day events which will climax ath letic events which have been held between the various en gineering departments for the last four weeks. Field Day The Field Day, to be held at Pioneer Park will include games such as Softball, voll eyball, tennis, bowling, tug-of-war and egg throwing con tests. That night at 6:30 the an nual engineering banquet will be held at the Black Coach Restaurant, when v a r i o u i awards will be presented to engineering students. Awards Given The O. J. Ferguson Award will be given to the outstand ing senior engineering stu dent, the O. J. Ferguson Me morial Award will be given to the outstanding sophomore engineering student and awards for the outstanding open house displays will also be presented. The Field Day winners and the Sigma Tau Freshman Women, 21-Year Olds started as a senior privilege or as a gradual step to liberal ize women's hours," Miss Rose stated. The question of maturity arises also when the key sys tem is expanded to include juniors and all 21-year olds. According to Ann Windle, AWS President, the key sys tem has been expanded in many schools, and has been successful because it has Regents Want Survey On Dorm Coed-Visiting Hours Delaying action indefinite ly on coed-visiting hours, the coed-visiting hours commit tee will work with admini strative personnel in compil ing a comprehensive campus evaluation survey requested by the Board of Regents. In rejecting the groups' re quest for coed-visiting hours, the Regents directed admin istration to prepare a fact finding report on available and needed space for recrea tion and social activities. Work On Report After meeting with G. Ro bert Ross, dean of student af fairs, Tuesday, coed-visiting hours chairman Dave Shon ka said his committee will work on the report from the angle of the dormitory resi dents. The committee, which ex pects to complete its report within three weeks will work closely with Dick Scott, assis tant to the dean of student affairs and although the com mittee hasn't met with Scott yet, Shonka said "his work in the outdoor recreational areas will be invaluable to us." Shonka said his committee would work with Scott and administration in assessing campus-wide recreation, cul tural and social assets and needs. Assets and Needs The expected 30 to 40 page report will contain informa tion on various areas the in dividual residence halls have compiled into a four page re port that will identify their assets and future needs, Shon ka added. Award, presented to the fresh man engineering student with the highest grade average, will also be given. Miss E-Week Trish Sultzbaugh, Miss E Week, a sophomore elemen tary education major from I """" '"i f - . f k ;s r f ." Ssi--J' Y i .. lis y'."T". .' ,-. . f v.": . , :' , ' ,::;- ' .V-, .-. V..:' g; ; FLIGHT SIMULATING COMPUTER ... one of many featured E-Week exhlbltf. The computer can be used to simulate either a bomber flight or space flight The entire flight of either is shown on an esiliscope. been found that juniors are mature enough to accept the responsibility of the keys. Less Incentive If the proposal of the Ad Hoc Housing Committee goes through to allow junior and senior women to live off-campus, the expansion of the key system will provide less in centive for women to move off-campus, according to The completed report will contain recommendations from each residence hall as well as for the entire cam pus, Shonka added, and also for future residence hall com plexes. The report w ill include study on additional indoor and outdoor recreational fa cilities, the possibility of bringing personnel from the University Counseling Service into the halls for private dis cussions with residents and of scheduling classes in the residence halls and an inves tigation of areas that stu dents can get together pri vately whether in the indi vidual student rooms or else where. Evaluation Report After the residence hall re ports are received by the coed-visiting hours commit tee, the committee will edit them and include them in their comprehensive report evaluating present situations on campus and make recom mendations for future chang es. The committee will turn this report over to Ross who, after assessing it, will pre sent it to the Board of Re gents. Chairman Successor At the group's Monday night meeting, Shonka ap pointed Gary Grahnquist, the newly-elected Abel-S a n d o z activities chairman, as his successor as committee chairman beginning next fall. Shonka added that since he may not return to the Uni versity next term, he saw no Lincoln, who reigns over E Week ceremonies will also be honored at the banquet. Plans for the two-day event began last November when the Engineering Executive Board selected Jim Chevalier from mechanical engineering Nancy Coufal, junior board member. Also passed at the B o a r d meeting was a motion to ex tend Lincoln overnights and out of towns. Freshmen and sophomore women will be allowed six overnights and out of towni to be used at their descre tion. Junior and Senior wom en will have unlimited privi leges in this area. reason to "hold up the pro cess" and that he will direct the committee the remainder of this year. "Gary has been interested in coed-visiting hours and he is the logical successor to tht post, Shonka said. Grahnquist, a freshman in pre-law from Omaha, said that he would begin trying to find other committee mem bers from across campus. At present, all coed-visiting hours members are from the Abel-Sandoz complex and, he said, adding campus- wide representatives would "be a better means of communica tion." Group Has Support He added that the group has the support of the Abel Sandoz student assistants and residence directors but it "would be nice to have the support of residence hall personnel all over." He said that IDA president John Fryar is presently look ing for additional coed-visiting hours committee mem bers and should announce his prospects shortly. Although he said future plans for coed-visiting hours were indefinite, he indicated that "if and when coed-visiting hours come up again, we will seek ASUN support for the measure." Shonka added that he wantt to keep the committee func tioning the remainder of thii semester and next year' committee will implement the present report in the areas of recreational facili ties and social aspects. House and Larry Drbal from chem ical engineering to serve as E-Week chairman. The E-Week Board, work ing with departments! co chairman consists of 17 stu dents and a faculty advisor who supervises the operation. - v fs s , ' . - a. ' ' j!