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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1968)
jjimi'liniilftB1 )lTi'iiiiiiiiW r Wednesday, Septenber ll, 1 968 I he Daily Nebraskan Page 3 University undergoes campus renewal. Oldfather Hall, one of the University's most recent additions, heightens campus scenery. '69 fall colors... B' JF; i r 'JTi) III" - - .'t, r. a ii hWA'my -Zk-i ill Enirlish reading classes will meet Dr. Robert Narveson and Dr. James Roberts have an nounced the first of two final meetings of the 1968 Summer Reading Courses. Dr. Jarbeson's class, English 293C, will meet Mon day, September 16, i n Oldfather Hall, room 303 at 7 p.m. English 265C will meet at the same time with Dr. Roberts in Oldfather, Room 205. Students enrolled in the summer classes have been involved in independent study by reading a representative selection of novels for their respective courses. BRING ENTIRE AD IN AND SAVE n my T-shirt or sweatshirt, limited topjty POSTER JOINT 16th 3! English 293C is the American Novel from Dreiser to the Present. It attempts to show the quality, variety and trends of American fic tion. The Continental Novel, English 293, shows develop- thought English ment of European through novels in translation After meeting with the in structors, students will take a final examination in September to complete the course. AWS schedules Key orientation Attandance at an orientation meeting Thursday 7:00 p.m. in the Union Ballroom is man datory for all women inter ested in keys, according to Christie Schwartzkopf, AWS key chairman. ' The key system is open to all junior and senior women who maintain a 2.0 average and meet the key program requirements. These requirements include application to AWS and writ ten permission from the appli cants parents. A deposit of $1 is assessed for the key. Miss Schwartzkopf stressed that all women who are inter ested in the program attend the orientation program even if they have not yet made ah application. Applications are available anytime from the AWS office and the Thursday night meeting will be preced ed by a meeting of the key chairmen at 6:30. 'Concrete jungle' grows to fit needs Big Red tickets available Football tickets for students who did not purchase them in the spring will be available through Wednesday at the Coliseum. Student tickets bought in the spring can be picked up through Friday. Students must pick tickets up personally. The ticket office is anxious i that students who want to buy tickets do so as soon as pos sible. Mail orders have not been proceessed since Feb ruary, and if the students do not want the tickets, the mail orders will be filled. Tickets cost $10.25 with a student identification card. The card must also be presen ted at the ticket gate. On the 32 major buildings on the IJniversity dqwntown campus, at least eleven are undergoing some kind of renovation this semester. The construction has resulted in snarled-up traffic and the loss of at least TOO parking spaces, -according to University Police Chief Eugene Masters. English classes are being held in almost every building on campus, the result of An drews Hall reconstruction, English Department Chairman Dudley Bailey said. In many other buildings, classes are being disrupted by minor remodeling or by con struction noises. Four new buildings are still under construction. Hamilton Hall, an eight story, $8 million dollar struc ture that will house the entire chemistry department, i s scheduled to be done by September, 1969, but it might be a month or so later than that, according to Dr. James Karr, a spokesman for the chemistry department. The fate of Avery Laboratory and the 5 01 Building, both currently housing the chemistry department, is uncertain at this time, Karr said. The new Women's Physical Education Building, originally slated for completion Sep tember 1, is still not done, according to Dr. Dudley Ashton, chairman of women's physical education. "At present, we are teaching classes despite the workmen." Miss Ashton said. Work remains to be done on the air conditioner and the floors. Dedication of the $2.1 million dollar building is to be held November 8, and it will definitely be completed by that time, she said. . Kimball Recital Hall is pro- gi-essing pretty much o n schedule, according to David Flowler, vice chairman and professor of the department of music. Seats and stage equipment for the new building, which will be primarily a concert recital rail, have still not been chosen or ordered. Fowler continued. The Student Union, slated for completion September 1, has run into die usual brush up problems and dealines, according to Director Allen Bennett. "We are about six to eight weeks away from completion," Bennett said Tuesday. The Crib and the second floor multipurpose room are the primary areas still under construction. Eventually the Crib will occupy the space where the old crib and cafeteria were. The second floor multipurpose room, which is adjacent to the ballroom, will seat 1100 for a lecture and 700 for a dinner. In addition, it can be divided into as many as seven different rooms, each seating about 100. The new lounge, greatly enlarged over the old one, is kuQ and Save fl ' . . ' f I I . I t II- 1 f 3 i id a f - St You can SAVE 20 on your dry-cleaning with this special offer from Globe Cleaning... All you have to do is clip this ad, and present it to the nearest Globe office, along with your order and siudent identification card. The offer is good on women's skirts and sweaters and on men's sport coats and slacks. What an easy way to save money... what a good place to have your clothes cleaned! 1124 LCatherAbelSelleck Harper-Schramm-Smith Remember, ALWAYS a 25t Shirt for Students at GLOBE EVERY TIME GLOBE OFFERS ANOTHER SERVICE. ..THE WHOLE WORLD LOOKS A LITTLE BRIGHTER! to be carpeted by Wednesday and furnished by Monday, Bennett said. Bennett estimated that the Union will be totally complete by the end cf Thanksgiving vacation. Andrews Hall is being completely changed about, Bailey said. Classrooms are being constructed in the basement and first floor and offices on second and third floor. Bailey said that Andrews Hall would probably be ready in January. Currently, English offices are in Seaton Hall with classes "spread all over the campus." Extensive work is being done at Nebraska Hall, Miller said. The first floor is being con verted in to classrooms and offices. The second and third floors are being developed into an undergraduate library, which will eventually rouse 75,000 volumes and many reader stations. Miller noted that the base ment of Burnett Hall is being renovated for the psychology department. The basement of the Student Health Center is undergoing facelifting. University High School is receiving new air conditioning and heating systems. Work on the Sheldon Scul pture Gardens, to be located just south and west of the Art Gallery will begin within two weeks, Miller continued. As soon as Oldfather Hall and the first floor of Andrews i Hall are completed, work will commence on the Social; Science Building, Miller said. Extensive remodelling of the entire building is planned. Major construction jobs on j campus have caused havoc with traffic flow and parking lots, Police Chief Masters ' said. ! Currently, a trench blocks 12th Street across from Old father Hall. Masters ex pressed the hope that the street will be open by Satur day to promote the flow of football traffic. The new chemistry building aim music vunuiugs aic uiiiii on the sites of former parking lots. They have also blocked access to other parking spaces, Masters pointed out. New parking lots have been added, especially on the east side of the campus, he noted. Eventually, parking space will be available for every student car at once, although many of these spaees would be quite a distance from the heart of the campus. f I 2 f IK & :.;v IVX 1ft I L, is? jrv I Hamilton Hall, new University of Nebraska chem istry building scheduled for completion next fall, holds the attention of Pam Butterfield and Jude Bowden, both Lincoln freshmen, as they search for the elevator shaft in the eight-story structure. Time cards lose their importance i The Administration Building has permanently lost its weaving limbs of students waiting for time appointment cards to drop or add a course. No time appointment cards will be needed to get into the Coliseum for Drop and Add Wednesday. Thursday, o r Friday, September 11, 12, or 13. "There has to be a better system than this one," said Lee H. Chatfield, Associate Dean of Student Affairs. "We will try something else next semester." On Monday and Tuesday, time appointment cards for the entire day were distributed by 10 a.m. and many students were turned away. Some 500 students were able to bring their grades up enough during the summer sessions to return to school because of the changes that were made in the grading system last spring. This put an unexpected strain o n general registration and tht number of classes available. Several of the departments within the Arts and Sciences College are short of faculty members because of unex pected resignations during the summer. This has placed a burden on other departments to provide more courses. Even with the increased number of students and decreased faculty, Chatfield was optimistic that the balance between the supply and demand of classes is much better this fall than in the past three years "The number of people being kept out of classes is Cont. on page 5 if 1 ! .imv-.m-mrziiw' Abo)utely Nothing it too good for our girlt. We give them oor all in fabric. tailoring, color, fif, design. If that isn t enough to spoil tnem, tne price ?$. Uither trimmf d. black tnd white iumoer. tbout S?7. 3 to 1 S. White rlbtwd wool turtlenccfc. tbout t1 1 1.32to4a For lft "Art Cuntiy Set girls spoiled?" button, write Country Set Inc, Dept.C, 1407 Broadway, NewYorH. Comity tt UUm urn wM at am ataM Mm to tea A 161 booootx 4 OQfiOQG4l