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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 29, 1968)
Thursday, February 29, 1968 The Daily Nebraskan Page 3 Senate approves rules for polling General election ballot to include 'Choice 68" Choice 68, the nationwide itudent presidential primary may be on the Apr. 10 general election ballot, according to Ed Hilz, director of the ASUN electoral commission. Rules and procedures for the general election were ap proved at Wednesday's Stu dent Senate meeting. Students will choose Sena tors, Senate Executives and members of College Advisory Boards in the election. Applicants for a Senate or College Advisory Board posi tion may pick up application forms March 4 in the ASUN office. These forms must be returned to the ASUN office by 4 p.m., March 15. Applicants must submit with their application 35 signatures of students who are members of that applicant's college. Students applying for an Ex ecutive position may submit 35 student signatures from any college. Students may file for one of the executive positions (president, first vice presi dent, second vice president) or a Senate position, or both. Applicants for both positions need only submit one set of 35 signatures. Senate and College Advisory Board Applicants must meet the University requirements for participation in extra-curricular activities and must be regularly enrolled in the col lege which the applicant pro poses to represent Mudents applying for any of the positions must be able to attend their meetings at the designated time. If a can aiaate is elected ana is un able to attend meetings, he or she will be required to resign the position. Non-verbal campaigning will begin Apr. 1. At midnight, Apr. 9, all organized group campaigning ends. All posters must be approved by a mem ber of the Electoral Conimis sion. No loudspeakers or pub licity on vehicles is allowed. Applicants running for ex ecutive or beta executive'and Senate positions will be al lowed to spend $50 for cam paign expenses. Applicants for Senate or College Advisory Board positions will be al lowed fto. By noon, Apr. 10, all can didates must submit to the Electoral Commission a finan cial form itemizing campaign expenses. This form is to in clude all expenses for cam paigning. Voting regulations will closely resemble those in force for last semester's two elections, according to Hilz. I The Port-A-Punch ballot will be used. Each voter will be marked with ultraviolet ink. No student should attempt to vote more than once in the election. Any offenders will be prosecuted by the ASUN court. Penalties for violators are: The offenders will not be allowed to hold any office on campus. The offenders will not be allowed to participate in any student activities or organiza tions and A fine not to exceed $100 may be imposed. , "These penalties act mainly as deterrants," said Hilz. Polling places will be the same as for last semesters ffifeGDi n aanrtMaf """"I fcaa, rate al c rn rkmrit m ae par afrcrtlMtaeat Nrkruk a l)Or Xrbw- elaaaifir mdwr- t to w T pint a clM9tn nl Um I'aJMtwtr J tor fcait arflrea ac " Nokratkj I otoa. The mm mi rw. AU drarthviarat adara mi appeal. nl ka prepa PERSONAL cnce. IteaaaaaMa. M-2. lecfcnical drawtnt i ration. 4UJ-5 after KEIP WANTED ludran tlaeaToow aad mnUx wort, a W U:Km vi la omr tun. Uniform raralabad. PI' prraanal arfloa i. C P "Or Co.. Uta and O. FOR RENT Mm tpnciMl. lure V Marrtad ato arnu. Clow to DcnUl CoDrfe ar Eaat campaa. 7tt Hsatrem a-l. tl gnrtdoa-Tiiuahaa1 apartnwtit. Twa lurtrau. Vrr aioa. Owrt. At allliUea paid. Uohttrattr appro- 43H7M. FOR SALE IM3 Bulck Stolar. bucket art Ul ar kaat attar. 4774D2. I IK beat war to wna at nl ( anrnv. rack, and paaUlaa WZ4L elections, Arts and Science students vote in the Student Union. Students in Teachers College vote in the Teachers College. Students in the College of Ag riculture, Dentistry and Home Economics vote on East Cam pus. Business and Graduate stu dents vote in the library. En gineering and architecture stu dents vote in Ferguson Hall. Thursday, Feb. 29 INTER - VARSITY-8 a.m. BAPTIST STUDENT UNION-S a.m. EAST UNION - VIRGIL ROGERS LUNCHEON 11:15 a.m. PLACEMENT 12:30 p.m. LUNCHEON FOR LEON ARD PENNARIO-12.S0 p.m. AWS COURT-3:30 p.m. UNION MUSIC COMMIT TEE 4:30 p.m. UNION PUBLIC RELA TIONS COMMITTEE 4:30 p.m. UNION SPECIAL EVENTS COMMITTEE 4:30 p.m. PHI MU ALPHA SINFONIA 6 p.m. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE OR-GANIZATION-6:30 p.m. TOYVNE CLUB 6:30 p.m. QUIZ BOWL ISOLATION Pub Board Study urges more student poivers Cont. from page 1 More student representation on the Board is one of the ma jor recommendations. Miss Phelps said. The committee is recommending that three of the six board members be stu dents and that the chairman also be a student. Presently four of the Board members are students and three are students, the chair man noted. Copple felt that the present system of having more facul ty than student members with a faculty chairman was bet ter than the proposed change because it provides for more continuity between years. The Board's chairman ac knowledged that he approved of some of the proposed changes, although he also dis agreed with recommendations for a monthly meeting of the Romney out Michigan Governor George Romney bowed out as a candi date for the 1968 Republican Presidential nomination, Wednesday. Romney said that he favored someone else, but declined to name any specific candidate. He feels that the choice is up to the party majority. "I have concluded that I can best serve my country and the ideas in which I be lieve otherwise than as a can didate," he stated. "Time is growing short, "he added in reference to the upcoming primaries. DAILY NEBRASKAN editor and students interested in dis cussing the paper at an open Board meeting. Pointing out that these monthly Board meetings w o u 1 d not have censorship capabilities, Miss Phelps said, "this would be a good way for students to feel that the DAILY NEBRASKAN Is their newspaper." Copple described the pro posed meeting as "non-professional" and said, "It doesn't seem to me to be the way a newspaper is run." "We have one of the b e s t set-ups for a publications board from a student free dom point of view," Copple contended, "and it is a system envied by many students from other campuses that I have talked to." Senior board member, Jane Ross, said that action will probably not be taken "for at least a month" and that if the changes were approved by Faculty Senate they would not go into effect until next semester. 4 Track Cartridge TAPE SALE 3.99 Sound City 144 U. 9th If you are interested in YOU. . . here is required reading! 13. ' Wiummtm eiiue. 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John Siicken RprunUng tht Onfj Compwf thai Stilt Etcluthnlf to Celttgt Mtn 540 N. 41 Swt. 4344849 6:45 p.m. QUIZ BOWL 6:45 p.m. UNION TRIPS AND TOURS SKI TRIP MEETING 7 p.m. PI TAU SIGMA SMOKER 7 p.m. ETA KAPPA NU 7:30 p.m. ZOOLOGY DEPARTMENT RECEPTION-7:30 p.m. MATH COUNSELORS-7:30 p.m. EAST CAMPUS TOAST MASTERS 7 p.m. East li brary Building G. YWCA BOOK MART-3:30 p.m. YWCA LOVE AND MAR RIAGE 3:30 p.m. YWCA CABINET 4:30 p.m. ALT EXECUTIVE 6:30 p.m. AUF BOARD 7 p.m. Building H PEOPLE TO PEOPLE PU-BLICITY-3:30 p.m. AWS HOUSE OF REPRE SENTATIVES 3:30 p.m. PEOPLE TO PEOPLE -6. :30 p.m. ASUN ACTIVITIES COM MITTEE 7 p.m. Quiz Bowl Slate Approximately 90 teams will remain in Quiz Bowl competition after a Thursday cutoff, according to Mark Bronson, vice-president in charge of arrangements. All teams have played twice, and only teams with one or no losses will remain for further matches. This will cut the number to nearly 90, Bronson said Wednesday. The teams will play single elimination matches, with two freshman and two upper- class teams meeting May 2 for the final competition. Pairings were to be ar ranged by the Thursday night matches and winning teams will be notified, he said. Isolation for the matches will be at 6:55 p.m. Thurs day: Unteachables v. Beta Theta Pi D; Sigma Kappa v. Farmhouse A; Sigma Delta Tau v. Triangle; Custers In competents v. Phi Psi Intel lectuals; Chi Phi A vs. chizo phrenic Fog; Pioneer House v. Sammy Skyhawks. Thursday Night It Pizza Night PEROT'S 11th & Q 432-7720 INTERVIEWING ON CAMPUS FARMLAND INDUSTRIES 331S N. Oak Trafficway K.C., Mo., 64116 TUESDAY, MARCH 5 In These 4 Areas Chemical Engg. Computer Science Mechanical Engg. Accounting AWS votes March 13 AWS members will choose next year's AWS executives in an all-campus AWS elec tion on March 13, according to Nesha Neumeister, AWS elections chairman. "Election procedures are all tentative," the chairman noted, "and these procedures will depend entirely on wheth er AWS members ratify the newly-revised AWS constitu tion.' Miss Neumeister said that the executives to be chosen in the March 13 election are: cabinet members, court of appeals judges, president and vice presidents. AWS mem bers may file for these offices on March 1 in the Nebraska Union AWS office. auentms 1229 R Street 432-3645 8 COME IN AND BROWSE MILLIONS OF NEW SPRING AND SUMMER DRESSES - SKIRTS-SUITS COSTUMES -HONDA PANTS and BEADED PURSES in BRIGHT SPRING COLORS! 1 v- . . v. 5 w . ' -s' 4 V'r; '-' MR. GALVIN: WHERE IS THE ACTION GOING TO BE? DeirMr. Galvin, I would like to discuss with you an issue that is of particular relevance to students like me who are making basic decisions about their future careers. This might be entitled, "Where is the Action Going to Be?". We are all aware of the tremendous changes that have taken place during the last forty years. The technological explosion, in fact, seems likely to continue to accelerate. Thus, the next forty years those which will encompass my career will aSect even our most basic outlooks, such as the concepts of religion, individuality, nationalism, education, and personal careers. We must, for instance, learn to better use our nation's affluence. Nothing is as unbearable as lack of opportunity in the land of plenty as our cities' riots have pointed out What challenges will the rest of the world present to us? Will we remain as the world's self-appointed policeman? How are we going to respond to India, Africa, and China in the next forty years? These problems are staggering since they amount to the fundamental question: where is the human race going next? Students are excited by this prospect they want to participate in the big decisions that will take place during their lives. Thus in considering a career in business, it is natural to ask: will business itself be capable of initiating the changes that will be required of it? What will be the motives behind the decisions business will make? I suspect a majority of such changes will come either from the educational sector where professors and administrators can have a profound influence on young men about to start their careers or from the governmental sector where direct changes are made law by Congress and welfare and aid programs can be instituted. In short, where is the action going to b7 Sincerely, Ralph B. Kimball ON THE LEVEL . . . Last September, Robert W. Galvin, Motorola Chairman, invited four students to discuss the pros and cons of business. Letters between them and Mr. Galvin appear regularly in this and other campus newspapers as a step toward improved understanding between campus and corporation. Barbara Caulfield, Northwestern; Ralph Kimball, Stanford; Fred Sayre, Arizona; and Paul George Sittenfeld, Princeton, are the students. Your comment are welcome. Write to Robert W. Galvin, Motorola Inc, 9401 West Grand Avenue, Franklin Park, Illinois 60131. Dear Mr. Kimball; Private competitive enterprise has produced in this country the most advanced standard of living in the world. Its efforts have helped advance living standards the world over. Business has been the prime activist in applying the very technological explosion that you cite. Look anywhere, look in the power plants, on the highways, in the sky, on the family dinner table, in the hospital operating room, on the shelves of the pharmacy, in the factories, or even in the Stanford science laboratories. You'll find practical applications of technology. Health, safety, comfort, knowledge, and efficiency have all been advanced. 1 agree with you that what has been accomplished in the first 20 or 21 or 22 years of your life will be dwarfed by what your generation in the next 40 years will do. I am confident, and I hope you agree, that business will continue to be a vital, forceful factor. The coming accomplishments will embrace advances, too, in the fields of sociology, humanity, and from government and many will be initiated and carried out by business. Most will result from teamwork mong all four elements. And today's brighter students will be responsible for a major portion of the leadership. An important reason for the achievements of the past forty years is the fact that those of us in business, in government, in the professions, and in education, did what students are doing now we questioned the way things were done, the results obtained. We probed for better answers to many problems. Some problems received priority and more attention than others. And some were woefully neglected. These are claiming more of our attention now. The business community is making inroads into some of the more critical areas both with and without the direct assistance of government r.nd education. For example, U. S. Cypsum developed low-cost renovating techniques to upgrade dwellings in the Harlem slum area. The company is working on similar projects for Chicago and other cities. The automobile industry has spent millions of dollars and is spending more developing and producing anti-smog procedures and devices. Cooperating with government to get industry into slum areas, Avco Corporation is building i printing plant in Boston's Roxbury district to train and employ 250 people. The company's $2.3 million is boosted by a government subsidy of $1.2 million. Other companies are training thousands of "unemployables" to take their place in society. It has been estimated that unless we do something about the refuse disposal problem, by 2500 A.D. our populated areas will be knee-deep in trash. Railroad companies have initiated a practical measure which will permit use of refuse as land-fill in remote areas chosen for urban development Some railroads are working with coal companies to use abandoned mine shafts for refuse JisposaL By 2000 A.D. there will be three hundred million Americans a third more than now. How will they be housed? Where will they work. shop, attend school? What will happen t food production as arable land gives i to building sites? Your seneration answers for these problems. There will be nomes, scnoois, snops, employment. There w ill be no famine in our land. These are some of the problems that young men with vision and ability, like yourself, will tackle whether you go into business, government, or the professions. Our ability to respond to the problems in underdeveloped nations will depend largely on how well we do our job at home. This is a related subject that I will take up in another letter. Returning to your question, "Where will the action be?" It will, by necessity, be everywhere, Ralph in education, the government, and business. It starts with personal motivation. Choose the type of action you want and demonstrate your capacity for it. Sincerely, - rX. "ay f 1 wi find I ' t I v