The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 19, 1968, Page Page 4, Image 4

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    Page, ,4
The Daily Nebraskan
Monday, February 19, 1968
Baily wins race
for IDA office
Eyster selected for ,
vice presidential post
by Mark Gordon
Senior Staff Writer
Bruce Bailey of Cather
Hall and Mike Eyster of Sel
lpct Quad were overwhelm
ingly elected Inter-Dormitory
Association (IDA) president
and vice president, respective
ly, in Friday's IDA executive
elections.
Both candidates, who as
sume office Thursday, won
handily in the IDA'S second
executive elections which
drew almost one-third of the
eligible voters.
Bailey tallied 1,120 votes
compared to Harper Hall's
write - in candidate George
Saunders, who received
votes.
Vice president-elect Eyster
received 1,056 tallies in o u t
nointin? Haroer Hall's write-
in candidate Pierre Daggett,
who won 238 votes.
Bailey, current Cather Hall
president, stressed programs
ranging from a constituional
revision committee to a fresh
man orientation committee as
primary goals of the new
executive team.
Constitution revision
" He said enough committee
members to permit debate
on controversial topies would
be appointed within two weeks
to revise the IDA constitution
for acceptance by ASUN.
He listed changing the exe
cutive election date from the
third week of second semes
ter to mid-April to permit un
successful student assistant
candidates to campaign for
IDA offices as a vital ele
ment of a revised constitu
tion. Bailey said other constitu
tional difficulties to be ironed
out include writing a with
drawal caluse enabling mem
ber dormitories to withdraw
from IDA and establishing
definite guidelines for qualifi
cations of executive candidates.
would be culminated with a
Sunday afternoon dance.
He a d d e d that a monthly
briefing session with all dor
mitory executive officers with
campus student and adminis
trative leaders speaking would
be held this semester.
Committee chairmans
Bailey added that his com
mittee chairmanships for the
activities, social, scholastic
and administrative coordinat
ing committees would be an
nounced within two weeks.
In attempting to improve
communications on both an
internal and external level,
Eyster said a position of pub
licity director would be
created.
The newly created officer
would have the responsibility
of distributing a newsletter to
all member dormitories and
also would work with the ac
tivities chairman in organiz
ing an activities calendar.
Bailev said the main objec
tive of his administration was
to show the member resident
the IDA can fulfill their needs
while acting as the voice be
tween the residence halls and
the University administration.
t . i -rir'""'i
y j t ,a & 1
IDA president-elect Bruce Bailey (left) plans his strategy with the help of
Mike Eyster, IDA vice president-elect. Bailey will appeal the present open
house policy to the Faculty Senate Committee on Student Affairs this week.
All residence halls unify
to protest open door rule
Petition to recall Page
passes half-way mark
Work for representatives
Open house committee
Calling the open house
controversy an essential ele
ment in the upcoming weeks,
the president-elect said an
open house committee con
sisting of five or six mem
bers would be appointed with
in the week.
He said the committee
would pursue research in the
solutions of the open house
controversy which has been
continuing since September.
The junior architecture ma
jor from Omaha said he would
send representatives to t h e
English department to obtain
a test to "scare freshman in
to using the IDA's (resb
man study-skill program."
Since the IDA social and ed
ucational efforts have trailed
the open housing issue, the
former areas will receive
added emphasis this semes
ter, he said.
Social chair vacant
Eyster, present S e II e c k
Quad president, said the so
cial committee has almost
been non-existent, since the
position of social chairman
has been vacant this year.
"It may seem like we're
stressing it at first since
we've never really had any
group in trie past, tne vice-president-elect
said.
Bailey said a residence hall
weekend will be held late this
spring, consisting of an event
in each dormitory, which
"The Council representa
tives will be doing reference
work to make sure they re
main interested and go back
to their residents," Bailey
said.
As the officer chaged with
coordinating IDA committees,
the vice president-elect felt
the IDA would be strengthend
by improving the committee
system.
"They all need improve
ment," the sophomore history
major from Bellevue said, "In
the past the committees were
as efficient as they could
have been."
The two dormitory leaders
said they would work togeth
er for a better understanding
of problems and would seek
to eliminate overlapping
goals.
"If there is ever a need for
clarification for anything IDA
does, both Mike and I will
both be willing to talk with
residents," Bailey said.
(SmjjIIB
19
Monday, Feb.
LYTER-VARSITY 8 a.m.
BAPTIST STUDENT UNION-
a.m.
ANTHROPOLOGY DEPT.
"THE HUNTERS" 10:30
a.m. 1:30, 3:30 and 7 p.m.
PLACEMENT LUNCHEON
12:30 p.m.
BUILDERS-SPECIAL EDI
TION 2:30 p.m.
PANHANELLENIC 3:30
p.m.
BUILDERS - CALENDAR
AND DIRECTORY 3:30
p.m.
TASSELS 4:30 p.m.
UNION FILM CO MM IT
EE 4:30 p.m.
DESERET CLUB 5 p.m.
TOWNE CLUB- p.m.
UNICORNS 7 p.m. I
MATHEMATICS COUNSE
LORS - 7:30 p.m.
AWS CONSTITUTION RA-!
TlFICAT10N-9p.m.
Organizers of a recall pe
tion against Abel-Sandoz
President Richard Page have
collected more than half of
the required 500 signatures
needed for a recall election
Clark Spivey, the petition's
originator said Sunday.
He said 280 signatures have
been collected and he antici
pated obtaiing the remaining
names by next Sunday.
Spivey. an Abel-nine resi
dent, and other floor mem
bers began efforts to recall
Page after the dormitory
president "failed to reflect
the feelings of the Abel-San-dox
r e s i d e n t s" regarding
Harper Hall's action, he said.
In a Feb. 4 open house at
Harper Hall, the dormitory
openly violated the open door
policy after its Student Sen
ate announced (in a motion
passed the preceding week)
the hall's intention to violate
the policy.
Spivey said he has heard
comments that the petition
should have recalled the 17
members of the executive
council who passed the resolu
tion which petition organizers
feel failed to support Harper
Hall.
He said other residents felt
the group should have spon
sored an initiative petition re
quiring the Abel-Sandoz cab
inet to pass another revolu
tion. "This (the recall against
Paee is ultimately more ef
ficient and it will achieve the
same purpose anyway," Spiv
ey said.
He said the petition would
not jeopardize Page s presi
dency if he can successfully
defend his policies in the re
call election.
If the 500 signatures are
presented to the Abel-Sandoz
cabinet, it will force a recall
election within two weeks pro
viding the petition s validity
is approved by the Cabinet.
Although pleased that the
petition's backers are employ
ing legal channels, Page
said the charges were based
on misinformation since he
was simply following instruc
tions from the executive
council.
"If the individual residents
don't feel the floor presidents
(who compose the executive
council aren't representing
them, then it's their duty to
get the presidents to vote the
way they want them," Page
said.
He said the charges that he
didn't support Harper Hall
Placement Interviews
The following interviews are
scheduled for the period Feb.
19-23 and will be held at the
Placement Office in the Ne
braska Union.
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are inaccurate, because he is
as determined as other resi
dents to alter the open door
policy.
Page added that if a recall
election was required, he
would be a candidate for Abel
Sandoz President.
The petition reads: "We,
the undersigned, petition the
recall of Richard Page, Abel
Sandoz President, because of
the inadequacy of his lead
ership in this period of dis
quiet relating to open house
policies."
A statement of policy ex
pressing a unified effort by
all campus residence halls to
alter the open door rule of the
new open house policy was
issued jointly Saturday by
three dormitory leaders.
The statement, which re
ceived unanimous approval by
the Inter-Dormitory Associa
tion (IDA) Council last week,
also reaffirmed previous IDA
resolutions backing Harper
Hall which defied the open
door rule in an open house
two weeks ago.
Brian Ridenour, IDA presi
dent, who issued the state'
ment with Abel-Sandoz Presi
dent Richard Page and Har
per Hall President Bill Cha-
loupka, said the paper indi
cated that the residence halls
are providing a unified front
to alter the open door ruling.
All Doors Open
The open door policy states
that all doors except those
of residents absent from the
floor during the open house
must remain open and those
residents leaving the floor
must register their abscence
with the responsible officer.
Page, who with IDA president-elect
Bruce Bailey will
appeal the present open
house policy this week to the
Faculty Senate Committee on
Student Affairs, said the state
ment "brought all of us to
gether now."
Contents of Statement
The statement reads:
"It is the intention of the
IDA Council in conjunction
with the Abel-Sandoz Resi
dence Association (ASRA),
Harper and all the other resi
dence halls on campus to seek
a change in the fifth articll
of the new open house policy
Furthermore, it must b
made implicit that the entiri
residence hall system, includ
ing ASRA, has and will coil
tinue to support Harper Hal)
At this stage of the effoif
to obtain a change in articlj
five it is the intention of thj
residence hall system to worj
in a responsible m a n n e
through an legitimate mean
available to us.
Special travel rates
available to students
Tickets are now available
for special-rate student rav
el to Europe. Plane fare has
been nearly halved, according
to Gottfried Voelker of the
European Student Association.
A New York - Amsterdam
flight departing June 19 and
returning August 29 will cost
$270 and a New York-German
trip' for $235 leaves July 7
and returns Sept. 8.
According to Voelker, stu
dents will be free to travel
as they wish during -their
stay in Europe.
Special prices for traveling
on the continent will be avail
able, also, he added. I
"Tickets are availabi
throughout Europe and to thi
Orient as far as Bangkok fo
less than half price," Voelka
said. j
The European Student Ai
sociation will also provide b
formation on cutting livin,
costs while in Europe, he said
Widrwdcy Night
b Pino Night
PERXY'S 11 & Q
432-7720
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If your major
is listed here,
IBM would like
to talk with you
February 26th or 27th.
Sign up for an interview at jour placement office e?en if
you're beaded for graduate school or military service.
Maybe you think, you need a technical background to work
for us.
Not true.
Sure we need engineers and scientists. But we also need
liberal arts and bu ;iness majors. Wc'q like to talk with you even
if you're in something as Jar afield as Music, Not Wat we'd
hire you to analyze Bach fugues. But we miht hire you to
analyze problems as z computer programmer.
What you can do at IBM
The point'is, our business fcn't just elnDg computers.
It's solving problems. So if you hive 4 logical mind, we need
you to help our customer solve problem.'! in such diverse areas
as government, business, law, education, medicine, icienca,
the humanities.
Whatever your major, you can do a lot of good things at
IBM. Change the world (maybe). Continue your education
(certainly, through plans such as our Tuition Refund Program).
And have a wide choice of places to work (we have over 300
locations throughout the United States).
What U do next
Well be on campus to interview for careen w Marketing,
Computer Applications, Programming, Research, Design and
Development, Manufacturing, Field Engineering, and Finance
and Administration. If you can't make a campus interview, send
an outline of your interests and educational background to
Atm What aT . .
Mr. i. . neicer, ii5M corporation, luo -
South Wacker Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60606. f
e re ma ctjuaj opporuuuiy employer. r ir jt ly 1
1 ,
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a'.k.