'WZBRASKA STATE HISTORICAL SOCTETV "ULN, NEBRASKA ocr-1 6 !257 Wednesday, October 11, 1967 University of Nebraska Vol. 91, No. 17 NFU Enrollment "May Top Last Year r. 1 ' - "'" ' y rii,rillin,Tilnir.i.i..iiiil.i..iililiiIW.i,i,,m..ilJX..W,,ili, iB.im.Mk., m0" mtmmSA SUSIE PHELPS . . . interests a student in the educational opportunities of enrolling in Free University course. A WS Changes Overnight Rule AWS board members voted Tuesday to eliminate the rul ing that all women taking overnights and out-of-town permissions stay with host esses at least 25 years old. This ruling will become ef fective second semester, ac cording to Ann Windle, AWS president. Susie Sitorius, judicial vice-president, said that the stipulation placed1 on these permissions will be left up to parents. Coeds will be able to take overnights with those pe pie that have been designated Senate Agenda Includes Vietnam Ballot Questions Student senate will begin considering possible ballot questions for a referendum on Vietnam at its Wednesday meeting, said Gene Pokorny, ASUN vice-president. The Senate will also dis cuss the possibility of includ ing a vote on the proposed Uni versity FM radio station at the same time as the Vietnam referendum vote, he said. Pokorny said Al Spangler, chairman of the Ad Hoc Com mittee on Vietnam, would ask the Senate for approvaj of questions to appear on the ref erendum ballot. The commit tee will propose that faculty members be allowed to vote in the referendum. iiiBniai HUB'S 1 A student poll spon sored by the All Univer sity P'und has selected the Cancer Society, Unit ed Service Organization, Larc School. Mental Health Association and lultiple Sclerosis Asso ciation to receive AUF funds. Most of these funds will be raised at the AUF Beat Dance Oct. 21 at the Nebraska Union. AUF is co-sponsoring the dance with the Inter-Dormitory Association, with all prof its going to AUF. Activities Queen will be announced at the AUF dance. Interviews for Ac tivities Queen and Big Ian on Campus start at :30 p.m., Thursday. Ac- ivities Queen finalists will go through a second set of interviews on Oct. 19. BMOC finalists are voted on at the AUF dance. parental permission The schedule for Focus on Coeds, entitled the American Woman, 1967, will include the following events, according to program chairmen. Tuesday, Oct. 24, AWS will present a "How To Do" work shop in the Nebraska Union from 2 until 4 p.m. The pro gram will feature creative women showing how to use decorative accents in a home or dorm room along with oth er displays. That evening a dessert for ASUN must consider how it will finance the proposed ser ies of Vietnam discussions, he added. By including a question on the FM station on the ballot, students would be given an op portunity to express their ap proval or disapproval of this proposal, Pokorny pointed out. He said ASUN must decide on th e cards. NU Team Premieres On GE Quiz Bowl University of Nebraska and University of Wisconsin (Mil waukee) quiz bowl teams will match wits Saturday. The math, sponsored by Gener al Electric, can be seen on television Sunday, Oct. 15, at 4:30 p.m. CST. A Nebraska team has not rompeted in the event since 1960, according to Dr. James Roberts, sponsor of the team. Last spring team members Jim Allard, Larry Grossman,. Linda Marcello, and John Simmons were selected to compete by a committee of faculty members, he said. The committee used examin ation results and the appli cants' speed response in a buzzer situation as criteria for their selection. The winning school will re ceive a $3000 scholarship, ac cording to Dave Cummins, last year's quiz bowl presi dent, and the losing school will receive a $1000 scholar shiD. Schools may return for a rcnxmum of five matches, he said. The team has been meet ing several nights a week for review sessions in current events, the sciences, philoso phy, mythology and other areas for questioning. Dr. Roberts reported. house representatives has been scheduled for 7 p.m. This will be followed by the Hovland Swanson style show where the 10 best-dressed-coeds on campus will be announced. "Challenge for Creativity," an evening of entertainment, will be held at the Music Building, Oct. 25, at 7 p.m. A seminar on the morality of the 1967 American Woman and the way that it has af fected her life will be held Oct. 30. Speakers will also discuss drugs and the birth control pill. The speakers have been contacted and they first what it is going to do to help the FM station planners. A third major item on the Senate agenda is the selection of a senator from the Grad uate and Professional College to fill the vacant seat of Bill Tooley who resigned several weeks ago. Candidates will be interviewed and voted on dur ing Wednesday's meeting. "We have also been espe cially emphasizing quick re call responses," he said. The team members and Dr. Roberts will fly to New York on Thursday, and they will receive tickets from GE to the broadway musical. 'Aun tie Mam e', on Saturday night. Ij The annual AWS Freshman Activities Mart will be held ij Wednesday, Oct. 11, j! in the Nebraska Un ' ion Ballroom. Univer i sity organizations will sign up members j from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. j ' Some of the groups ; included in the Ac- i! i tivities Mart are: !'i i Builders, Union. 4 i ASUN, All Univer-. 1! sity Fund, Corn Cobs. ;! T a s s e Is, Orchesis. I Quiz Bowl. AWS. j j 1FC, Young Republij ; cans. Young Demo- j i c r a t s, Panhellenic , .jj 1 People to People, Ca- jjj d e n c e Countesses, pi i Pershing Rifles, and j Red Cross. iii !i IH PHOTO BY MICHAEL HAYMAN will soon be announced along with the meeting times and places. Sellout Predicted . . . Peter, Paul And Mary To In Repeat Performance By BARB MARTIN Junior Staff Writer Peter Yarrow, Paul Stook ey and Mary Travers met in a Greenwich Village apart ment in May, 1961, and sang "Mary Had A Little Lamb." One year later the trio had become the most highly ac claimed folk singers in t h e country, according to an In ternational Talent Associates release. Two years ago the group appeared in Lincoln and the performance was a sellout. Ticket sales for the two-hour concert to be presented at Pershing Auditorium, Oct. 13 at 8:30 p.m. are paralleling previous sales, said Persh ing's representative. TICKETS AVAILABLE Although tickets are still available at Pershing's box office from noon to 6 p.m. daily, the representative said the $3 and $1 tickets arc- ex pected to be sold out by if " 1 X I 5 THE FOLK SINGING TRIO ... of Peter, Paul and Mary Marriage, Cheap Travel Are Top Attractions By ED ICENOGLE Senior Staff Writer Over 250 University stu dents registered for Nebras ka Free University (NFU) courses Monday and Tuesday in the first two days of the NFU's registration drive. This number, according to Susie Phelps, chairman of the ASUN's NFU committee, in dicates that the enrollment for the 21 courses may sur pass last year's total of 600. SECOND SEMESTER A no-cost, voluntary collec tion of courses, NFU is en tering its second semester of operation at the University. "Since we waited to start registration during the fifth week of school," Miss Phelps said, "more students already know whether or not they can fit an NFU course into their schedules." Miss Phelps emphasized that many of the courses have limits on the number of stu dents who may participate and that interested students should register early in the week. MOST POPULAR Opening registration was heaviest for the courses "Mar riage: Sexual, Emotional and Social Contract" and "Theory Wednesday. The $2.50 ticket sales will probably continue until the end of the week. The trio, whose three most recent records appeared on the best-seller charts simul taneously, was formed through the efforts of Albert Grossman, who arranged their first meeting at Mary's apartment. Immediately a problem arose the release said. The threesome couldn't think of one song to which they a 1 1 knew both melody and lyr ics, so they chose "Mary Had A Little Lamb." ENTHUSIASM SHARED But the unsophisticated rhyme didn't deter the group. Yarrow said," we found that we shared the same enthusi asm for our work, and the same conviction that folk music is a way to communi cate ideas and concerns." In ternational Talent Associates said. .IT- ' V " 01 ( 1 ? l J , Ml. J.' ft . ' ii , , v ft ' and Practice of Free and Low Cost Travel". The number registering for some of the courses may in fluence their structure, ac cording to one of the course leaders. "The structure of the course I am organizing," said Dav id Kelley, "will depend on how many people sign up and how they want to handle it." SUPPLEMENT Kelley, an associate profes sor of anthropology at t h e University, is leading "The Concept of the Incredible". i There are certain subjects that are difficult to treat in the ordinary class situation, said Kelley, who attended Harvard Univeristy and has been with the Nebraska an thropology department for al most four years. "Some courses are o v e r structured sometimes and for some students," he said, "the NFU courses can be a useful supplement to Univer sity courses." FORMAT "The Concept of the Incre dible" will-be conducted at an informal level, Kelley said. "I would like to have some For seven months following the first interview, the trio worked towards this commu nication with arrangements, harmonies and rehearsals be fore their debut at the Bitter End, A Greenwich Village night club. Engagements at the Gate of Horn in Chicago, the hun gry i in San Francisco and the Blue Angel in New York followed the initial perform ance. , In the spring of 1962, "Pet er, Paul and Mary" the sing ers' first album was re leased and was soon at t h e top of the charts. Single rec ords from the album, "If I Had A Hammer," and "Lem on Tree," also gained popu larity. The wave of acclaim started by the trio's first releases occasioned a series of cross-country and world tours. Attendance records in nearly every major concert will appear at Pershing Jf J, sort of seminar," he said, "if we have between. 20 to 30 peo ple." Kelley added that "The Con cept" will be approached from two different aspects, what kind of evidence has been presented and the fac tors in accepting and reject ing the incredible. UFO'S The course will concern it self, according to Kelley, with areas such as unidentified flying objects and ghosts. "There are a series of ul timately determined attitudes towards what may or may not be believed at a certain time," he explained. Factors that affect the cre dibility of many concepts, such as ghosts and UFO's, vary with the individual and his training, Kelley indicated. Kelley said that he has col lected considerable informa tion on "the incredible" and that the course will be de signed to see what people can do with these concepts. "I think we will find that the types of explanations, rather than the data them selves," Kelley said, "is more important in considering credibility." Appear Friday hall in the U.S. were broken, according to the Talent Asso ciates release. AWARDS RECEIVED In only one year the group had developed from three in dividuals meeting for coffee and harmonizing to a pol ished and popular folk sing ing trio, the release said. The "group has received gold rec ords for their albums. "Mov ing," "In The W i n d" and "Peter, Paul and Mary in Concert," and for their sin gles, "Puff, the Magic Drag on," Blowin' in the Wind," and "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right." The release said the group has consistently refused to compromise their ideals for publicity and has even walked out of performances when requested to change the word ing of authentic folk songs. Participation in the Civil Rights movement has af fected sales and appearances in the South. In I Auditorium Friday night. V V'l v'. it i t i ; el-. if... ? : Is'' ft,.. ' i u 44 Si r r ft 5 t