Page 4 The Daily Nebraskan Monday, November 13, 1967 iubcommittee H ousing Code Issue Passage Would Benefit The Minimum Standards Housing Code is supported by the ASUN subcommit tee because poor housing complicates learning, bet ter housing attracts better staff members and it would assure that low cost hous ing be brought up to stan dards, according to sub committee member Ron Warnet. Lincoln voters will decide the fate of the proposed Min imum Standards Housing Code in a city election Tues day. The City Council ap proved the measure by a vote of 6-0 last spring. The ASUN Special Proj ects Committee, headed by Chairman Margo McMas ter, has been working the past several weeks in sup port of the code. The committee has at tempted to gain support for the code by contacting over 1,500 parents of University students living in Lincoln, going door-to-door in some parts of the city and talk ing with parts of the vot ing University community, Miss McMaster said. Warnet, acting as spokes man for the subcommittee, gave three reasons for its support of the code. THREE REASONS First, many students, for lack of available transpor tation, are forced to live near the campus where IDA Seeks Tickets For Orphan Use On Thanksgiving Members of the Inter Dormitory Association Coun cil are sponsoring a campus drive for football tickets for orphans on Thanksgiving Day, according to Jerry Mc Crery, activities chairman. "Many students will not be using their tickets be cause of the holiday," said McCrery. He explained that since this was the last game there would be no need for tickets to be returned to those who donate them. "Student identification cards need not accompany these ticket s," explained McCrery. He said that the Univer sity of Oklahoma-Nebraska game would be nationally televised and that a "full stadium would be impres sive on TV." IcAll-jMllSOli THE BIG CATCH .. . MIJff Just arrived from holy TolIy-Ho" flshermon 5 knit. The biggest sweater in the fashion pond in beautifully bulky, natural colored 100 wool. The buttoned cardigan $20. Sizes S-M-l. Also the furtleneck of $29 end the enwneck of $n. srcmvvLUL mat now. jfssMfMMnaBMnaMMMHHMM honsing is generally in poor condition. Livine in sub standard housing may im pair the student's ability to learn. Foreign students. In par ticular, are in this situa tion. They come to this countryb get a better ed ucation only to find inade quate housing to complicate the problems of studying in a foreign country. An im provement in living condi tions availabe to students would benefit the University as a whole, he said. Second, faculty members demand good living condi tions for their families. Passage of a minimum housing code would be an other step in improving the University to attract the competent faculty necessary for a good univesity, he said. A third reason for sub committee support was giv en by Jean A 1 1 e m e y e r, chairman of the housing code subcommittee. The student with small in come will be insured of a place to live that meets the housing code's requirements for safety and welfare, she said. The code will help fill the need for low rent housing that is up to standards. Warnet also gave a brief explanation of the function of the code. FUNCTION OF CODE Inspections w o u Id be made to determine if there are existing conditions which should be corrected. The homeowner is protected un der the code by many safe guards from unlawful search and every effort would be made to make this inspection most convenient to him, he noted. The code sets forthde tailed specifications for judging substandard condi tions. This will prevent the inspector from being arbi trary in his judgment, War net said. The Dode further stipu lates that one or more sub standard conditions make a dwelling unit substandard only if there is a danger to life, limb, health, prop erty, safety or welfare of the public or occupants of the dwelling unit. If the inspectors decide there is a real danger and corrective measures must be taken, they would sub mit their recomendations to the City Building Inspec tor. If the inspector agrees with the decision the own er would receive a letter stating the findings and the corrective steps recommended. Backs University The owner would have thirty days to appeal to the mayor if he does not wish to accept the recommenda tions. The decision of the mayor could be appealed to regular courts, he pointed . out. There is no penalty sec tion. Violation of any city ordinance is considered a misdemeanor as voted by Lincoln voters in 1966. RELOCATION ASSISTANCE If it becomes necessary to move a person or fam ily out of their dwelling be cause of extensive repair or condemnation, they could not be moved until they had been offered "assistance in relocating in a dewelling unit which meets the pro visions of the Code." The mayor is required by the Code to designate an agency to carry out this responsi bility. The occupant as well as the owner are held respon sible for the condition of the dwelling unit by t h e code. Specifically, the oc cupant is responsible for keping his unit clean, while the owner is responsible for keeping the unit in sound structural condition. Quiz Bowl First round Quiz Bowl matches involving a total of 30 freshman teams and 74 upperclass teams were completed last week. This year Quiz Bowl of fers participating teams the opportunity for special chal lenge matches. Any team may challenge another team to a match providing both teams consent to the chal lenge. Teams interested in chal lenge matches may contact Bill Ptacek at 1645 R St. The twelve challenge matches will be held on Dec. 14, and will be ac cepted on a first come, first serve basis. The results of challenge matches do not apply to regular Quiz Bowl elimina tion. The results of last weeks' matches are: rmbnet Sammy Freshmen 113 Ag Mm 40 Thei Xi 190 Cornbinker Coop IS Calhcr 115 Love Hall 30 Dime? House 270 Alpha Omjcron Pi o Phi Kappa Pi 103 Zeta Tan Alpha to Stona Phi Enttkw M Alpha Xi Delta Classics Arthur (Btta Sumi Psi M Kappa Alpha Theta 25 roswrriassmro Alpha XI Delta Turtles l Pena Hutu 65 God's Divine Independents 195 Af Men Jo Cornhosker Ca-p lit Love Hall 10 Pi Beta PW 193 . Pioneer Ham M Delta Tan Delta 115 The Troopers 4 Kappa Alpha Theta No. J. M The Uncalled Four M The UstesctuWes 13 Harpers Knirhu M Beta Theta Pi A 325 Cather Hall Sis It V . i MEMBERS OF THE TEAM ... the University of Nebraska Law College's moot court team bones up for regional competition to be held Nov. 17-18 in Kansas City. Left to right are: Bill Fenton, Tom Thomsen, Bill Harding and Bruce Wright, Nebraska Law Students To Vie In Regional Court Competition Four University law stu dents will try to add anoth er award to the College's list of moot court honors when they compete in the regional court competition Nov. 17-18. They are Bill Fenton, se nior and graduate of Em poria State College, Tom Thomsen, also a senior, and juniors. Bill Harding, and Leslie Bruce Wright, the Briton Enrolled In NU Extension Class The Farm and Ranch Op erators Short Course, con ducted by the University College of Agriculture, pres ently has 25 young men en rolled for the fall term. Among the participants is Charles Heward. a resident of Mills, England. The rest are from the local area. The eight week, vocation al course provides an op portunity for young men who want more agricultural training than high schools offer, but who do not want to pursue a college educa tion, according to Clinton A. Hoover, head of the Hall of Youth at the Nebraska Cen ter for Continuing Educa tion. Students presently en rolled in the University are i not eligible for the course. The courses are designed to provide practical infor mation which can be applied ! on ranchs or farms. j Instructors are College of ! Agriculture staff members who are specialists in their respective fields and who also have had practical experience. IOWA PUBLIC SERVICE Iowa Public Service Company fs an Investor owned gas and electric utility company serving more than 200 cities and towns in north-central and northwest Iowa. Our future is involved with underground dis tribution lines, electric autos, nuclear power, crime reduction through better lighting, and on and on. In less than ten years our service to residen tial customers will have to double to meet the de mand. Construction projects, sales promotions, marketing and financial programs, personnel de velopment . . . If this sounds like opportunity, it should. It is. J atetn mTT'--tsa1 ft? latter three University of Nebraska graduates. Teams from 12 law col leges will participate in the court. The Nebraska team drew a first round bye and will compete against winners of the first round in the quarter-finals set for Friday af ternoon. The semi-final and final rounds will be held on Saturday. Applications will be ac cepted until Nov. 24 for the first term, which begins Nov. 27. The second term's applications will be accepted until Feb. 2. Further information can be obtained by writing to Hall of Youth, Nebraska Center, 33rd and Holdrege, Lincoln, Nebraska 68503. Will be Interviewing At the University of Nebraska November 16, 1967 Iowa Pn&Iic Ssrric3 The winner and runner up will advance to the na tional finals to be held in New York City in Decem ber. Nebraska's 1953 team, en tering for the first time, won the national championship and award for outstanding individual speaker. The 1956 and the 1961 teams were national run-ners-up. They also took hon ors for the top individual and best brief in the compe tition. Nebraska won the region al championship in 1962 and was regional runner-up in 1964 and 1965. This year's case to be ar gued concerns a class ac tion for people who alleged ly bought stocks and bonds from the facts in an errone ous financial statement sup plied by an accounting firm. Nebraskan Want Ads Bring Results COMPANY NCD Goes Outstate As Support Grows Support behind the Ne braska Concerned Demo crats (NCD) seems to be growing, according to fig ures from Gene Pokorny, treasurer of the organiza tion. Pokorny estimated that between 500 and 600 signa : tures had been collected by Saturday's organizational meeting. The NCD is supporting National Convention dele gate hopefuls who are un pledged or pledged to presi dential aspirants other than President Johnson and who are opposed to the Vietnam war. As a branch of the Na tional Conference of Con cerned Democrats, the NCD also includes the University Concerned Democrats (UCD), although the divi sion between the groups is not formal. "We aje too busy trying to do the work," Pokorny said, "to worry about set ting up officers and so forth in the University group." As a result of Saturday's meeting 98 letters are be ing sent to out-state Demo ALL THE SPACHETTI YOU WANT FOR . . . Every Wednesday Nite 5 to t p.m. SPACHETTI FESTIVAL Patio Italian Spaghetti with spicy meat sauce. Served with warm garlic bread, tossed salad and dressing. $1 Get the Gang Together Wed.! Join the Fun. PATIO RESTAURANT Fremont and 48th Streets f " ISSak.-..."-" B On (3 FOOTBALL FOR SHUT-INS At next Saturday's football game while you are sitting in your choice student's seat behind the end zone, wont you pause and give a thought to football's greatest and, alas, most neglected name ? I refer, of course, to Champers Sigafoofl. Champert Sigafoos (1714-1928) started life humbly on a farm near Thud, Kansas. His mother and father, both named Walter, were bean-gleaners, and Champert became a bean-gleaner too. But he tired of the work and went to Montana where he got a job with a logging firm. Here the erstwhile bean-gleaner worked as a stump-thumper. After a month he went to North Dakota where he tended the furnace in a granary (wheat-heater). Then he drifted to Texas where he tidied up oil fields (pipe-wiper). Then to Arizona where he strung dried fruit (fig-rigger). Then to Kentucky where he fed horses at a breeding farm (oat toter). Then to Long Island where he dressed poultry (duck-plucker). Then to Alaska where he drove a delivery van for a bakery (bread-sledder). Then to Minnesota where he cat up frozen lakes (ice-slicer). Then to Nevada where he determined the odds in a gambling house (dice pricer). Then to Milwaukee where he pasted camera lenses together (Ze iss-splicer). Finally he went to Omaha where be got a job in a tan nery, beating pig hides until they were soft and supple (hog-flogger). Here occurred the event that changed not only Champert' life, but all of ours. Next door to Champert's hog-floggery was a mooring mast for dirigibles. In flew a dirigible one day, piloted by a girl named Graffa von Zeppelin. Champert watched Graffa descend from the dirigible, and his heart turned over, and he knew love. Though Graffa's beauty was not quite perfect-one of her legs was shorter than the other (blimp-gimper) she was nonetheless ravishing, what with her tawny hair and her eyes of Lake Louise blue and ber marvelougly articulated haunches. Champert, smitten, ran quickly back to the hog-floggery to plan the wooing. lb begin with, naturally, he would give Graffa a pres ent. This presented problems, for hog-flogging, as we all know, is a signally underpaid profession. Still, thought Champert, if he had no money, there were two things ha did have: ingenuity and pigskin. So he selected several high grade pelts and stitched them together and blew air into them and made for Graffa a perfectly darling little replica of a dirigible. "She will love this," said he confidently to himself and proceeded to make ready to call on Graffa. First, of course, he shaved with Personna Super Stain less Steel Blades. And wouldn't you ? If you were looking to impress a girl, if you wanted jowls as smooth as ivory, dewlaps like damask, a chin strokable, cheeks fondlesome, upper lip kissable, would you not use the blade that whisk away whiskers quickly and slickly, tuglessly and nickleajly, scratehlessly and matchlessly? Would you not; in short, choose Personna, available both in Injector style and double-edge style? Of course yon wookL 0M' m jf. sU JM -ts LiTT : So Champert, his face a study in epidermal elegance, rushed next door with his little pigskin dirigible. Bt Graffs, alas, had run off, alas, with a bush pilot who spe cialized in dropping limes to scurvy-ridden Eskimo vil lages (fruit-chuter). Champert, enraged, started kicking his little pigskin blimp all over the place. And who should walk by just then but Jim Thorpe, Knute Rockne, Walter Camp, and PeteRozelle! They walked silently, heads down, four discouraged men. For weeka they had been trying to invent football, but they couldn't seem to find the right kind of ball. They tried everything-hockey pucks, badminton birds, bowling balls, quoits-but nothing worked. Now seeing Champert kicking his pigskin spheroid, their faces lit up and as one men tbey hollered "Eureka 1" The rest is history. f . - - lit i Speeding of kick, if you've tot any about tour ores. wmmmw eeeow, my tfmsmotitan negmar or crats believed "sympathet ic" with the movement. "These are people we are able to identify as being op posed to the war," he said. "In this way we are broad ening our base from the Lincoln-Omaha area." . The out-staters will be asked to circulate petitions in their areas in support of the NCD aims. The group is also canvas sing areas of Lincoln to se cure more signatures for the movement. "Our ultimate goal is not a certain number of names," he said, "but to get just as many signatures as possible for an advertise ment in the Omaha World Herald Nov. 26." Deadline for the signa tures will probably be Nov. 20, he added. Plans for the NCD follow ing the signature drive are uncertain, Pokorny said, but interested Democrats will probably be supporting the delegates pledged to candidates oppos n g in volvement in Vietnam and to delegates not pledged to Johnson. Pat's .911312 mMm By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!", "Dobie GiUus," etc.)