rpn-p,f f it O el) fPB LR'ffTi H) UJJ U OiD Lfu O U J The FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1968 LINCOLN, NEBRASKA Vol. 92, No. 34 ; .... .. f..1f inTjr..-.111I.rlrl..1T1.1..T..I ( . ... ( r r-1 . 1 1 MTII l. TI..IL-- I1ll.ll.ll- .L,J.,,J I J L- 1 " " " fi) s I H - - ' f 1 i -. - - . - x -a i f IVU faces stiff challenge against by Randv York Assistant Sports Editor Kansas State near the top of the Big Eight football standings is about as common as lemonade at a woodsie. In fact, the Wildcats have not registered a conference victory since 1964. But even in the underdog role, K State carries a dangerous tag, having thrown its quota of scares into league foes. The tele screen re ceived and transmitted There was of course no way of knowing whether you were heing watched at any given moment. 1984 by George Orwell Vinton tube room. Ernie Sigler coming home. K - State underdogs AND NEBRASKA knows only too well what the Wildcats can do on any given Saturday. It took a last minute field goal by Bill Bom berger to bail the Huskers out of trouble last year at Manhattan, 16 14. Nebraska, derailed by nationally ranked Kansas and Missouri, is back on the winning track after disposing of Oklahoma State and Iowa State. Kansas State has been '4 1 H - M r ' y A 111 i&iJ. k ' - f ; I outscored 151-68 while dropping four straight league decisions to Iowa State, Colorado. Missouri and Oklahoma. The Husker homecoming matchup may feature a quarterback duel as Nebraska's Ernie Sigler, best percentage passer in the league, goes against K-State's Lynn Dickey, who statistically ranks ahead of such standouts as Iowa State's John Warder and KU's Bobby Douglass. The Wildcats have gone more to the air this year since a stalled running attack has mustered but 93.1 yards per game, worst in the conference. K-STATE, however, owns one of the most explosive runners in the Big Eight. Wingback Mack Herron, who returned a kickoff 100 yards last week against Oklahoma, has gained 189 yards on the ground this season, but has only rushed 42 times. Tailback Russell Harrison and fullback Cornelius Davis are also in Coach Vince Gibson's stable. Harrison, a sophomore who broke Gale Sayers' prep rushing record at Omaha Tech, has also rushed but 42 times, gaining 145 yards for a 3.5 average. Davis, a senior who led the conference in rushing with 1,028 yards as a sophomore, has managed 188 yards through eight games this year. Davis, however has scored four touchdowns. Her ron leads K-State in scoring with six touchdowns. Flanker Dave Jones, who holds the Big Eight career receiving record, is Dickey's chief target and Kansas State's top offensive threat. Spy resolution triggers discussion by Joanelle Ackerman Nebraskan Staff Writer The "emotionally colored word spy" provided the basis of dialogue in the opening round of the Hyde Park session Thursday afternoon. Alan Siporin opened the subject by asking the more than 100 students gathered in the Student Union lounge how many would like to have student spies informing on them. FEW STUDENTS raised their hands. One who did was Dave Landis, one of the ASUN senators who opposed the Student Senate resolution condemning the hiring of students to act as undercover agents. "I do not choose to restrict law enforcement agents from enforcing the law," Landis said. Arts and Sciences .Wore student planned by by John Dvorak Nebraskan Staff Writer Students will have a voice in the operation of the College of Arts and Sciences due to a number of evolu tionary experiments currently being planned, according to Dean C. Peter Magrath. "It is desirable, useful and necessary that students have both a formal and informal say in the College," Magrath said. Students should participate in the College, not just attend classes in it. hp said. Magrath, new to the University this semester, feels that students should work with the faculty on grading review and curriculum co mmittees, as well as in other educational experimentation. Students should not participate in hiring and firing decision; though. "THESE ARE not just words." Magrath emphasized. As evidence, Grading Review Appeal Committees, as recom mended in the Student Academic Freedom Report, have been established all Arts and Sciences Departments. Some of the commit tees include students and graduate assistants. Magrath said. If students are dissatisfied with the department committee's decision, the student can appeal to the College Grading Review Appeal Committee, he continued. Three faculty members and a student compose that committee. SO THAT students may participate directly in curriculum matters, Magrath has proposed that the 23 member course of study committee be restructured to in clude three non-voting student members. The Arts and Sciences dean poll ed faculty members in the college. Not all members responded, he said, but the curriculum committee revision was favored approximate ly six to one. The Arts and Sciences Executive Committee, the Arts and Sciences Council, and the Student Advisory Board will consider the proposal, Magrath reported. Selleck Quadrangle will be the scene of another experiment utiliz ing student trained counselors for freshmen students, he said. THE STUDeWcOUNSELORS will advise some Selleck freshmen j' ma'Di ! iiiii..) i ijH4iBtywi)"i unwiiwiun"H.jyyS! Pre-registration for second semester is scheduled for Nov. 8 according to Mrs. Irma Laase, assistant director of registration and records. Worksheets may be picked up Friday and deadlines for students with 89 or more hours is Nov. 13; for students with 53 or more hours is Nov. 19, and all students with less than 53 hours must have registration completed by Nov. 26. He said that he opposes the ASUN resolution because it creates a "special situation" for the University. In effect, the resolution would be restricting the University from law enforcement that the rest of society is subject to. THE RESOLUTION in question which was tabled during the ASUN Senate meeting Wednesday, reads: Whereas, an atmosphere of free in quiry is essential to the survival of an academic community ... the ASUN Senate condemns the hiring of students to act as undercover agents and requests that a University policy be established stating that any student acting as a lired undercover agent be subject to suspension from the University. Landis said that the resolution revamped about their second semester courses, subject to review by a faculty committee. They will help the freshmen plan their course of study, Magrath said Possibly the most startling ex periment is a proposed Human Studies Program, which is being considered by an ad hoc faculty committee. It would allow students to choose not a traditional major, but a major from several existing courses, Magrath said. These selected students would explore a particular aspect of the human studies courses, choosing that as a major, he said. The students would be advised bv a faculty sponsor. Other educational experiments, such as the proposed Centennial College, which may be a combina Students unhappy with no-action housing policy by Julie Morris Nebraskan Staff Writer The student members of the University Housing Committee told the committee Wednesday that students are tired of waiting for implementation of a housing policy approved 18 months ago. Bill Gilpin, Cheryl Tritt, and Jim Ludwig formally asked the com mittee to implement by second semester the policy requiring only freshmen to live on campus. Gilpin is the new chairman of the commi ttee. The committee agreed to postpone action on the recom mendation until a meeting set for next Wednesday. THE STUDENTS said they believe the policy "might well have been implemented last May if precent enrollment and occupancy levels could have been confidently predicted." They noted that administrators originally projected a fall 1968 enrollment of 18,417, but revised that to 17,500, "making it impossi ble to implement the policy." The actual enrollment this fall was only 100 short of the original estimate. "Students are living in University residence halls who don't want to be there, who feel coerced; and as a logical extension was poorly worded and that he particularly did not agree with the part stating that "any student ac ting as a hired undercover agent be subject to suspension." SIPORIN said that he also thought the resolution could have been stated better. He objects to a student un dercover system because the purpose of having undercover agents would not be for the en forcement of all laws, but only laws relating to drug abuse. "The whole spy network would be used to discriminate against a cer tain individual because of the way he dressed or the people he associated with," Siporin said. BY CONDEMNING itudent say-so college tion living-learning experiment, are supported by the College of Arts and Sciences, Magrath said. He emphasized that most of these ex periments are student initiated. "AS PART of the effort to in volve students in the College, we will especially try to respond to the student advisory board," Magrath said. This board, as a formally designated student group, can play a large part in making suggestions and assisting in the planning of these experiments, he reported. Student representatives on many of the committees will be selected by the board. The board is also directly involved in the counseling experiment in Selleck. of this these students are damaging the residence hall program. The group as a whole is suffering," the three said. The students' report to the com mittee, two months in the writing, suggested that no more than 200 students would move out of the dorms if the new policy were im plemented second semester. Loss of 200 residents, less than four per cent of the dorm popula tion, would not hurt the operation of the dorms, the report states. The Students based their figure of 200 on statistics from the University's fall housing report, which lists the living areas of all They suggested that the number of students who would move if the policy were implemented second semester woud be minimized because of dorm contract penalties for moving, parental permission and the problem of moving in mid year. Freshmen, sophomore and junior women and sophomore men are now required to live on campus by University rules. A total of 5,200 students live in the dorms. More than one half of the dorm residents are required to live on campus. Continued on Page 3 undercover agents, the University would be eliminating an "extra amount of restriction that society does not condone." "It is not relevant to say whether or not undercover agents exist now. The point is that they can exist now. What is going to be done about it?" Siporin asked. He added that the fact that University officials do not hire undercover agents does not mean that someone else can't Landis said that he would not agree with the use of undercover agents on a personal level, such as a state senator hiring campus spies. The rest of the Hyde Park session was devoted to a discussion of discrimination within the Greek system.