The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 09, 1968, Page Page 3, Image 3

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    Friday, February 9, 1968
The Daily Nebraskan
Page i
Board detects faults
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Newly Revised AWS constitution was signed Thursday by the constitutional
convention delegates. Ratification procedures are now underway.
photo by Mike Haymnn
Bowen comments on Harper
Friday, February 9, 1968
INTER-VARSITY 8 a.m.
BAPTIST STUDENT UN-ION-fl
a.m.
ENGLISH DEPT. 12 noon.
PLACEMENT OFFICE
LUNCHEON 12:30 p.m.
STUDENT AFFAIRS
MEET A.PII.A. 1:30 p.m.
INTER-VARSITY 7 p.m.
N.I.A. 7:30 p.m.
ARAB STUDENT ASSOCI
ATION 7:30 p.m.
PALLADIAN LITERARY
SOCIETY-8 p.m.
TURKISH STUDENT ASSO-CIATION-fl
p.m.
Wilson reports
on radio station
Future of FM depends
upon finding funds
by Jim Evinger
Senior Staff Writer
Student Senator Phil Bowen,
tpeaker pro tempore of Stu-
rn
PERSONAL
Personality Posters, Pyschadelic, SW
Posters and Buttons. II we don't Have
them, then you don't want them. Send
(or samples and list. MADAM BUT
TERFLY'S GIFT SHOP. 4609 E. Col
fax, Denver Colo. 80220
Nebraska Region Sports Car Gub
of
America
SPORTS CAR RALLTE
Feb. 10. li8
Congress Inn on West "O"
Registration 6:30 p.m.
SUrt 7:M p.m.
Special reduced University entry fee
I do ironing in my home, charged by
the piece. Phone 466-1482.
HELP WANTED
Loral Company needs two colloie men
to work part time. 486-4414.
FOR SALE
Stereo system: pre-ampllfier, two ampli
fiers teach 70 watts), two enclosed
peakers, FM tuner. Garrard turntable.
Big beautiful sound. 489-3285 after (pm.
tj T-Bird Sea to Believe. Fac. Air. 1300
No. 61 C-4-5827.
1964 Ford XL 390. 26.000 mile, air.
power steering. Black with red In
terior. 434-22S4.
FOR RENT
Small 3 room cottage. Furnished, air
conditioned, gaa heat, outdoor picnic
area. Long a favorite of married
t'nlversjty students. References re
uired. Call after 3pm. 466-2284.
dent Senate, criticized Senate
Thursday for what he called
superficial action on the Har
per Hall issue of open house
policy violations.
At its Wednesday meeting,
Senate defeated two motions
supporting a Harper Hall
Senate resolution which ig
nores the open door article of
the dormitory open house pol
icy. Rather ,than definite action
being taken, Bowen charged
Senate merely reacted to the
issue.
He referred to Senator Rob
ert Weaver's motion in Sen
ate last January which would
have created an ad hoc com
mittee to investigate the ques
tion of dormitory open house
policy and visiting hour poli
cy. Senate turned down the
motion.
Bowen said this would have
been definite action by the
Senate. He explained that the
committee could have inves
tigated the situation, reported
its findings with recommen
dations to Senate and intro
duced resolutions for Senate
to consider.
This method, Bowen con
tends, would have allowed
Senate to take definite action
in Wednesday's meeting when
the issue came forth in Sena
tor Jim Ludwig's motions ask
ing Senate to support Harper
Hall's actions.
He said the senators were
pretty well-informed on t h e
issue as a whole and that they
discussed the issue intelligent
ly. He added there was a prob
lem in t h a t few people real
ized the involved ramifica
tions of 'article five of the
Open House policy, to which
Harper Hall objects.
Bowen also criticized Sen
ate for not establishing an in
vestigating committee
Wednesday. He qualified this
by adding there is a question
of responsibility involved. He
said IDA has thus far as
sumed responsibility in t h e
issue and has not yet pre
sented the problem formally
to Senate.
Agreeing that Senate then
should have established the
committee, he said the sena
tors in Wednesday's meeting
were not formulating their
own thinking on the matter of
Harper Hall.
He said Senate has been
waiting for the dormitory to'
do this itself.
He described the issue as
was presented to Senate by
saying that Ludwig's resolu
tions were very "open-ended."
He said Senate was asked
to approve the actions by Har
per residents in their viola
tion last Sunday of visitation
rules by closing doors to
rooms with visitors.
The realization of a campus
FM station now depends en
tirely upon finding some
source of initial capital, ac
cording to Bob Wilson, vice
president and program direc
tor of the University Student
Broadcasting Founda
tion (USBF).
Wilson said that USBF has
done everything possible to
implement its dream of an
FM station since the Student
Affairs committee approved
the idea last April.
"It's clear that we are not
going to be served an FM sta
tion on a silver platter. We'll
have to go out and build the
station on our own efforts," he
said.
Majority voted to pay
Wilson noted that the vote
cast in last semester's ASUN
referendum showed, "the ma
jority of the students indicated
that they are interested and
willing to pay 15 cents a stu
dent for the station."
However he added that the
Four acts
to perform
Four traveler's acts have
been selected for AWS Coed
Follies, according to Linda
Jeffrey, traveler's acts chair
man. The acts chosen for the Feb.
23 performance are: the Tri
Delta Washboard Band; Roni
Meyer: Becky McSpadden;
and Linda Riggs and Peggy
Rees.
Do you think
a bright young engineer
should spend
his most imaginative years on
the same assignment?
either do we.
You may select special
ized jobs, or broad systems
type jobs. Or you can choose
not to change assignments if
you'd rather develop in-depth
skills in one area.
Either way, we think
you'll like the Hughes ap
proach. It means you'll become
more versatile in a shorter
(And your HUGHES S
salary will
show it)
N
That's why we have a two
year Rotation Program for
graduating engineers who
would prefer to explore several
technical areas. And that's why
many of our areas are organ
ized by function rather than
by project.
At Hughes, you might
work on spacecraft, communi
cations satellites andor tacti
cal missiles during your first
two years.
All you need is an EE, ME
or Physics degree and talent
t.
If you qualify, we'll arrange for
you to work on several different
assignments... and you can
help pick them.
i j
MUiH.f AINCHAFT COMPANr
Some of the current openings at Hughes: ...
Microwave & Antenna Engineers
Electro-Optical Engineers
Microcircuit Engineers
Space Systems Engineers
Missile Systems Engineers
Guidance & Controls Engineers
Spacecraft Design Engineers
Weapon Systems Engineers
Components & Materials Engineers
Circuit Design Engineers
Product Design Engineers
For additional information,
please contact your College
Placement Director or write:
Mr. Robert A. Martin
Head of Employment
Hughes Aerospace Divisions
11940 W. Jefferson Blvd.
Culver City, California 90230
U.S. Citizenship is required
An equal opportunity employer
CAMPUS
INTERVIEWS
February 23
Contact College Placement
Office to arrange interview
appointment.
results of the referendum
have not been approved by
the Board of Regents, pend
ing the foundation's obtaining
starting capital.
Wilson said that the Re
gents will probably approve
the referendum as soon as
USBF gets the money, but
thus far all efforts to raise
the capital have failed.
"Funds not available"
"There are no federal funds
floating around that we can
ask for and the alumni letters
that, we sent out have yielded
no results. It is safe to say
that we will receive no out
side help," he said.
Wilson indicated that a com
mittee is considering ways to
raise the money, which in
clude sponsoring an all-student
drive.
"The whole situation is sim
ilar to the way the Faculty
Evaluation Booklet got
started. The students have to
really show they are interest
through their pocketbooks, in
this case before the Regents
approve the referendum," he
said.
He added that things may
get under way again late in
the spring, but that all indica
tions so far point to a delay
until September.
Wilson said that a board of
trustees for the FM corpora
tion was formed last Decem
ber and added that "Every
thing else will fall into place,
when we do get the money to
start."
bv Joan MeCullough
Junior Staff Writer
Dual-matriculation may have its
advantages? but a recent Teach
ers College Advisory Board study
says it does not benefit students.
Dual-matriculation is the process
by which students registered in an
other college matriculate in Teach
ers College, meeting the minimal
requirements to obtain an certi
ficate. A broader educational back
ground and graduate school quali
fications are the reasons students
gave for dual-matriculating, ac
cording to the study. ' I
But dual-matriculation does not
accomplish these goals, the study
has revealed.
Requirements for a Bachelor of
Arts degree in Teachers College
are the same as those for a Bache
lor or Arts degree in Arts and
Sciences.
The proportion of people who
dual-matriculate is very small, Dr.
Loren Bonneau, Advisory Board
advisor said Wednesday.
Dual-matriculation was original
ly begun for students who register
ed in Arts and Sciences and who
decided to obtain a teaching certi
fivate late in their college career,
Bonneau said.
Two advantages of he program
are: students can go to graduate
school in their major subject or
in education if they wish to teach
on the college level and they have
a teaching certificate upon gradu
ating from college so they can
teach before entering graduate
school, he said.
Dr. Einstein
Drug addicts show
failure of society
Drug addiction cannot be
explained in medical-legal
terms but should rather be
viewed as a failure in respon
sibility on the part of society,
according to Dr. Stanley Ein
stein. Einstein, lecturing at the
East Union Thursday after
noon during a session spon
sored by the Special Events
Committee, is a New York
specialist in problems related
to alcohol and drug misuse.
Einstein, director of the In
stitution for Study of Drug
Addiction, argued that a medical-legal
definition of drugs
could not handle such motives
for the use of drugs by stu
dents as greater self-awareness.
Rather, he chose to define
a drug as being: "Any sub
stance mat by its chemical
nature alters structure or
function in the living orga
nism." Einstein pointed out that
such a definition could apply
to alcohol, potentially the most
dangerous of all drugs since
it can cause widespread and
irreversible physical damage,
and to tobacco, items which
have been widely accepted
and used for centuries.
Einstein feels that society's
inconsistent attitude towards
drug use is also reflected by
the fact that no distinction is
made between the criminal
addict and the person who is
caught experimenting.
He declared that the stan
dard rehabilitation approach,
which boils down to ab
stinence from using drugs,
really represents the goal of
rehabilitation and not the pro
cedure needed to arrive at it.
Einstein feels that better re
sults can be obtained by stan
dardizing specific treatments
around the country and by ap
proaching the patient more as
a human being with strengths
as well as weaknesses.
Einstein said that responsi
bility is a crucial factor in
addictions.
The Society is in a large
part responsible, Einstein
feels, both because of its de
fensive stance towards addicts
and because the way it has
prolonged adolescence and
made adulthood appear un
certain induces young people
to take drugs.
Einstein expressed hope
that interpersonal relation
ships and the commitment to
life and others that this type
of relationship demands will
help in solving the dilemma
of drug use and addiction.
mm
S&03GD
"Every cell became alive as I
brought the sandwich to my eyes!
The first sensations I felt were
visual: First, the soft, pleasing yel
low of tangy, tasty cheese . . . the
totally crisp, green freshness of
the lettuce, then the sizzling, golden-brown
perfection of choice,
grilled ground beef floated before
my eyes . . the rhapsodic texture
of pickle chips and snowy bits of
chopped onion came next, fol
lowed by the glowing redness of
a slice of garden-fresh tomato, and
finally the deliciously fragrant
sandwich seasoning that tickled
my nostrils. What a mouth-watering
experience! I ate it. LSD? No.
Something new and better . . .
a BIG BRONCO SANDWICH."
Mn. Elliot Poggemeyer
Muscle Beach California
Pier 7
13th & E St. Lincoln, Nebraska
1111 IIUI '" B ''I"C' '
A
Why should you
confide In a guy
you've never met
before?
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 turn 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.)
So make it a point to meet Alcoa's
recruiter. He's a confidence man .
you can really trust.
Interview date:
Wed., Feb. 14
An Equal Opportunity Employer
A Plans for Progress Company
Change for the better
with Alcoa
ALCOA