NU now boasts first draft' counseloi by Kent Cockson Junior Staff Writer The University may not have everything, but it now has its first draft counselor. He is philosophy Prof. Charles G. Marxer, a lean and youthful-appearing professor w it h a neatly trimmed beard, who has been counselling students for about three weeks on ways to avoid the draft. "Strictly speaking, I am a draft resister, although I have never re fused induction," said the bespec tacled counselor. He added that he sent a letter some time ago to the Selective Ser vice. The letter said in effect that he had "disposed" of his draft card, that he would refuse any and all cooperation with the Selective Service system in the future and that he would make plans to coun sel those interested in avoiding the draft. Marxer said that his basic motive for taking such action arose from his opposition to the war in Viet nam. He added that he is a self made counsellor with no formal or legal qualifications. "I haven't heard anything from the Selective Service since I sent the letter," he said, "but I could be re-classified for being delinquent if they asked me to fill out some forms or something and I refused." Marxer currently has a 3-A clas sification which defers him because of his dependents. He has never served in the armed forces nor has he ever been classified 1-A. The draft counselor said that the questions most students ask him concern the draft laws, for instance what physical standards are estab- Thursday February 29, 1968 . f ' ' fV . -r''4 I , ' X ' ' 1 , ': li ;( "I '! i vsS - V '"'":!,. !'...;' ': r ' I j, . , -.,r j Student Senator Craig Dreezen moves to table Government Bill 17 proposing the office of Curricular Evaluation. He suggested waiting to endorse the Centennial Committee's Council on instruction. NU may participate in student primary 'Clioice 6T to slate major candidates ASUN President Dick Schulze an nounced Wednesday that the Uni versity will participate in Choice 68, a nationwide mock presidential primary, if balloting could coin cide with the ASUN general elec tion Apr. 10. Schulze made the announcement at the Student Senate meeting, in which business was light. He added the balloting would be -more worthwhile if national pres idential candidates were to speak at the University before the bal loting. Schulze also announced the ap pointment of Bob Zucker as editor of the Faculty Evaluation Booklet Committee. Ed Hilz, election commissioner, was present for the final discus sion of the proposed procedures for the spring election which were unanimously accepted by Senate. Little discussion was held on two government bills regarding affilia tion with the National Student As sociation (NSA). Schulze announc ed an NSA representative will ap pear before Senate next Wednes day to answer questions regarding the organization. Senate votes next week whether or not to affiliate. Discussion was held on the re commendations of the Ad Hoc Committee on Disciplinary Proce dures headed by Sen. Robert Wea ver. The recommendations are neces sary because the -"present proce dure is inadequate and ill-defined, "Weaver said. He answered questions regarding the place AWS would have in the proposed revised court structure. Weaver said AWS would control and determine its own court structure, Strictly speaking, I am a draft resister,' says tlie University's firs id raft counselor, Professor of Philosophy Charles G. Marxer. ' liave talked to several people thinking along the lines of escaping to Canada. But I advise them to think it over care fully ..." lished for a 4-F classificagion or the meaning of the recent draft policy to affect graduate students this fall. "I have talked to several people who were thinking along the lines of escaping to Canada. I can give them the name of a Canadian group who can help them as well as information : about immigration rules. "But I advise them to think it over carefully before they make their deciions because it (escap ping to Canda) involves renounc ing American citizenship," he said. He added that there are also le gal complications involved in such a move in that a person can be prosecuted if he is ever caught in the U.S. after violating a Selective Service law. Marxer said that he has talked to 12 or 15 students in the last three weeks adding that he did not know of anyone making a decision on the basis of what information and counselling he had given them. "I haven't had any feedback in that sense. These students are pro bably waiting until their present deferments run out. Most of them figure that now is just a g o o d time to start thinking about it," he said. A 1963 graduate of Rockhurst Col lege, in Kansas City, who received his Master of Philosophy degree from the University of Toronto in November, Marxer said that he is only a visiting professor and will not be here next year. He said that his ambitions as a draft counselor may have some weight in his decision about where to teach next. He added that "a lot depends on how much heat I get from the government." SDS has asked him to be their official advisor, according to Mar xer. He said that he will make such an affiliation official if he can qual ify with the permission of the ad ministration. Until then, he said he is work ing with a group of students to ward establishing a draft resistance union at the University. He dis pelled questions regarding student interest in such a union, saying that as deferments decrease, mar ket interest grows in Selective Ser vice laws and induction into the military service. "Every senior' and every gradu ate student faces reclassification this year and most of those boys face induction," he said. "You might be surprised at the interest that will be shown." as stated in the proposed AWS con stitution, following the minimum requirements for courts as stated in the committee recommenda dations. He explained the procedures deal with procedural rules and regula tions, as opposed to ones of a sub stantive nature. Action on Government Bill 17 was tabled for a week. Sen. Craig Dree zen said there was a conflict in the purpose of the bill, to estab lish a Curricular Evaluation Com mittee, and the way in which its structured. He said the bill in its present form will not achieve its intended purpose. Richard Page of the ASUN Hous ing Committee reported on the com mittee's work this past year. He said its attention has been focused on solving problems in the resi dence halls. Page said the -committee has pushed for better recreational facil ities and has served as an appeals board for those wishing to live off campus. Asked about rumors indicating junior men would be required to live on campus next fall, Page said he was not at liberty to talk about a change in policy because no definite rules had been finalized. He and Schulze doubted the pol icy would revert to last year's rules which stated junior men had to re side on campus. Page indicated the policy was related to enrollment pre dictions for next fall which have not yet been completed. In other Senate business, action was deferred a week on the con sideration of ten constitutions be fore Senate for review. U GJ n fTv rvr University of Nebraska Vol. 91 No. 70 Copple disagrees Pub Board hears recommendation The chairman of the University Publications Board said Wednes day that he disagrees with several changes in the Board structure suggested by a Student Senate committee. The Board, chaired by Neale A. Copple. director of the School of Journalism, was presented the rec ommendations for changes com piled by the Student Senate Ad Hoc Committee on Student Publications. Copple explained that the Board did not reach a consensus at Tues day's meeting. "WTe have no power to act on these recommendations" he said, although Board members will in dividually comment on the pro posed changes. The recommendations of the Board will accompany the commit tee's suggestions, which will be presented to Faculty Senate for re view and action in several weeks, Susie Phelps, chairman of the Sen ate committee, said. One of the main purposes of the committee's recommendations is to try to make the structure of Publications Board concur with the proposed Student Bill of Rights, the chairman said. She explained that the Bill of Rights contains the following two major points: Faculty and students should have equai representation in policy making decisions. There should be no censorship 1968 evaluation book changed Interviews scheduled Sunday, March 10 bv Susie Jenkins Junior Staff Writer Interviews for staff positions for the 1968 Faculty Evaluation Book will be held Sunday, March 10, according to Bob Zucker, newly appointed editor of the book. Zucker plans to re-evaluate the present format of the book He has made plans with the ASUN executive committee to divide the publication of the book into two areas, working with the question naire and writing the evaluations. "Our plan is to appoint area edi tors through interviews," Zucker said. "These people will be re sponsible for editing material in each area. This has been placed fully on the editor in the past, which was one of the book's main problems." Outside help Zucker hopes to obtain help in the book's publication, both from University and outside sources. "We can't assume ihat the stu dents are fully capable of organ izing a questionnaire by them selves, so we hope to use 'profes sional' people in deciding what questions to ask,"he said. "Peo ple in educational psychology, so ciology, and psychology will be able to organize questions. Often length and repetition is the rule in ques tionnaires, and -triviality results." Zucker also plans to have grad uate students in each department write subjective evaluations of pro fessors to get more insight into the comments students make. Correct evaluations "This approach will help us to print more correct evaluations than we could do with straight student comment." he said. Our goal of the staff this semes ter will be to establish a new atti tude on the part of the faculty and students concerning the boo k, Zucker said. "Faculty must realize that the book is a definite part of the Uni versity," he said. "We hope to in crease participation from the fac ulty and impress on students that rating professors is not a five-minute job. "Also, each staff member "must have an idea of what teaching is, and what a responsible rating en tails." Editing policy On the question of editing and censorship, Zucker noted that no general policy is set down on de leting specific comments. "The point of the book is to tell students how a professor performs in the classroom and in his office. An isolated comment is not proof of classroom conduct, but we would think that a number of similar com ments would have value." he said. iHiiiiiiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiuiiM I On Campus ... Today BE A zoology seminar will be held at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in Bessey Hall Auditorium. Dr. Earl B. Barn awell, Department tof Zoology, will speak. There will oe coffee and a social time before the program. it. it The NU Speaker-Artist Series will present a concert by classical pianist Leonard Pennario at 8 p.m. Thursday at the Nebraska Theater. & it Quiz Bowl matches will be held Thursday night beginning at 7 p.m. Moderators will be Dr. Charles Gruner and Dr. Fred Luthans. Af ter Thursday's matches, any team with twa losses for the season will be eliminated and the remainder of the matches will be single-elimination. ii it i: A panel on "Conscientious Objec tion What It is; What It Is Not" will be held Sunday at 8 p.m. at the Unitarian Church in Lincoln. Panel participants will be Col. Loe Liggett of the Nebraska Selec tive 'Service and Dayton L. Olson, Director of the College Program, American Friends Service Committee. of student publications. Miss Phelps emphasized that the committee had not felt that cen sorship of student publications is a problem, but that the committee felt that a formal statement an a Publications Board was needed. i UUUUUL On her fifth birthday . . . University student Betty Miller inhales for a clean sweep of the candles on her sparcely populated birthday cake she will not have another opportunity until February 29, 1972. Three NU students mature to age of 5 bv Steve Leger Junior Staff Writer Baffling as it may be to t h e comptroller and admissions super visors, three University sopho mores are celebrating their fifth birthdays Thursday. Bettv Miller. Robert Dalrymple, and Marcia Martins are among 129.000 other persons in the United States celebrating their leap-birthdays, with 16000 baby expected to join their ranks by midnight Thursday night. The three Univer sity students were born on Feb. 29, 1948 (leap-day). Being born on Feb. 29 presents some special problems, namely de ciding when to celebrate one's birthday the three years between leap years. Betty Miller solved this problem by celebrating her birthday on March 1 Nebraska's birthday. "The typical reply after telling someone your birthday in on Feb. 29 is 'Oh. you're one of those," ac cording to Betty. But the leap ear problem is beyond control, or any one's for that matter. What makes leap year leap? It's all a matter cf the heaven's ver sus man's arithmetic, and man is always the looser. Tha bissextile year leap yean was determined by some of Julius Caesar's astronomers in 46 B.C. They divided the year into 365 days, 5 hours. 18 minutes, and 48.75 sec onds. The extra five hours and 18 minutes make an extra day every four years causing a day to "leap-over." However, since 5 hours. 48-4 min utes added for each of four years does not total quite a whole day the extra 24 hours that are added each leap year are a little too much and something must be done to correct this. As a result, leap year is elimi nated three times every 400 years. The trouble, however, is that only 18 hours 43 minutes should bt elim inated each century. No matter how far you carry it there is always a remainder. Custom sets aside leap year lor women to woo rather than to be wooed, but there is no satis factory explanation for it. The custom probably began in Scotland when a law was enacted in 1288 which said that "it is statut and ordaint that during the rein of hir maist blissit Megeste. for ilk yeare knowne as lepe yeare, ilk mayden lakye of bqlhe highe and lowe estait shall hae liberte to bespeke ye man she likes, al beit he refuses to talk hir to be his lawful wyfe. he shall be mul cted in ye sum ane pundis or less, as his estait may be; except and awis gif he can make it appeare that he is betrothit ane ither wom an he then shall be free." That means that any Cornhusker "lass" can shake her scarlet petticoat at an eligible man this year and get away with it. 4 'i'i i i m ''J I I: I'. i: 4 r i n f r I i -. - t' r t - s t ,