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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1968)
Tuesday, September 24, 1968 The Daily Nebraskan Paga 5 , J V J v , ? H ? J ...-INI ....,..., v-f., it. 1 re. -' "7 ji J X'i r ij ; ,W '-A t V l, Jilt ';-u; ; ' U. I : . - ' V- - - j u .............. t v ( .. ,. 1;1 1. . ..v - Hf .0 ;.-t I - , - .- 4.--.. L--inrnTnmn''llflMiiiirntr -Miwiiniinmi mm iuiiimiw mnhmmmwumwhwimm Utensils in quaint campus hang-out will be hung-up ' . ' ' lis 7 - V - --. t r-r it? As the dough spreads and rises, so must the University and Karl Quentin, senior English major from Redondo Beach, Calif., frequents "Doc's Place" during its last days of donuting. University press books on list Three University of Nebraska Press books ap peared on the August Western Writers of America Western Ratings checklist of nonfiction books ''which merit nationwide attention." They include "Bill Nye's Western Humor" edited by T. A. Larson, chairman of the History Department at the University of Wyoming at Laramie. LARSON'S COLLECTION of Bill Nve's humorous rticles set a U n i v e r s lity The new Alpha Phi pledge class officers are Suzie Sch wartzkopf , president; Betty Loers, vice president; Nance Herman, secretary; Sue McCarthy, treasurer; Gayle Tweeton, scholarship chairman; Susie Lyness, stan dards chairman; Mary McKel vey, song chairman; Barb Graupner, activities chair man; Sharman Joseph, social chairman; and Diane Bryan, Jr. Panhellenic delegate. Go Big Red i 6 ? lid; ? I ; k.k f ... .....,,- Press sales record when the entire first printing was sold out a week before th e scheduled publication date. Also on the checklist was "Bostonians and Bullion: The Journal of Robert Livermore, 1892-1915" edited by Gene M. Gressley of Laramie, director of the Western History Research Center. Livermore, whose father held controlling interest in the Smuggler Union mine near Telluride, Colo., kept a valuable record of mine management ana labor difficulties. The other book listed is a University Press Bison Book paperback, "The Great Buf falo Hunt" by Wayne Gard of Dallas, Tex., a former book reviewer for the Dallas Times. PR's to hold pledge smoker All interested ROTC cadets are invited to attend a Pershing Rifles Smoker Thursday. Sept. 26, at 7 p.m. on the dnU tloor ot me jvioe;n Building. A program has been outlined and will aim at recruiting new members into Company A-2, the National Society's unit at the University. The two-hour program will include an exhibition by "Pershing's Own," the com- - : A M- pany drill team; a iais on merits oi oinmg me Society by LTC Gene B. Weins, acting PMS m the Army ROTC department, ana thirty-minute mm on tne 1 Guard who keep a cons tant vigil at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Washington, D-C Refreshments will be serv ed following the program by j the caaence counws?H,, j sister unit to Company A-2, j rl P-R nersonnnel will be ; available to answer questions at that time. 1 for the last time Nov. 1 Shop on University orders. "Do-nut sell anymore" orders N November 1 final eviction date by George Kaufman Senior Staff Writer It's only a small place five tables, a juke box and a well-used pinball machine. But it's been something of a second home for some students and a welcome retreat for many others. It's known among the elite few as "Doc's Place" and to others as the Happy Donut Shop, and now it's the latest victim of University expansion. "Doc" is Elton Lehl, and he's been offering asylum to NU students since 1963, when he took over the one-year-old operation from his brother. THE G ATHERIG o f clientele was rather haphazard at first as, one by one, Abel Hall dwellers began noticing "that place down by the tracks." Bus Ad board sounds One of the most important objectives of the Business Ad. ministration advisory board is to sound out student griev ances, Steve Ulrich, chair man of the advisory board, said Tuesday. At an organizational meet ing held last week, the board BHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUimiillUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIB i Sheldon starts I new season As students begin the new semester, the Sheldon Art Gallery also begins a new season with new acquisitions and a new exhibition. An exhibition of 30 paintings and sculptures from the col lection of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sosland of Shawnee Mission, Kan., is currently on dis play in collaboration with the Mulvane Art Center of To peka. New acquisitions include David Park's painting, "City Street 1955;" John Day's painting, "Erobos-Evening;" Robert Indiana's, "A Divorced Man Has Never Been Presi dent;" and other oil sketches, photographs, drawings, and Roger Williams' wood sculp ture, "Reclining Figure." Read Nebraskan Want Ads 17,000 SQ. FT. Recreation Space SNOOKER BOWL p!wey$ peii fcewl 18 hole indoor mil. golf 17 biltard taUw Group and Party rates N. 48th & Dudley as "Doc" Elton Lchl must The mouth-to-mouth ad vertising began paying off for Doc in a regular group of customers, most of them Abel inhabitants, then in their first year of occupancy. Doc still remembers many of the "regulars," and souvenirs of the era remain the hole in the wall where a well-known football player took out his anger at the pin ball machine, pictures on the bulletin board and the new pinball machine which was needed after another student took out his feelings on the glass top. Doc's operation grew easily after the word spread and for a while he. hired some Abel students part-time and re mained open 24 hours, becoming a haven for late night scholars who formed a steady stream from Abel discussed the establishment of an advisory system for upper- classmen to aid freshmen, Ulrich said. He added that the board also intends to form panels to hold discussions in marketing, Representative seeking investigation of SDS WASHINGTON (CPS) If Representative Albert Watson had his way, the Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) would be one of the groups on the government's Sub versive Organizations blacklist. The South Carolina RepubUcan on the floor of the House of Representatives last week called for a "full-scale investigation" by the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HUAC) of the most dangerous New Left group operating in the coun try today. WATSON SAID SDS plans to overthrow the U.S. govern-1 kit III ' PHOTOS BY JIM SHAW close his Happy Donut down to the tracks. Doc knew that eventually the University would want the land, but was rather surpris ed when in the middle of Sep tember, he was given the word: Be out by November 1. So he and his wife, Jan, are now preparing to leave and find something else. "I really hate to leave, but what can you do?" Doc philosophizes. He has no plans after the closing, but has put in an ap plication to the University Police and would like to stay around the campus. "I'm still just a youngster myself," he laughs. THE NIGHTS of poker, donuts, pinball machines and talk are evidently over and it's rather sad to see one of the few genuine hangouts go. go. grievances finance and personnel. The Business Administra tion advisory board partici pated in the Placement Office personnel seminar held in the Nebraska Union Tuesday night. ment, and used as examples tactics in the recent Chicago demonstrations and the disruption of Columbia University last spring. He said Federal agents who attended the SDS National Convention in June heard sessions which discussed the "fine points of firing Molitov cocktails from shotguns" and other tactics of guerrilla warfare. Watson also charged that SDS was heavily infiltrated by members of the Com munist Party, who see the campus groups as a good base from which to launch their own activities. HAYRACK RIDES Free Woodsie Spot and Bonfire afterwards J Per Person fMflM FARA1 10 Miles South of Lincoln 797-2581 Community college plait explained by committed by Jim Evlngcr The establishment of community college in Lincoln would in no way be duplication of the programs offered by the University of Nebraska, according to citizens' advisory committee m Lincoln. The proposal to establish a community college in Lincoln will be voted on by the city electorate in the November general elections. If the proposal, which fell snort in a special vote in February of 1967, attains the necessary 55 per cent mi jority approval there will be direct positive results for the community and the Universi ty, according to a report by tne Lincoln Community Col lege Citizens' Advisory Com mittee. Referring to a common ob jection that a community college would only duplicate the University's program, the report stated that each in stitution generally serves a different purpose and a dif ferent clientele. The work of the two in stitutions complement one another rather than duplicate purposes and objectives," the report states. The report points out that the University has been serving, in part, the accepted functions of a community junior college for the city. IN AS MUCH as there is no community college in Lin coln, the graduates of Lincoln senior high schools who fall in the lower half of their respective graduating classes are entering the University in much larger numbers than is characteristic of graduates of the other high schools of the state," the report states. It goes on to emphasize that the needs of only oi e-third of all Lincoln high school graduates are being fullfilled. These are students who are qualified to attend a four-year institution. A community college, con tinues the report, would fulfill the needs of two-thirds of the graduates who would welcome an opportunity to pursue a post-secondary pro Gophers top NU in long series Minnesota holds a com manding 29-8-2 edge in the series with Nebraska as the two teams prepare for Satur day's 40th meeting in Min neapolis. Nebraska has triumphed in the last three games, includ ing last year's 7-0 match in Lincoln on halfback Joe Or- duna's 25-yard run for a touch down. HUM 1145 ri3. igram of vocational or technical education rather than enter an academic pro gram at a collegiate type in stitution." The Lincoln Board of Education, In defining the purposes to be served by the community college, stated that the over-riding purpose to "provide vocation as op posed to academic Instruc tion" Is aimed to fulfill the following needs of the city: two-year vocational training as an articulated continuation of present public school offerings; terminal technical training In selected fields for youth entering the labor market and for adults in the working force who need to upgrade skills; short term course work to meet specific manpower needs of community, business or industry; wide ranging enrichment opportunities for people of all ages as requested but outside the formal or structured con fines of degree-granting in stitutions; general education courses required by or complimentary to vocational and technical training but also carrying transfer credit to institutions of higher education; basic education courses intended to alleviate illiteracy or to provide opportunity for adults who have not yet qualified for high school diplomas. ANOTHER FACTOR emphasizing the need for a community college is the mounting evidence that the universities and many of the nation's senior colleges will be forced by the increased demand for higher education and the expanded numbers of graduates to limit their enrollment to those who have successfully completed two years of junior college work, demonstrating that they can satisfactorily complete a regular college degree pro gram. Probably then m the near aUiniinillllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMIMHIIIIIIIIIUIIMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimillUIllllH Do You I The Real You? ; . : Know yourself, and others, through handwriting. Is 1 your boyfriend jealous? Is your girl friend sincere?"" f Find out the true character of yourself and your I I mends. Send sample of writing Handwriting 1 P.O. Box 30037 siiiiiiiiiimmiiuiiiiHiiiHHiiiiimiiinimMiiiHuiiNiuniiiNiiniiiiiuiiiNmniiiiiNiiiiiiiiiitHiiiiiHiinimifis End your parking problems and have fun too Dual carbs Dual cylinders Dual exhaust Electric start 22 horsepower Less then 75c a dsy with Bank Financing MOT future the young peoplaof Lincoln who do not ranlrtn the upper half of th-lr graduating classes or doot score high enough on college entrance examinations will pe excluded from entering he University of Nebraska" Jls freshmen," the report con udes, The report points uut 'TSat no such policy has yet liven adopted by the BoardTbf Regents. But it does inciwde the fact that as of this'&ll all entering freshmen most take college entrance typos of examinations. . ; A number f stfe universities in neighboriag states have already UXjn steps to deny admissio-s freshmen to graduates of less than average attainments," the report states. The report emphasized mat the community college would fill the needs of many LiniOln youth who might choose n educational and training pro gram that would be .more realistic in terms of aptrtde, interest and ability if sucban opportunity were available locally. Wednesday Night -is rizza Night Perks 11 &.t) 432-7720 Knov j s g plus $2 per sample to . ff Lincoln &85C3 Wi(i - vmm I r I YAMAHA Bonanza 180 434-7070