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About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1968)
r--o Page 6 The Daily Nebraskan FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1963 '1 1 "I i 4 t v5 .J- J ' J. : 1 I i Hours no longer a privilege ... .Keys should; be a 6 ' Continued from Page 1 The same pamphlet and AWS letters to parents and surveys of women students repeatedly refer to the junior and senior keys as a "privil- egp,. ' 4 M MISS PILMER, a member ofjhe AWS key committee, said she believes that "by the time a girl is old enought to come to the University, set ting hours is no longer a pri vilege, it becomes a right. Making that an assumption, it is not the perogative of t h e University to grant that right or to take it away." Linda Parker, a senior congresswoman who is also a member of the key com mittee, said, "If your parents tell you you can have a key, it s not a privilege. The AWS key committee has been working on a pro posal to extend the key system to sophomore women for seven months. MOST CONGRESS women, including Miss Park er and Miss Pilmer, say they are willing to wait awhile for Sophomore keys to be certain wnue AWa presents as air tight a case as possible. The request must go to the Student Affairs Committee, which Miss Parker said, is expected to pass the final say along to the Board of Regents. The Student Affairs Com mittee made the final decision of senior and junior keys, And elsewhere This listing of women's hours at colleges and universities around the country as gathered this Sep tember by ASUN. " University of Nebraska key system for juniors, seniors, women over 21. " University-o f Iowa no hours for sophomores, "Juniors, seniors. UNIVERSITY OF Kansas - no hours f o r sophomores, juniors, seniors. University of Colorado no hours. Michigan State University no hours for sophomores, juniors, seniors. University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. -key system for seniors. University of Massachusetts no hours. UNIVERSITY OF North Dakota no hours for juniors, seniors. University of Pennsylvania seniors set own weekend hours. University of Oregon no hours. University of Wisconsin, Madison, seniors, women over 21, no weekend Washington State University sophomores, juniors, seniors. call in late hours, Wis. no hours hours for juniors. no hours, UNIVERSITY OF California at Los Agneles no hours women over 21, juniors and seniors no hours with good scholastic standing, parental permission. State University of New York at Buffalo no hours second semester freshmen, sophomores, juniors, seniors. California State College at Los Angeles women with at least 24 hours credit have keys. Temple University, Philadelphia, Pa. 3 a.m. curfew all weekends. ' ST. OLAF COLLEGE Northfield, Mass. no hours for seniors. , Sarah Lawrence College, Bronxville, N.Y . week night hours 1:30 a.m., weekend hours 2 a.m. - Reed College, Portland, Ore. no hours. Radcliffe. Cambridge, Mass. no hours juniors, seniors; no hours sophomores after Thanksgiving. NORTHWESTERN, Evanston, 111. key system for Juniors and seniors. Muhlenburg College, Allentown, Pa. no hours juniors and seniors. George Washington University, Washington D.C. no hours seniors, women over 21; 10 no hours nights per semester for juniors. Antioch College, Yellow Springs .Ohio no hours, open dorms. Nixon claims more understanding' WASHINGTON (CPS) -Richard Nixon he has learned a lot from cam paigning for tfie Presidency, especially in understanding what's on the minds of young people. He's been on the receiving end of some pretty pointed messages on signs carried by students. One poster held high at a rally in Burbank, Calif, especially caught ais eye. "Talk With Us, Not At Us," the sign said. THE SENTIMENT behind that statement Is indicative of what Nixon sees as a gap between generations, a gap he Hi inks his new political leadership will help to close. Nixon feels he has made a Sincere effort to talk with students, not at them- He of fered a platform that includes ending the draft through an all-volunteer army after the Vietnam war is ended. He has established a Stu dent Coalition to "utilize the talents and energies of the academic community t o resolve society's problems." NIXON ALSO said he would "devise new ways by which, through long term loans, the federal government can further assist students to gain a higher education." He also said he would encourage private enterprise to expand its participation in student financial aid. Nixon also supports lower ing the voting age. Eighteen-year-olds are old enough to vote not because they are old enough to fight, he said, but because they are smart enough to vote. Unlike other classics' West Side Story'grows younger! Starring NATALIE WOO 7 J "J ft , " i & ft I. i T - M Cj L w U Liu MKiraiON TKMXXUX" MM X urn 0mte4 Arttttf (M) ANLI ' NEXT ATTRACTION JOANNE WOODWARD IN PALX NEWMAN'S "RACHEL, RACHEL' Miss Parker said, but AWS leaders doubt that they'll want to have the final say on sophomore keys. MISS PARKER indicated that she eventually expects a no-hours policy for all University women. Miss Pilmer said she actively sup ports the establishment of such a system. But the two are in a minority of women on campus and would be considered radicals by some parents who've written AWS about the key system. An AWS survey of one-third of the University women liv ing on campus showed that only 273 favored abolition of all hours, while 1,060 believed right9 freshmen should have hours. AN AWS compilation of parents' comments on the key system includes this one, '"It's people like you who make it so tough on the rest of us to raise our children in the ways of the church and in the eyes of the Lord ... a 21-year-old has good judgement? Like hell!" Another parental comment was more representative, "This is a well-worked out system, worthy of a trial." Apparently, to most campus women and to their parents, AWS does have good judgement and it is slowly but surely proving that University coeds are "mature and responsible." Bitterness expressed by youth Continued from Page 1 When asked if he had seen any Russians in Cuba, he replied quickly, "Yes, many. They like to drink hard stuff and it's hard to get, so you can trade it to them for all kinds of things." He estimated that about 75 of the Cuban people are against Castro's government now, although nearly all had supported him in the beginn ing. Pedro tells of food rationing and shortages of clothing and other materials which made him want to leave. THE TRANSITION t o school has been tremendous. In Cuba the boys only at tended school in the morning given no selection of courses, and each boy must work 45- days on a farm before passing each grade. Pedro said that even though his father was 41 years old, he was still inducted into the "army." Aneel talks bitterly about his father's arrest as a "political prisoner." . "Thev iust throw you in prison without a reason. There was no reason to throw my father into prison, but they did. And when they came to get him, they stole a lot of things out of our house." ALL FOUR of the boys say they want to return to Cuba someday, "but not until Castro is gone." They say a revolution will not take place against Castro because he has too much power. Angel and Pedro go to ont ferent Lincoln high schools Profs want balance in teaching Cambridge, Mass. (LP.) The notion that professors scorn undergraduate teaching proved wrong when Harvard sociologists questioned faculty members in several institu tions. The professors ask for a balance of undergraduate teaching, graduate teaching, and research. And the institution's respect for academic integrity is more important than "prospective salary im- NEBRASKA UNION FRIDAY, NOV. 15 8 a.m. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship 8:30 a.m. Psychology 70 9:30 a.m. Architecture 5 12:30 p.m. Placement Luncheon 1:30 p.m. A. Ph. A. 3 p.m. Nebraska International Assoc. Exec. 7 & 9 p.m. Movie "Fahrenheit 451" 7:30 p.m. Bahai Club Inter-Varsity " 8 p.m. Turkish Student Assoc. EAST UNION Friday, November 15, 1968 12:30 p.m. Moselum Students Assoc. End approaches for Coriihusker picture-taking Next week is the last week that pictures for the ,1969 CORNHUSKER will be taken according to Jeanne Baer, CORNHUSKER Panel Editor. Students who had their pic tures taken before Oct. 17 and have not yet received their proofs should come back for a retake. The week is also open to students, especially seniors, who have not had their pictur es taken. "The best time for students to go over is in the morning, especially on Monday, Tues day and Wednesday." Miss Baer said, "Thursday and Friday will be hectic, and kids may have to wait in line for a long time." Pictures are being taken at UMHE, 333 North 14th Street, from 8:30 - 11:30 and 12:30 4:30. provement" in attracting faculty members, especially among the top institutions. These findings appear in a pilot study of the American academic profession by Talcott Parsons, Profess of Sociology, and Gerald M. Pi att, Lecturer on Sociology. They polled more than 400 stitutions in preparing for a more general study of the academic profession in the United States. THE SOCIOLOGISTS report that "the undergraduate col lege, though changed, is flourishing more than before, and not less in the universi ties with extensive graduate schools. In the course of the pilot study,. the sociologists perfected a method for measuring institutions on a Scale of Institutional Dif ferentiation, based on size, quality and research-orientation. In their small sample, they found this scale proved consistent with major observations. On this basis, they found "a good deal of strain" in the middling institutions. The strain is reflected in a sense of conflict on the part of the faculty, in the faculty's relatively small contact with the administration, in the rather superficial and misplaced criteria used ... in evaluating the quality of faculty members at these in stitutions, and in the heavy teaching and research demands placed son the faculty members, both by their colleagues and by the administration. The sociologists suggested! that these middling institu-i tions "are undergoing the most rapid upgrading and as a result are perhaps placing the most uncoordinated demands on faculty." ' IN THE institutions low on the Scale of Institutional Dif f e r entiation (size-quality-r e search-orientation). the sociologists found the ad ministration has a far greater share of decision-making au thority in matters which other institutions consider faculty affairs. As a result, in these low-rating institutions, faculty members show a greater in terest in exercising power, as distinguished from exercising influence on faculty issues. In the "top" institutions, by contrast, most of lhe scholars would prefer to be influential members of their department or of their faculty rather than have formal authority, for instance, as department chairmen. In these "top" institutions especially, they note, the power in academic affairs is decentralized, and thus neutralized. and both talk of wanting to go to college later on if possible. The program which brings them to Cristo Rey is federally-sponsored, but car ried out by the Catholic Social Service, and is planned to spread the young Cubans all over the country to help them enter American society. . Harris and Sattherlund organize sports for the boys and take them hunting and other places. Leadership seminar, Pershing Rifles project Existentialism is topic of speech Existentialism will be the topic of a speech by the Rev. Walter IT. Stohrer, S. J. chair man of the Creighton Univer sity philosophy department. Rev. Stohrer will speak at the Graduate Forum on Tuesday Nov. 19, in the basement lounge of Selleck's Fairfield Hall. Pershing Rifles will sponsor a High School Leadership Seminar at the University on Nov. 16. Sixty-five to seventy high school cadet officers of the Army and Air Force Junior ROTC or o grams in the Omaha High Schools are ex pected to attend. The seminar will be held in the Military and Naval Science Building. The seminar, according to a Pershing Rifles release, is sponsored for the purpose of developing a high caliber of the high school detachments. The seminar is to stress leadership, the charac teristics of a leader, the traits of a leader, and the principles and applications of leadership. Special stress is to be plac ed on the importance of esprit de corps, morale, proficiency, and discipline within the unit. Lectures on these subjects are to be given by the senior freshman instructor, M A J John Biese, and by the Act ing Professor of Military Sci ence, LTC oene d. wiens. In addition to lectures, discussion sessions will be held by the members of Pershing Rifles Company A-2 and National Headquarters. Discussion sessions will delve deeper into the problem of the application of leadership to active duty, cadet leadership, drill units, and civilian life, the release said. At the seminar, Company A. " 2 will announce plans for the Spring High School Drill Meet. Current - a a Movies - ' m m Timet Furnished kr Theater. Ttmes; t.m, hckt facet .m. fe Ct ratlRf-i tinted are ariatea' at ra eeftea' rram the theater and iadleata a votaatar, rating givea ta the merle hr the metlaa MYlare mdvttrr: G Sat. ceatm far UKNKRAL amUraeet, (Ml Satiettea' ler MAtl RE aadiearea (par. eel ditrretlaa affiled!. (ftl RE STIlJCrKO PenM aader 11 aat ad mitted wttaeat parr at ar adaH iarlaa. X Penaaa aader 17 aat admitted ate mar differ, check theater airer tiaemeat. LINCOLN CooperLincoln: 'The Boston Strangler', (R) 7:00 & 9:00. Varsity: 'West Side Story', (M 1:09. 3:49. 6:29. 9:09. ; State: 'Heiga'. (M) 1:00. J:(i0, ' J: 00. 7:00. 9:00. Joyo: 'Live A Little, Love A Little', 7:20, 9:20. Stuart: 'T1h Split', M 1:10. 3:10, 5:10. 7:15, 9:15. Nebraska: 'Two A Penny', (G) 1:00, 3:00, 5:00, 7:00, 9:00. 84Ui & O: inspector Clouseau', 7:30. 'The Good, The Bad &. The Ugly', 9:15. Starview: 'Closelv Watched Trains', R 7:45. 11:20. 'Dear John', R) 9:20. OMAHA e Indian Hills: ice Statiod Zebra G) every evening at 8:00. Wed., Sat. & Sun., 2:00. Dundee: 'Funny Girl', (Gi, evcrv evening at 8:00, Wed., Sat., & Sun.. 2:00. Cooper 70: 'Finian's Rainbow', (G) every evening at 8:00. Wed., Sat. & Sun.. 2:00. CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM WW STARTS TODAY! our tjtu j m im istwistr all t!f """1 fwVOiVLWOUl "NIGHT 7 & ? P.et. N I i (ZAJ11L1JV mo atit nunre it artMirrrn 7421 54th & 0 Street NO ONE UNDER 17 ADMITTED UNLESS ACCOMPANIED BT PARENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN 13th &P Street ADMISSIONS: MON. THRU FRI. $1.00 fill ML; AFTER t tM. AND All DAT SAT. A SUN. $1.50 JhK (A) w Shi 1 for, a ll ' K i b , ' ' dfWmiani. " . . ,?,.., , They're happy because . they just stole a half-million dollars. But watch what happens wherv its time for The Split! ' 4. RD WEEK! THE STORY OF THE SELF-CONFESSED BOSTOU STHAflGLEtl IS BASED ON FACT, PANAVISION ft COLOR IP (R) BOSTON STRANGLER b lorry Curtis Henry Fonda George Kennedy n-. & Sun. Continuous From 1 n.rr a MM ftv-: METRO-GOLDWYN MAYER presents A SPECTRUM PRODUCTION starring mi nnAiini MiniiiiiAinnAii Jim Drum 11 uiMnMnrc UHnrtULt. JULIE HARRIS, "n ' n-r mill p&tA GENE HACKMAN JACK KLUGMAM WARREN OATES 7 lAMre uutminDC ERNEST BORGNINE : NO ONE UNDER 17 ADMITTED UNLESS ACCOMPANIED IT A PARENT OR ADULT 6UARDIAN. PANAVISION'METROCOLOR mom - !ra-v. I i f i im -r inniiTiM ran EVERT EVENING AT P.M. MATINEES AT 2 PJN. ON WED, SAT. SUN. oni HOLIDAYS 393-&55S 86th & W. Dodge Ite&oddwyn Maysrpitsefts Mstfn RsBohctTs fttxJucfon of ROCK .HUDSON ERNEST PATRICK BORGfiiriE twcGuSHAN m JIM bnwnil i r Now T!f7,V Mot A v 1 ' C , .-, "v" - i 1 iiiii.iuTry.!!jj EVERT EVENINB AT I tM. MATINEES AT 2 PJM. ON WED, SAT. SUN. ti HOLIDAYS PARENTS: BECAUSE OF CERTAIN SCENES... WE SUGGEST YOU SEE "HELGA" FIRST!!! it 1 1 1 i I flAl i nw 14th & Douglas (G) curs oMjfeP imF TOMMY a lkf 1 COLOR m PERFECT II KOlcBl OEFons mmmu num... m m I! I I TOMMY STEELE mm pna WAHNEH Kt&98EVEN AHTS mj IDEE 851-3599 4952 Dodge EVERT EVENINO AT PJM. MATINEES AT 2 PJN. ON WED SAT, SUN. AND HOLIDAYS BARBRA STRBSAND OMAR SHARIF V.UJAM VWLERRAYSTARK PRODUCTION CaUMBIAPCTURESdTol RASTAR PRODUCTIONS prnem RUTHGASSMANN-KiCHFiENDro-oa TICKETS ON SALE IN LINCOLN fOK TNCif ftODMOW THTn IN TH ITUAIT THatiRS LuanT IKUn. THRU FBI. tiN M d:N P.M I T"T---:T,niliMii i ' in" "H iiiiwaj ilium "in ii inn irr'j-M-wi wr -imrwftii MiiUfni m .iwMaag ; 1 yI. f """Waaa "