The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 17, 1969, Page PAGE 3, Image 3

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    THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
PAGE 3
No business . . .
Beer bill is still brewing in Unicameral
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17 1969
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. . . like snow business
AAUP: marijuana bill discriminates
Officers of the Nebraska State Con
ference of the American Association
of University Professors (AAUP) and
the Nebraska Civil Liberties Union
have labeled LB8 as discriminatory
and called for legislative re-examination
of the measure.
The bill would impose a 30-day
suspension of any person attending
any college of higher education in
Nebraska who is convicted "of having
cannabis (marijuana) in his
possession ..."
Local AAUP officers said the bill
"singles out students as a special
class for penalties beyond those
already in effect for the rest of the
community."
ACCORDING TO Lawrence
Poston, NU English professor and
local AAUP secretary, "the bill seems
to intend that a student who had
already been convicted and punished
by a criminal court would then be
Too much work' causes
cancellation of evaluations
continued from page 1
to what we want," he said. "But it
is almost more than we can handle
with the staff we have."
"THE FACULTY evaluation com
mittee cannot, with any degree of ef
fectiveness, put out a book in a year
under the present structure of the
committee," Zucker added. "It is
simply too large a volume of work."
Zucker thinks that the possibility
of salaried positions on the committee
should be investigated.
Tom Morgan, past chairman of the
committee, feels that under the ex
isting structure of the committee,
without any salary ,the publication
becomes a one or two man job.
"It boils down to one or two people
taking all responsibility for the
publication," he said Sunday. "That
is the wav it is on nearly any publica
tion of this type."
Keyserling talks on economics
MORGAN ALSO thinks that the
faculty evaluation book can be printed
"for a good deal less than $2,000,"
Zucker's estimate.
The method by which evaluation
sheets were distributed in living units
this fall does not assure that the
evaluations will be valid, according
to Morgan.
"The first book that was published
was a success in that it was published
at all," he added. "No new program
in campus history has been a widely
acclaimed success in its first year."
THE SECOND year of publication
saw improvements mainly in the area
of the number of professors evaluated,
Morgan continued.
As part of the college
of business administration's
centennial program, Leon H.
Keyserling, chairman of the
Council of Economic Advi
sers during Truman's ad
ministration, will 6peak on
campus Monday, February
17.
Keyserling will speak on
"What Is to Follow the 'New
Economies'?" at 3:30 p.m.
nomics at Columbia and has
long been engaged in eco
nomic research, currently as
president of the Conference
on Economic Progress, a
non-partisan, non-profit or
ganization. Since leaving government
in 1953, Keyserling has been
a consulting economist and
attorney, with offices is
Washington, D.C He also
serves as consultant to
federal agencies and Con
gressional groups.
LeoiH.
Keyserling
in the Nebraska Union. His
talk is open to the public.
He is scheduled to address
classes and seminars in the
college of business admin
istration in the morning. At
7:30 p.m. he will meet with
business faculty and gradu
ate students at the Faculty
Club.
The economist holds an
A.E. degree from Columbia
and a law degree from Har
vard. He has taught eco-
Stufy in
Gacdslsjsra, Msx.
The Guadalojaro Summer
School, a fully Accredited Uni
versity of Arizono program,
conducted in coopsretion with
profeisorc from Stanford Uni
vertity, Univercity of California,
and Guadalajara, will offer June
30 to August 9, art, folklore,
geography, history, language
an literature eoureei. TuHion,
board and room ' $290. Write
Prof. Juan i. Rael, P.O. Bok
7227, Stanford, California
4305.
RCfT Tour
Serve Msney
And Time
Enjoy Attracfivt
Surroundings
Interiors
Diversified
1230 SmA St. 432-SSS2
Tha Nebraska Union Special Events Committee
Presents
iima m
"' .. V .. Mat
I- . V- y:.
and (ha
TUP1SEME
Monday, March 10
8:00 P.M.
Pershing Auditorium
TICKETS, ma $440 $4.50
OH SALE THIS WEEZ
IN THE NEBRASKA UNION
If Scottsbluff Sen. Terry Carpenter
has his way the 3.2 beer, LB17, will be
revived at the hands of the Legisla
ure's Miscellaneous Subjects Commit
tee. Several University' students were re
torted to be planning to attend the
ommittee meeting at 2 p.m. Monday
voice support for Carpenter's, bill.
LB17 was introduced by State Sen.
L'erry Carpenter on the opening day
of the current legislative session and
'iromptly killed by a 5-2 vote of the
Miscellaneous Subjects Committee.
Wallace Weld, 29-year-old University
jtudent, is initiating a petition drive to
influence the senator to reconsider.
The petition, to be signed only by
voters and potential voters, will be
resented to Carpenter, he said.
The campaign is not an effort to
jet the bill passed. "We're interested
in just getting this thing on the floor
where Jhey can all vote on it." Weld
commented, adding that he thought
it would probably fail on the floor
as it did in committee.
IT MIGHT STAND a chance,
though, if enough people talk to their
senators, he continued.
"When we were 18. we sure would
have liked a 3.2 beer!". Weld ex
claimed. He pointed out that a number
of Nebraska minors spend a good deal
of time and money In Kansas and
Colorado where 3.2 beer is sold to
minors.
Weld is now working alone, but he
hopes to enlist the help of interested
adults. Weld said he is trying
specifically to interest the Student
Veterans Organization.
THE ORGANIZATION, composed of
students attending the University on
the GI bill, has done little more than;
meet, he said. Since he is a member
of the group and wants it to becoma
politically active, he will seek its help -
in reviving the bill.
The reason the bill was killed is
not known, Weld noted, adding that"
he intends to inquire into it,
ONE MEMBER of the committee
reportedly told him that a major
reason for killing the bill was that
some beer wholesalers claimed they
had no room to store 3.2 beer, "it
just doesn't sound right," he said. '
He pointed out that all witnesses
but one had testified in favor of the
bill at the public hearing, and said
he expected it to be cleared without
difficulty but was surprised when the
bill was killed.
Committee debate and individual
voting have not been made public.
punished by his college or universi
ty." The officers feel that such matters
as suspension and dismissal from
school should be at the sole discretion
of the school, Poston said.
Poston said LB8 makes it possible
to dismiss any presiding officer who
has failed to enforce the law and
"thus intrudes on the prerogatives of
the governing boards of the institu
tions." The bill also fails to define the dif
ference between treatment of ad
ministrative officers of public and
private institutions and should be
closely re-examined by the
legislature, he said.
THE CIVIL LIBERTIES group
declared that the provision calling for
a fine and removal from office of
a "presiding officer" who fails to ex
pel such a student, is flagrantly un-"
constitutional.
NCLU President Chalres Stephen
declared that, "the bill would single
out one group of persons, students,
for more severe consequences than
others convicted of the same alleged
offense.
"It singles out one kind of offense
for penalties not validly provided by
the criminal law and is an unwar
ranted intrusion on the rights of
educational institutions," he added.
"If the bill is passed by the
legislature, the Nebraska Civil
Liberties Union intends to look for
opportunities to challenge in the
courts any attempt at its enforce
ment," Stephen said.
llllllilllllllllllllllltllll!!lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll'
I Workers (
I sigii-up
held early
Four generations will hold
a registration for workers
Tuesday, Feb. 18, accord
ing to Dave Buntain, presi
dent, of the Nebraska Union
Program Council.
Union, Red Cross, Builders
and YWCA will operate
booths in the north lobby of
the Union to sign-up all up
per and under classmen who
desire to work second semes
ter. The booths will be open
from 12:304:30 p.m.
"All four groups decided
to go ahead with a worker
registration prior to the AWS
Activities Mart," Buntain
said.
Internat'l Glib
selects committee
A group of interested stu
dents met Sunday afternoon
to determine goals and ob
jectives for the new Univer
sity International Club.
The general meeting broke
into groups of four to discuss
objectives. Then the groups
reported to the entire body.
No decisions were reached.
A steering committee was
elected to tabulate the com
mittees' findings and present
them to the general mem
bership at the next meeting,
tentatively scheduled
for March 2 at 2 p.m.
NU trackteam sets new
records in recent meets
s
fjDi
if In Vogue for Spring Faddon
Try youn now in 18K White or
Yellow gold.
ExcUisicely
Sett
Frn $315
Strrini Lincoh Sinat 2905
H29 "0" srsai
ajBsrcuD jewiuks amoucan sem soarrr
After setting a Nebraska
record for the mile run, Greg
Carlberg has two goals re
maining in this year's indoor
track season helping NU
to a Big Eight indoor title
and beating Iowa State.
The Omaha sophomore,
with a 4:08.8 blistering
clocking in Saturday's 93-29
dual victory over Colorado,
broke his NU mile record set
two weeks ago against
Southern Illinois. That day
he raced to a 4:10 but
finished second.
ALTHOUGH CARLBERG
said he doesn't look at the
four-minute mark as a bar
rier, he added that he felt
somewhat stronger Saturday
at the three-quarter turn
than when he ran the 4:10 in
the opening meet.
"I didn't do anything dif
ferent for Saturday's meet,"
he said, "I just hope the Big
Eight meet will be balanced
enough to take points away
from Kansas so we have a
chance to beat them."
The league indoor meet,
set for Kansas City on Feb.
28 to March 1, is expected to
set various indoor records as
well as provide stiff opposi
tion to the favored Kansas
Jayhawks and their mile
star Jim Ryun.
But before the league
championships conclude
NU's indoor campaign, the
Huskers, now 3-0 under
coach Frank Sevigne, meet
Iowa State Saturday at 1:30
p.m. at the East Stadium
track.
AFTER DEFEATING
highly rated Southern
Illinois, Kansas State and
Colorado on successive
Saturdays in Lincoln,
Carlberg said the Huskers
may relax a little for the
supposedly weaker Cyclones.
But that doesn't mean NU
will falter for the Ames team
to score an upset.
Besides Carlberg, other
record-shattering efforts
were achieved by trackman
(and former basketball
player) N. S. Hurd who top
ped NU's oldest record by
leaping 24-8 in the long jump.
DESPITE SETTING a
Stadium record of 15-2
Duane Sullivan finished se
cond in the pole vault.
Brang also topped the
Husker mile record by
finishing second with a
4:09.5.
Olympic competitor Clifton
Forbes won the 60-yard dash
with :06.4 while Garth Case
wen the 600, Fred Nichols
the 60 high hurdles and Dan
Morran in the 1,000 for NU.
Daily Nebraskan
Classified
Advertising
Hours
Monday thru Friday
1 p.m. S p.m.
Rates
5c pr word
Sec minimum per day
Pro-payment required
Wanted:
local company needs two men to
part time now and fall time tola
mer. 48-M14.
Art student: Shop interested la scIUnd
orisinai art work and craft oa consign,
meat. Phone 46M6SS or 132-21 3P.
For Rent:
Attractlre party boom for rent
time offered. Outside city.
432-212e days. 488-0068 eveatass.
Call
Miscellamovs:
Expert typist Reasonable rates. Cast.
pendable. Call Pat Owen. 42J-200S.
Only Senator Carpenter can rertrn LB IT,
(allow J.I beer). Write him at the
State CapitoL
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Then come to work at Hi.
tl $9
We'll listen to you. And give you a
chance to stand on your own two feet.
Right from the start.
You see, we believe your noint of view
is just as important as ours.
We want new ways to do things. Better ways.
And this calls for fresh ideas.
That's why you'll have to be a thinker.
An innovator. A guy who has the guts to
stand up for what he thinks is right,
You show us your stuff,
well give you the freedom to swing.
Youll find plenty
of action in motor trucks, farm equipment,
construction equipment and steclmaking.
And the faster you prove yourself, the quicker
youll move up. Without a lot of red tape.
Get the picture? Now why not get into the act
Talk to your campus placement officer
about us. He'll give you the word on the good
jobs we have in engineering, accounting,
production management and sales.
Because the way we look at it, if we give you a
good job you'll want to stick with us.
And that's exactly what we have in mind.
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