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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1968)
Friday, February 2, 1968 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 IFC approves wildcat rush system for 1968 Interfraternity Council (IFC) approved a semi-" wild cat rush" program for this year at its first meeting of the semester Wednesday night. Each fraternity will be al lowed to pledge a maximum of 10 men from July 19 to 29, the same as last year. IFC also received a com mittee report on Greek Week and passed a set of rules for Rush Week next fall. Rushees will again be obliged to visit a minimum of 16 houses during Rush Week. The number of optional par ties has been reduced to one, however. Ray Novotny, IFC's Greek Week chairman and Jan Bin ger, Panhellenic's Greek Week chairman proposed a budget for the event totalling ?5,100. Funds are to be cot lected by assessing the indi vidual members of every fra ternity and sorority house $1.50 each. Greek week is planned for April 24-27. Its purpose is to bring all the components of the Greek System together in a common recreational effort, according to Dave Buntain, IFC secretary. Approximately two-thirds of the budget will be spent on a concert that will be presented in Pershing Auditorium. The Righteous Brothers, The Temptations and Glenn Yar borough are being considered for entertainment. A conference at which IFC representatives will be fea tured as keynote speakers is also planned. Miss Binger Indicated that Panhellenic was opposed to having the traditional Greek Games again this year. IFC, however, voted to keep the games. Charlie Baxter, representa tive from Delta Sigma Phi, Norman Geske selects U.S. art in Italian Biennale Exhibition By Barb Martin Campus Life Editor Norman Geske, director of Sheldon Art Gallery and U.S. Commissioner of the Biennale Exhibition, has announced the selection of art works which will represent the country at the display held in Venice, Italy, from June through Oc tober. Major showings include the paintings of Edwin Dick inson and the sculpture of Reuben Nakian, both of New York. Dickinson's paintings represent examples of his work spanning forty years of exhibits. The sculpture submitted by Nakian consists of recent work since his showing at the Sao Paulo Bienal in 1961. Con tributions by eight other art ists will also be included in the collection. Figurative tradition shown Five of these artists have not received national recog nition, and three have not yet exhibited abroad, accord ing to Geske. He added that mamtmt nllllbH' wort mfetm.m T. Wl7 l7nU4 .(K.rtl.emrM c.U ..4 Mk fct Ik D.I1T Nkrk. .HIM. I'M. Tk riMUM JwU.tu nuaanrt riMM tttaowl I nnn mow mmwwm. All aaXrUuaiMta mut k rpiM keftr .0 PERSONAL to work foragiant? (t)epends on the giant. If the viant happens to be Ford Motor (Company, it can be a distinct advantage. See your placement director and make an appoint' fment to tee the man from Ford 'when he is here on: V3Utijjtpleiie. February 8, 9 declared that the games were perhaps the most important attraction of Greek Week and the one in which there was the closest participation of the different houses. Under new business, a mo tion raising the treasurer's and the vice president's sal aries to $30 a month was approved. This, according to Buntain, will place the sala Hyde Park retires to senate cemetery Hyde Park, the weekly for um h e 1 d in the Nebraska Union main lobby, will not begin again until enough stu dent interest is generated, ac cording to Carol Madson. Miss Madson, chairman of the Union talks and topics committee which sponsors Hyde Park, said there is a lack of new issues on campus. She said that Hyde Park, at the end of last semester, was re duced to a hashing of the Vietnam war and a few other issues which were being "talked into the ground, week after week." With the upcoming student government elections this spring, Hyde Park will prob ably be continued, she said. Only if students show enough interest will the forum be continued weekly. Format remains same The general format of Hyde Park will not be changed. Miss Madson said the pro gram will continue in the main lobby of the Union with a podium serving as speak ers' platform. One or two microphones will again be placed in the they have been chosen to demonstrate the continuing vitality of the figurative tra dition in American art. Sheldon's director noted that the artists represent six states, distribuetd in the Mid west as well as the coastal areas. He added that the work of the various artists is dis tinctly individual, with the human figure in its environ ment as theonly common element. These representatives in clude sculptors Robert Cre mean, California; Leonard Bask in, Massachusetts; Frank Gallo, Illinois and Red Grooms, New York and paint ers Fairfield Porter, Long Is land; Jamse McGarrell, In diana; Byron Burford, Iowa, and Richard Diebenkorn, Cal ifornia. Works will travel Geske visited artists and dealers and traveled to sev eral galleries to select the works for the Biennale exhib it. Those works chosen will be sent to New York City and fcn K W ! taorttaa. Ik IHuwmMif 1 Ntbrork. at 47MIM m C ft M H J""" maialalB : I 1:N ihImh hot. Personality pouter. Pnycliadelle. bki pouter, and Button.? II we don't have them, you don't want them. Dend for ample, and llt. MADAM BITTEK FLY'S GIFT 8HOP, MM) E. Colfax, Denver, Colo. HW20. I do Ironinf In my home, charted by th ptec. Phone 464-I41B. FOR RENT Lara fumlihtd room, excellent fond. Morn, provided and laundry done. Statin, .wlmmlnf and homeliarli rtd Inc avallabl. $7S month djiutablt. 471MI61 Ext. m. Two men to .har room. Work part time in .mall animal hospital. 27BO South fit. Room. tea Wanted, ahar w old turnUhed brick bona. 4664M1 HELP WANTED Local Company need two eollog maa to work part Urn. 48M4H. LOST AND FOUND Lost On Alpha Gamma Slfma fra ternity pta. Howard $11). 434-tuw. FOR SALE Fender gtratorattar Guitar, I month old. Ilka new. Kplphona Reverb Amp. BUI Arttu 4M-9DW. Htrno man prs-.mplifter, two ampli fier, leach 70 waU. two wlneed pcakara, FM tuner, Garrard turntable. Bid pMulllul ovod. 4B-32g kit! (pro. ries of all three of the lesser offices on the same level. Sid Logemann, president of IFC, announced that inter views for the chairmanships of some of IFC's committees, including the Fraternities Management Association, the Expansion Committe, the new Pledge Education Committee and the Publications Commit tee will be held February 10. audience that listeners may question and respond to the speaker. Asked if student senators and non-University individu als would be invited to speak, Miss Madson replied that such appearances tend to at tract students who simply lis ten to the speakers. She doubted if candidates for March's AWS elections would use Hyde Park, even if it were reopened. Dorms may use series A similar plan, based on the Union Hyde Park series, is being considered for use in the dorms. Miss Madson said the Union would work with the dorms to establish a pro gram following the general pattern and format of the Union Hyde Park. She pointed out that this program would be for dormi tory residents and would not be sponsored or affiliated with the Union series. If students are interested in holding Hyde Park sessions at the present time, Miss Madson asked that they ex press their interest by in forming the Union program office. then shipped to Venice for the showing. The Sheldon staff under Geske's direction is now com piling the catalogue for the American exhibition. The of ficial catalogue will be ex tended to book length and will be published by Smithsonian publications. Following the Biennale, the exhibition will be shown at the National Collection of Fin Arts in Washington, D.C., and will be displayed at Sheldon Gallery early in 1969. The Biennale is the oldest and largest of the internation al art exhibitions. It was or ganized by the Italian govern ment and the city of Venice in 1895 and contains perma nent pavilions for most of the Western European nations, and for Japan Venezuela and Brazil. Fri., Febr. 2 Nebr. Union Aud. 50c -f I.D. Sunday, Febr. 41. SI". meal for buck, 5:30 p.m. Union Cafeteria. This week the classic "SHE DONE HIM WRONG" with Gary Grant I May West. ALFIE, 7:30 p.m., Union Aud. 50c LD. Thursday Fcbr0 8? ri2Zll)nZ. Social Critic Vance Packard 3:30 p.m. Union Ballroom. Nebr. Union Contemporary Arts Committee presents a "Paint In." Bring your paints l brushes and 'decorate' the false wall in the Union Lounge. Coming Events Nhr. Union Contemporary Arts Committee prostate Its 3rd Annual Photography Contest. Befalls available in Program Office. Cash rim. Deadline Fob. 16. Nobr. Union Talks A Topics Committee presents Francis Alonlkolf tptakii! on the lively Art ol Dance 3i30 p.m., Union Awl. at, , (All activities are scheduled for the Nebraska Union unless otherwise indicated.) Oer-VARSITY -8:00 a.m. BAPTIST STUDENT UN-ION-8:00a.m. ENGLISH DEPT-12:00. SOCIAL CALENDAR SATURDAY KAPPA DELTA FORMAL 6:30-12:00 p.m. DELTA GAMMA FORMAL :00-12:00p.m. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON & ALPHA PHI, HEART FUND DANCE-8:30-ll:30p.m. SUNDAY ABEL IX, OPEN HOUSE-1:00-4:00 p.m. SANDOZ V, OPEN HOUSE 2:00-4:00 p.m. SCHRAMM V, PIZZA PAR TY 5 : 00-7 : 00 p.m. 'Beauty'.) dance set by Smith hall Smith Hall is sponsoring an all-university "Beauty and Beast" dance Saturday at the Nebraska Union Ballroom. Tickets can be purchased for one dollar at the Union, according to Becky Jones, act ing social chairman for the dormitory . Miss Jones explained that each ticket enables the hold er to vote once for a "Beauty" candidate and a "Beast" can didate. She added that the dance is the first activity sponsored by the dorm and the executive committee hope that it will become an annual tradition. Candidates for "Beauty" in clude Jeanne Bartel, Pound Hall; Chris Cox, Sandoz Hall; Randi Geschwender, Alpha Omicron Pi; Jan Lovald, Smith Hall; Diane Kucera, Al pha Xi Delta and Julia Mitch ell, Zeta Tau Alpha. Candidates for Beast" are Leroy Dillon, Alpha Gamma Rho; John Dyrbal, Sigma Chi; Mike Eyster, Selleck; Leon Jergens, Delta Sigma Pi; John Tievald, Schramm Hall and Delmer Truss, Sel leck. Race film scheduled Monday An Omaha effort to ease race problems has been filmed as a documentary and will be shown Monday at 7:30 p.m. at Selleck. "A Time for Burning" is the story of the all-white Au gustana Lutheran Church which approached integration through visits by congrega tion members to Negro churches in Omaha. Ernest Chambers, featured prominently in the film, will be present to lead a discus sion following the film. THIS WEEK IN THE UNION Febr. 2-8 Union Weekend Film Series present; A L F I E. 7:00 & 9 p.m. PLACEMENT LUNCHEON 12:30 p.m. A.PH.A. 1:30 p.m. JAZZ 'N JAVA-3:45p.m. INTER . VARSITY - 7:00 p.m. PALLADIAN LITERARY SOCIETY 8:00 p.m. HARPER HALL, OPEN HOUSE 1:00-4 :00 p.m. KK slates Iryout for spring show Tryouts for Kosmet Klub's spring production of "West side Story" will be held Sat urday and Sunday from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and Tuesday and Wednesday from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the west end of the second floor of Nebraska Hall. No experience and no prep aration is necessary, accord ing to Clint Jakeman, direc tor of the show. Students will be given instruction during casting. Time and interest is more important than previous work, he added. Meredith Willson comes to Lincoln Meredith Willson, composer of Broadway musicals "T h e Music Man" and "The Un sinkable Molly Brown," will appear at a luncheon in t h e Nebraska Union Ballroom at 12 noon Saturday in conjunc tion with the "Weekend with Music" sponsored by the mu sic department and extension division. Have You Furnished Your Apartment in "Modern Poverty?" Have You Had It Up To Here With "Furnished Apartments?" RENT One Bedroom decorator-coordinated Furniture for $25.50 monthly plus tax. INTERIORS DIVERSIFIED 1230 South St. Open 10-6 104 Why should you confide in a guy you've never met, before? Two University students to attend Stillman College by Jan Parks Senior Staff Writer Stillman College, a small Negro school in Alabama, will not have students participat ing this semester in the stu dent exchange program be tween it and the University of Nebraska. "We expected a boy and a girl student from Stillman this semester," said Margaret Van Cleave, chairman of the ASUN Stillman Exchange Commit tee. "The boy could not come because of family difficulties, but we aren't sure why the girl didn't come." This problem was reversed during first semester of last year, she said, when two Still man students came to the Uni versity, while no one from here went to Stillman. Cheryl Bethel and Chuck Hodges, as the first Univer sity students to participate in the program, have now started a new semester at the Tusca loosa, Alabama school. Both Miss Bethel, a first se mester junior in dental hy giene, and Hodges, a sopho more in English, are taking general courses at Stillman. The chairman said that Miss Bethel is taking a sociology course dealing with racial mi norities. "Cheryl should find this course to be very inter esting," she said. The chairman explained that Miss Bethel and Hodges were selected in November by the ASUN Executive Commit tee. Applicants for the pro gram were interviewed by both the ASUN Executive Committee and by Dr. Russel Brown, dean of student af- Phone 432-8851 Mon.-Fri. Sat. Because the guy we're talking about Is a college recruiter from Alcoa. And the only way to play it is honestly. He'll be on campus In a couple of days. And here's what we recom mend you do at the interview. First, lay your cards on the table. Tell him what kind of work would really (urn you on. Then, sit back and listen while he explains how your plans figure Into Alcoa's plans. (You'll be surprised how versatile Aluminum Company of America can be.) Change for the with Alcoa fairs and administrative co ordinator for the committee. Problems resolved "A lack of communication and financial difficulties have proved to be the main ob stacles in the exchange stu dent program," she said. The chairman felt that the com mittee had effectively over come the communication problem because correspon dence has "eliminated much of the confusion about Still man's responsibility in the program." The Stillman officials have placed the program under the Dean's Office, which has also facilitated communcation, she said. Much of the financial diffi culties for Stillman exchange students were relieved by the passage of two committee rec ommendations by the Board of Regents on Dec. 11, 1967. The two rulings are: Nebraska will waive out-of-state tuition for Stillman students attending the Univer sity. Stillman students will thus pay only in-state charges. If Stillman will waive tui tion for Nebraska students, Nebraska will also waive all tuition charge. Miss Van Cleave explained that Stillman students, had they attended the University Nothing's happening in '68. Except you. As far as Libbey Owens-Ford Glass Company Is concerned. Everything else is old hat. We've been there. In missiles and lasers. On space walks. Wherever and however glass could go. Next stop the 21 st century. With only once-a-year pauses on campus to look for creative engineers and scientists for technical center, manufacturing and sales functions. If this is your year to happen, look for our repre sentative. FEB. 9 El Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass Co. &?s 811 Madison Ave., Toledo, Ohio 43624 better this semester, would have been eligible for the first Re gents ruling. "We haven't heard yet whether Stillman is willing to agree with the sec ond ruling," she said. Concern expressed Miss Van Cleave expressed concern that Stillman students were losing interest in the pro gram. "We're hoping that Chuck and Cheryl's interest in the program will inject en thusiasm into the program." she said, "and that they will find out how the Stillman stu dents feel about the pro gram." The committee's ASUN re port states: "We feel very strongly that this exchange program is an asset to the en tire University of Nebraska community. It is based on the belief that only through open communication between dif ferent social groups can true understanding exist." "The exchange benefits not only those few students who actually participate in the ex change," the report continues, "but also those who come in contact with visiting Stillman students." The dean of Stillman, Dr. E. E. Hardy definitely plans to continue the program, Miss Van Cleave said, and to send two Stillman students to Ne braska next fall. So make it a point to meet Alcoa's recruiter. He's a confidence man you can really trust Interview date: An Equal Opportunity Employer A Plans for Progress Company if, : U : V t H i 'I I rA r f.:, .t i H r ft :