Tuesday, September 24, 1968 The Daily Nebraskan Page" 3 Infiltration to where did the Acid by Larry Eckholt Senior Staff Writer Many Omahans point to the 22-story Woodman Tower, now under construction, as a symbol of their city's growing up. But turned-on Omahans point to the Old Market as proof that the Gateway City is making the scene. THE OLD MARKET is lo cated in one of the city's old est commercial centers. For years it was the hub of wholesale produce sales. Even now, a few farmers truck in fresh fruits and vegetables to sell to local grocers. But the old buildings on Howard St., between 9th and 11th, are getting a new look. A new market has been established, catering to those who like fresh ideas as well as fresh vegetables. A gallery of modern art; an unconventional dress shop; an art school ; an underground movie theatre; an import shop; and a sprawling pyschedelic center attract hundreds of persons to the area each week. The development of the Old Market served as a sort of 'economic transplant" for the blighted area in which it is located. The Omaha Chamber of Commerce, city officials and many civic-minded firms are delighted with its success, its initiators said. The first shop to materialize was The Farthest Outpost, owned by Roger DuRand and Wade Wright. University enrollment now 18,312 If you suspected you were one of 18,312 students at the University of Nebraska here in Lincoln you were right. Last fall there were 18,067 students on the city and east campuses in Lincoln and the Omaha Medical Center. This year there are 19,024 in cluding the 712 medical students in Omaha. Total record-breaking enroll ment on the four campuses in Lincoln and Omaha is nearly 30,000. This reflects the addi tion of the University of Ne braska at Omaha with a record 10,788 students enrolled.' Graduate student enroll ment is down 92 from last fall. Many educators felt there might be a more drastic decline because of the draft and military situation. University officials feel that the graduate enrollment might yet reach last fall's record of 2,631 because graduate students may enroll at various times during the semester. These figures do not reflect the 400 students who are enrolled in credit and non credit courses in the Ex tension Division. A summary of the figures is as follows: Total 19.024 up 957 from a year ago. Agriculture - 1,303 up 91. Home Economics 760 up 34. Arts and Sciences 4,189 up 106. Business Administration 2,019 up 152. Engineering and Architec ture 2,239 up 178. Teachers 3,943 up 330. Junior Division 529 down 37. Students at large 137 up 13. Dentistry 239-up 49. Law 284 down one. Medicine and Nursing-SOS up 94. Pharmacy 235 up 40. Graduate - 2,539 down 92. (total includes 104 at the Medical Center.) Lincoln mayor keynotes dessert Lincoln Mayor Sam Schwartzkopf will be the speaker at the Ellen H. Rich ards Dessert for home eco nomics majors Tuesday, Sept. 24 at 7 p.m. in the Corn husker Hotel Ballroom. . The theme is "Home Eco romics in the Making." Tick ets are available in the resi dence halls and on both campuses. where The two had operated a dif ferent Omaha pyschedelic shop and decided to expand. The Outpost opened last Easter Sunday. DuRand and Wright credit much of the Market's success to Sam Mercer, an Omaha attorney who owns most of the property in the area. Mercer was receptive to the idea of rejuvenating the run down area in order to attract local artists, shoppers, and eventually the tourist trade. WHEN DURAND and Wright signed their lease. Percey Roche, a native of Great Britain, agreed to open His British Imports shop. Since then the Old Market has flourished in a remarkable fashion. "We thought it would be at least two years before the idea would catch on," DuRand said. "But I would estimate at least 20 individ uals have already, or are planning to, operate shops in the Market." The Gallery in the Market, featuring local art, opened three months ago and is gaining in popularity as "the place to go" in Omaha to see contemporary art, DuRand said. Edison Exposure, the movie theatre, opened three weeks ago and is doing capacity business. It features foreign films, shown on Friday and Saturday nights. Reba Is a women's shop; The Loft is a private art school; and Crelghton Giambers to speak . . . N ew Left movement New Left thought la Nebraska terms will be on display this weekend at a three-day campus workshop called the Midwest Conference on Movement Politics. Sponsors of the Friday through Sunday conference are members of the Nebraska Peace and Freedom Move ment, headed by Dave Sallach, a University sociology graduate student. The conference sessions will be held at the Nebraska Union and at the United Ministeries for Higher Education, 333 N. 14th St. ERNIE CHAMBERS, a write-in candidate for th6 Omaha School Board will speak at the opening session of the conference Friday night. Chambers is to be followed by a panel discussion of the Chicago protest and its implications for the radical left. Conference backers say that national representatives frm the Young Socialist Alliance and Students for a Democratic Society ( S D S ) Basketball team needs manager University students in terested in student managing for the Nebraska freshman basketball squad are asked to contact freshman basketball coach Bill Harrell in room 206 Coliseum. Help Wonted Female nude model. Days or evening Contact Art Dept. Office Room 203 Wood! Art Bldg. or call 472-2631. Good typtat, bookkeeper with hlrh ability for real estate. Excellent opportunity. Full or part-time. 433-2772. Local Company needa two nollefa men to work part-time. 4M-4414. Need Roommate. Good etudy habtta. Ilka dating. Share $30-40 rant. Phone 435-637L PARTTTME BUSBOYS We ha- parttlme work 11 A.M.-l P.M. daily In our tearoom for buiboya. Em ployee discount on atore purchases. Apply 7lh floor 10-n A.M.. 4-S P.M. daily and 7-8 P.M, Thursday. Call 432-0511 For Sale 1MB 250 c.c Ducati Motorbike, lsno ml. Manv chrom" extras. MOO. Night, 4:t4-t171: "V's. 4-i72. Still under war ranty. Oiinhi Tobacco's In CUIf'e. the north or rutabagas go? Ontax it's at University will soon utilize a fourth-story studio in the Market's main building for a number of art classes. In late October a botlque, the Looking Glass, will open. It is a chain operation with stores in Chelsey, England, New York, Los Angeles and Denver, DuRand said. Plain and fancy specializing in an tques, is also scheduled to open that month. "And within two weeks our first coffee house should be open," DuRand said, "and we think that our business will increase substantially." 1 1 will be called The Other People and will also contain a record shop. And the list continues. A French resturant is to open late this year. A bookstore will be completed by November. An old hotel is to be remodeled into apartments ready for occupation next year. THE OLD MARKET is at tracting a large spectrum of patrons, DuRand said, adding that at least half of the buyers at The Farthest Outpost are "over 30." "We don't feel that we are just a psychedelic shop," he continued. "We are kind of an art-noveau general store for hip people. We sell artifacts of a new life-style." The shop features flowers, jewelry and art made by local people in addition to the posters, incense and paper Tiffany lamps that are often schedules workshop will attend the conference, but Sallach said the sponsors don't know who the representatives will be. Three Peace and Freedom Movement meetings are in cluded in the conference. A regional Peace and Freedom Conference is set for 3:30 p.m. Saturday. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss establishing a formal midwest regional Peace and Freedom organization. Sunday at 2:30 p.m. is a coordinating meeting of the midwest campaign for Eldridge Cleaver, national Peace and Freedom can didate for President. The Nebraska Peace and Freedom Movement state con ventions will also be held Sun day at 2:30 p.m. The conven- Liberation group schedules NFU course offerings A meeting of the new Liber ation Institute will be held Thursday noon at United Min isteries for Higher Education, 333 N. 14th St. The institute, temporarily chaired by UMHE program director Hudson Phillip?, is designed to aid the radical education of people on cam pus, according to Dave Sal lach, one of the founders. Sallach said the institute will present a program of courses that will be offered through the Nebraska Free 1 University. 1965 Honda. CB160 434-3494 after 6 p.m. Phllllpp KroU Violin, hand Germany. Call 434-9160. made is Professional typing. Quick a e r v 1 c e. 48-3257. Term paper, etc. Reasonable rates. SEX Change the shape of your head. Posters. Incense, beads and things. Emporium 14W4 80. 11th. Open 10-10, Sunday at ternoons. Honda 390 Snper Sport. Leu than 1.000. 423-6101 after 6:30. Cameras. Nikon 8 Raeeeflnder 39. Pen F single lens reflex with 1l.t normal and S5-90 mm zoom meter and can. Paper cutter, light meter and misc. CaU 798-3435. Black English Racer, Used 4 months. $40. CaU 477-667$. Used motorola portable stereo. Six speak ers and stand. Hardy's, 1314 "O". Lost- Heavyweight, gray-green zippered hand knit sweater. Reward. Call 466-2490. ed w i t h pyschedelic shops. Soon, DuRand and Wright will be featured in an Eye magazine report on "tuned-on peopoe in turned-off places." "Apparently, the magazine people decided they had given enough attention to people on the coasts," Wright explain ed. "So, they came to Omaha." But the Old Market is not a Haight-Ashbury, or a Greenwich Village, and many Omahans seem releaved that it isn't. It does demonstrate, however, that the generation gap can be bridged, its developers suggest, since the Old Market blends the at mosphere of a departed era with the symbols of a new stule of life. PURPOSE, they add, Is to broaden the cultural spec trum of Omaha and Eastern Nebraska. "I quit a $10,000 a year jog to start our shop," said DuRand, a former architec tural designer. "I just wanted to get into something that better suited my character." Wright is a former University journalism stu dent. He left Lincoln in 1966 and spent some time in San Francisco. Both he and DuRand thought that Omaha was ready for a cultural "boom" and gambled in the Market. Now they think they just might win. tion is to elect a permanent steering 'committee and plan programs for the year. Workshops on at least seven topics that will run all day Saturday form a major part of the conference. Tentative discussion topics include black liberation and white radicalism, black unity (A session for blacks only), electoral politics, the politics of the streets, underground newspapers, student power and the nature of economic imperialism. THE TIMES and places of the workshops will be published Friday. A Saturday night dance sponsored by the Students for Peace and Freedom at Nebraska Wesleyan University is also a part of the conference. The dance, to raise funds for the Peace and Freedom movement, will be held on the Wesleyan campus. The conference has been endorsed by the Wesleyan Students for Peace and Freedom, Students for a Democratic Society at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, the Black Panther Party of Omaha, the Student Committee on Political Education at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and the University Students for Peace and Freedom. LEATHER WATCHBANDS LEATHER WATCHBANDS LEATHER WATCHBANDS Leather Watchbands Leather Watchbands pop flavors WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25 (all events will be in tfie Nebraska Union unless otherwise noted.) 1NTERVARSITY CHRIS TIAN FELLOWSHIP - 8 a.m. AWS-3 :30 p.m. UNION PUBLIC RELA TIONS COMM.-3:30p.m. : BUILDERS - College Days & Tours 3:30 p.m. ASUN SENATE MEETING 4 p.m. UNION HOSPITALITY COMM. 4:30 p.m. YWCA CHRISTMAS BAZAAR COMM. 4:30 p.m. T OASTMASTERS-5:30 p.m. RED CROSS-6:30p.m. ORCHESIIS-7 p.m., Women's P.E. Bldg. ALPHA KAPPA PI 7 pm. BUILDERS-7p.m. IFC 7 p.m. LAMBDA TAU - 7:30 p.m., Piper Hall rec. room. A.I.Ch.E 7:30 p.m. ALPHA PHI OMEGA 7:30 p.m. MATH COUNSELORS -7:30 p.m. AGC Science Engineers 7:30 p.m. CIRCLE "K" - 7:30 p.m. FELLOWSHIP OF CHRIS TIAN ATHLETES 9:30 p.m. aiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiu! ImatchI BOX Engagements Ellen Eisenhart, Alpha Omicron Pi senior in business teacher education from Cambridge, to Mike Smith, junior in civil engineering from Wilsonville. Sharon Schulz, Alphia Xi Delta graduate student in speech therapy, to Gary Petersen, Delta Tau Delta senior in pharmacy. Deborah Pile, Alpha Xi Delta sophomore in Arts and Sciences, to Alan Leapley, a sophomore in business at Norfolk Junior College. Nancy Riley, Alpha Xi Delta senior in Teachers Col lege to Bob Ford, Delta Upsilon senior in pre-med. Patricia Miller, Alpha Xi Delta sophomore in Teachers College, to John McGill of Waverly. Shelley Fry, junior in music from Ralston, to Charles Porter, a junior in biology at Wayne State. Sharon Sowder, Alpha Omicron Pi senior in home economics from Fremont, to Mark Nyffeler, Sigma Phi Epsilon senior in agriculture from Columbus. Jerri Siemers, Phi Mu senior in Home Economics from Wisner, to Terry Schaaf, Sigma Phi Epsilon junior in law school from Hastings. Emily Kuhr, Phi Mu senior in home economics education from Blair, to Ray Rath, business administration senior from Harvard. Jan Faltys, Burr East Hall senior in home economics from Schuyler, to Bob Woerman, Alpha Gamma Sigma graduate student in animal science from Oakland. Marilyn Maas, home economics senior from West Point, to Dennis Kimbrough from Geneva. Jan Dalglish, senior in fharmacy from Omaha, to Jim McLeod, Acacia senior in history from Plattsmouth. 4. President of the University Committee to Keep Biafrans Alive, Dam" Mesmer, at the Monday night meeting., ; ; ZZZZ Goal set hv campus backing sought in AUF drivp The University Committee to Keep Biafrans Alive set a tenative fnd goal Monday of $10,000 to be collected in the next three weeks through campus and community drives. The committee plans to appeal to campus organiza tions, faculty, and students and the Lincoln community through onthe-street solicitation, a special speakers bureau, personal contact, and booths in the Nebraska Union. mm ABOUT 40 PEOPLE at tended Monday's meeting, arranged by John Anaza, a Biafran native who is a graduate student in economics. The committee officers named at the meeting are president, Dale M. Mesmer, associate professor of mathematics; vice president, Jerry Petr, assistant pro fessor of economics; financial chairman. John Schrekinger, a senior; speakers' bureau Sheaf fer's big deal gets you through 29 term papers, 3 book reports,17 exams, 52 quizzes and 6 months of homework. Sorry about that. Sheaf fer's big deal means you can write twice as long. Because you get the long-writing Sheaffer dollar ballpoint plus an extra long-writing 490 refill free. All for just a dollar. The world's longest writing 186tt W.'Al's'HfcAUtR PtN COMPANY, liSSs'ii St. ? S - i ;-.;sS ' - L r. IMS; ft fslif f ; rr- - U . ill ' - J , - -V- iff H l : iteVAiili' - V : .. . -i ;-.,) ., '" J , !'-.'' -- . L-. . '.:",::""-'-'-,'-''-.v-JW-'.':V 1 .... i S -..." r f . if ...u mnr .-!-. ' Biafran relief chairman, Anaza; and public' relations, Stuart Frohm, a senior. Frohm said the committee will make a special effort to contact Lincoln businessmen and civic clubs concerning the drive. Mesmer said he is hoping for a good response from the University faculty and that the All University Fund (AUF) will agree to list the Biafran project among its five charities for the fall drive or to make it a special project. Two ideas discussed, but not acted on at the meeting, were a possible solicitation at University football games and an "austerity day," on which campus Greek houses would (mm How much do write? dollar ballpoi nt pen, v I MB:, III I FORT MAOI&ON, IOV A TEXTRON COMPANY "Y i committee: give up one meal and donate funds to the drive. Try Perlcy's BAR-B-Q Perky's 11 & Q 4327720 mm you think you can SHEAFFER mmmm I ?fl?6V 75 i ""it, t 1,: $ "i 1 i ....