THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1967 University of Nebraska VOL 90, NO. Jfi- Quiz Bowl Aces Set For Clash All-University semi-finals for quiz bowl will be Thurs day night in the Nebraska Union, according to Quiz Bowl president Dave Cum mins. Matches will be held for teams in both the upper class and freshmen division to decide contestants for the finals. Semi-Final Opponents In the upperclass divi lion, the Incompetents will play Alpha Gamma R h o with Brown Palace against Le Fleur du Mai. Freshmen in the semi-finals are Delta Sigma Phi vs. the Sammies and Betas vs. Gus III. KUON Televised The two winning teams in each division will play in the All-University finals Tuesday at 9 p.m. on KUON television. A trophy will be awarded to the winning team in both divisions. Two quiz bowl scholar ship awards of $100 each will also be announced on KUON Tuesday after t h e team competition. According to Cummins, freshmen, sophomores and juniors interested in a posi tion on NU's G.E. College Bowl team will take a writ ten exam 2 p.m. Saturday, 108 Burnett. Oral Exam "This is an exam from the University Testing Ser vice which deals mainly with general knowledge," Cummins explained "Those with the highest test scores will take an oral exam given by a commit tee of faculty members." - Four students will then b chosen to represent NU on Oct. 15 G.E. College Bowl match, which is televised nation-wide. Cummins said students Interested in taking the written exam, but who have not signed up for the test, should report to 108 Burnett at 1:45 p.m. Saturday. Council Position F or Union Vacant Interviews for the position of Recreation Area Director of the Nebraska Union will be held Tuesday a 7 p.m., according to Nebras ka Union President Pam Wood. Those eligible for the po sition include all present chairmen and assistants and any freshmen or sopho more workers who have had six months of Union experi ence, Miss Wood said. Ap plicants must have a 2.3 overall grade average. Applications are avail able in the Program Office, Room 136, where applicants may also sign for interview times. These applications must be returned to the Program Office by 5 p.m., Tuesday, she said. ASUN Tables Housing Report To Better Examine Statement ASUN tabled the Ad Hoc Housing Committee report Wednesday until next week after Senator Al Spangler sug gested the Senate needed more time to "scrutinize" the statement before taking ac tion on the committee's rec ommendations. Although Student Senate failed to act on the report, the Housing Committee will still present the statement to the Faculty Senate Thursday for discussion. Students' Views Since the Regents will meet next week, Marv Almy, Hous ing Committee chairman, sug gested Senate act on the hous ing recommendations before the meeting so students' views can also be represented. Almy asked the Senate to endorse the Ad Hoc Commit tee's ten recommendations for housing policy changes or to adopt other suggestions to be taken before the Regents. Effective Next Fall If the Regents approve the policy changes, he said, the new housing regulations could go Into effect next fall. The Senate also beard John I'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiic Has E P vx " ft. h wmsmmk i f y ' MHi'iBUi MauBaBannaar2tfMH3i!4 h.imi. Fbolo by Donf Keystor STUDY IN CONTRASTS . . . Lilac hush in full bloom serves as a reminder to a jack eted Todd Slaughter of the warm spring weather which has temporarily vanished. Snyder Says Sophomores Ought To Live On Campus Associate Dean of Student Affairs, Helen Snyder, has submitted her opinions in a minority report to be added to the Ad Hoc Housing Com mittee's recommended nous " ing policy statements "I agree with the report as presented with one exception. The committee has acknow ledged the value of the group living experience and has placed belief in a progression of independence in housing choices as one advances through college. This I agree with. The divergence in my thinking with the committee proposal is related to the speed of that progression," the report states. Two Recommendations "Specifically I would rec ommend (1) that sophomores, like freshmen, live on cam pus; (2) that the specially ap proved housing apply to the exceptions that must neces sarily be granted within the freshman and sophomore classes." Miss Snyder's ' opinion dif fers from the committee rec ommendation made last week that sophomores may live in on campus housing or in spe cially approved off-campus housing! The committee rec ommends that juniors and seniors may live in on-cam-pus housing, specially ap proved off-campus or gener ally approved off-campus Klein, a University law stu dent, who presented his own housing policy recommenda tions and asked that the Sen ate add his report to the Ad Hoc Committee report for the Regents' consideration. . Klein stressed his report did not differ radically from the Ad Hoc Committee report but that the Committee's recom mendations contained "defic iencies in the area of men's housing. Abandoned Some White liberalizing women's housing regulations, he said, the Committee "has aban doned some of the achieve ments made in men's hous ing." He suggested "phasing out" the rules which compel fresh men and sophomores to live in the dormitories. He added that these students should be required to live in "gener ally approved housing." Goals Endorsed The Ad Hoc Housing Com mittee goals "should be en dorsed," he added, and in particular the liberalized women's housing rules. In other Senate business Spring Sprung? housing. She gave her explanations, reasoning that as the fresh man year is spent in ad justment to new learning and living arrangements, as the committee report states, "this means the sophomore year can be a developmental year and a year to explore some of the participation in group experiences with more free dom than is possible in the first year. "It is a time for some lead ership to emerge and some involvement with the actual program making. This comes from the continuity of the two years and cements the rela tionships with the life of the campus and the University community." Transition To Life She also explains that the transition to life after college would come more appropriate ly in the last two years of college, when a student more specifically enters his major field and looks ahead to his career. Her last reason states that "many of the problems of ad justment cited for freshmen apply equally well to the new transfer student." The committee report, with Miss Snyder's minority report . and a minority report by com mittee members Ron Pfeifer, Susie Phelps and Dr. Floyd Hoover, will be presented to the Faculty Senate Commit four executive appointments were approved. They are Susie Kunc, rec ording secretary; Nancy Probasco, treasurer; Carol Johnson; Director of Rec ords; and Georgia Glass, cor responding secretary. Steve Brumley was named the Chief Justice of the ASUN Student Court next year. Senator Al Spangler was voted to assume the duties of president pro tempore. The Senate pro tempore takes the duties of the vice-president or the president in the event thess seats should be vacated. ASUN also elected three senators to serve on the Ex ecutive Committee which in clude the President, vice presidents and president pro tempore. They are Cheryl Adams, Sue Phelps and Mark Schreiber. Ron Alexander was select ed to fill the Senate seat vacated by Mimi Rose when she took office as ASUN sec ond vice president. Alex ander, running on the PSA ticket, was defeated in the Senate election by a slim majority. tee on Student Affairs on Thursday. IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ Davis Refunds f 1 Deadline Near 1 I The deadline for tick- 1 et refunds from Sammy Davis Jr. is 6 p.m. Fri- day, according to Shir- I i ley Voss, Nebraska Un- I ion Program Manager. 1 1 Refunds may be re- ceived at Pershing Au- ditorium. Davis' perfor- I I mance was cancelled because of complica- tions following dental 1 surgery. f filllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIli? Masters Week . . Industrialist, Educators (EDITOR'S NOTE: In prep aration for Masters Week, the Daily Nebraskan Is printing a series of articles on Masters Week plans and the Masters themselves. Masters Week is May 1 and 2 this year.) Included among the Mas ters who will be visiting the campus next week are Dr. Allan F. Smith, vice-president for academic affairs of the University of Michigan; El mer T. Gustafson, president of the Ceco Steel Products Corp. of Chicago; and Alan R. Moritz, M.D., provost and former vice-president of Western Reserve University. Allan F. Smith Smith received his Bachelor of Arts from the Nebraska State Teachers College in 1923 and his Doctor of Juridicial Science in 1950. He began his career as an attorney with a firm in Kearney. After teaching law at Stan ford University for a year he went to the University of Michigan where he was an associate and full professor of Law. In 1960 he became Dean of the University of Michigan Law School. Smith is presently vice ' president for academic af fairs of the University of Michigan. He is chairman of the real property committee of the Michigan State Bar Association and he wrote the text, "Personal Life Insur ance Trusts." Gustafson Elmer T. Gustafson was a member of the Nebraska En gineering Society and Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, while attending the University. In 1935 he joined the C e c o Steel Products Company. He was vice-president and gen eral manager of sales and marketing, senior vice-president, and director of the company before becoming Gather By-Laws Cause Secession Of Floor 13 By Mark Gordon Junior Staff Writer The Cather Hall Executive Council Tuesday night named a five man committee to work , with leaders of John F. Ken nedy House, after the house officially announced its seces sion from the Cather Execu tive Council. Named to the committee by Cather president Bruce Bailey to work with Floor 13 in their dispute over the Ca ther By-Laws were Jim Ca vender, Cather vice-president, Ron Swanda, floor ex ecutive representative, Ron Klutman, floor 10 executive member, Ken Noha, floor 8 executive member, and Steve Grenier, whose acceptance is still pending his approval. In a prepared statement, floor 13 proclaimed that "the Cather Hall government has become too powerful, the Ex ecutive Council has surpassed its limits of authority in mak ing the present by-laws and that the Judicial Council has surpassed its limits of author ity in enforcing these by laws." Individual Rights It continued that they "have threatened the indi vidual rights of the residents of this hall as guaranteed by the United States Constitu tion and the Constitution of Cather Hall" and consequent ly, the h o u s e has seceeded from the Cather Executive Council. Floor president Robert Wolff said that as soon as the proposals in the proclama tion are met, "we -will consid er returning to Cather Hall." The group's main request centers on the by-laws which have been on trial since Feb ruary. Kennedy House contends that the by-laws were hastily enacted by the Executive Council with the residents having no voice in the deci sion. They propose that the Cather constitution be amended to provide a refer endum vote to be taken among the residents on all President of the Corporation. Gustafson was President of the American Society of Me chanical Engineers, former Director of the Architectural Aluminum Manufactur ers Association. Alan R. Moritz Moritz was a member of Kappa Sigma social fraternity and Phi Rho Sigma, Sigma Xi, and Alpha Omega Alpha honoraries while at the Uni versity. He obtained his Doc tor of Medicine at the Univer sity School of Medicine in Allan F. Smith Art, Films, The Abel-Sandoz Spring Festival, consisting of events ranging from a car nival to a folk jazz concert, will be held Friday and Sat urday at the residence hall complex. The two-day affair, spon sored by the Abel-Sandoz Residence Association, will begin Friday at 8 p.m. with a folk jazz concert on the Sandoz lawn. Candy Wise Appearing on the pro , . . . -'--.""n,' , . .1 f 1 ; V"f -' " H - v i 1 y' " - 'i n '- V ") F"V, . r: 'V;.: 1 'f X.'Su existing by-laws and all fu ture by-laws. They also desired a propos al whereby all future amend ments would automatically be tabled for one week to en able Executive members to discuss the by-laws with their floor residents. Dress-Up Regulation They referred specifically to two by-laws in the procla mation demanding that the dress-up regulation by-law re quiring residents to dress-up at certain meals be repealed and replaced by a recom mendation of dress-up stan dards. The other request asked that the by-law on crowding in meal lines be re pealed until it can be en forced upon the residents of Pound Hall and Women's Residence Hall as well as Cather. The proclamation also re quests changes that would give the Floor judicial Boards additional power and "to take power away from the Hall Judicial Board," Wolff said. To prove their point, Wolff said the House has been re named John F. Kennedy Hall and the student assistant Gary Heaston has been tem porarily assigned as the hall's residence director. Although they have with drawn from Cather student government, the floor still in tends to abide by all s t a t e and University regulations Wolff said. Abidte By Laws "We plan to have our own by-laws and a constitution" he said, in adding that "our main reason for secession is to reform rather than to re voke." After Wolff read the procla mation at the Executive Council meeting, the Council proposed to freeze all Cather 13 funds and announced that although Cather 13 was not under Cather Hall jurisdic tion the floor still lives in Cather Hall and they will be placed under the jurisdiction of residence director J i m Pequette until they rejoin Omaha in 1923. After graduation he was an intern at University Hos pitals in Cleveland, Ohio, a Hanna Research Fellow in Pathology at Western Reserve Medical School, and he stud ied bone pathology in Vienna. Austria. In 1937 he joined the Har vard Medical School Faculty and subsequently became he d of the Department of Legal Medicine there. He was a national leader in the move ment for the application of Jazz Set For gram will be the C a n d y Wise Quartet, a musical group, the Three Day Ryd ers, a local folk singing group, Dave Vanny, a pop jazz singer and folk singer Jean Schulte. Also appear ing will be Bob Bordy who does humorous folk arrange ments. Bordy has per formed in Sun Valley and is currently appearing in Omaha. Spring Festival Chairman Craig Gilpin said seating Alan R. Morili Cather Hall. Committee Meets Bailey asked that the com mittee meet at least twice in the next week and have their findings available for presen tation at next week's Cather Executive Council meeting. "I hope they have an open mind about this committee," Bailey said. "Although much question has arisen over their methods of applying changes, I have to agree there is a ma jority of unrest over the sit uation (of hurriedly passing Cather by-laws)." "Since our main objective as Executive Council is to co ordinate and organize the hall for the resident's benefit I plan no meeting regularly with them until something ii worked out," Bailey said. Referendum Vote He added that areas the committee will discuss in clude the referendum vote requested by Kennedy Hall, a definition of common Cather areas for judicial jurisdiction asssignment and the automa tic tabling of future by-laws. Several Cather Executive members disagreed with the methods the hall used but they all agreed that the by law enacting system d o e i need an adequate investiga tion. Bill Kennedy, Cather social chairman, said that they "have a legitimate complaint as sometimes we vote and don't know what we are vot ing for. I like the referendum with the idea of waiting at least one week after the item is made before voting." 'Rash Action' IDA vice-president BriEti Ridenour said that it was a rash action, "but since it'j done, I feel the government should and will handle it in the most responsible manner possible." Cather Hall activities chair man Jerry McCrey alse didn't agree with their meth ods but added "that they have brought up several nec essary points and the pro posed new system would be better." Visit NU medical knowledge to the de tection of crime and the in vestigation of deaths of un known origin. He left Harvard in 1949 t return to Western Reserve University as Director of the Institute of Pathology. Ia 1964 he was named vice-president of Western Reserve Uni verity. He is presently pro. vost of Western Reserve and he serves as chief adminis trator for all educational, re search, and student services at Western Reserve. Elmer T. Gustafson Festival for the program would be arena style and spectators should bring blankets to sit on while attending the con cert. An Art Sale and Display is scheduled in the Sandoz fishbowl, with student art projects on sale and exhibit along with a silent movie presentation featuring eith er Laurel and Hardy or the Keystone Kops, Gilpin said.