Mi PAGF THE DAILY NEBRASKAN THURSDAY, MARCH 13, 1969 I t M i . h V J V i ! ,' ' ' i .-,4 i m 1 3 S3 s -s '3 'v t.1 IS v. f v. 5- i I I, bf.ftiiti:itiiiiiiitiiiiiJiiiiiBiteiiitiniii!iiiituitfiifrfifiiieiiriiiiiisiJfitiiiiiiiiiiiftitritiiiitiiitffriiffiiiJ tt lEU'iiiMiiiiiiiuiDiiiitiuiKiuii jiiimuiiM Remarks by Mark Gordon Sports Editor Two Items appearing in the Omaha World-Herald recently indicate a trend which we hope never arises at hi campus. World-Herald sports editor Wally Provost in his Jan. 15 column reported that at San Jose State College, the Student Council voted 11-2 to cut off what remains of a $276,000 allocation for the athletic program. The students also ordered money from TV rights for one fooiball game transferred to the general fund of the Associated Studens. He also reported that the Associated Students of Colorado State College voted 34-1 to refuse to pay a student athletic fee increase intended to alleviate a possible deficit of $565,000 in the athletic department budget. A RECENT Associated Press story quoted Chancellor Wlliam P. Tolley of Syracuse University as accusing the media of focusing on minor aspects of the educational scene such as sports. Both Provost's example and the Chancellor's naive remarks indicate that possibly today's colleges consider sports nothing more than trivia which is retained solely as a money-making gimmick to lure the public to the campuses each Saturday afternoon. College athletic rograms, while they sometimes are costly to run and even finish in the red, are one institu tion on campus that can and will at tract public interest and support. We aren't saying the main purpose of an educational institution is to provide an athletic program, but if one aspect of the college can attract attention by just doing its regular routine, it's the athletic department. On this campus during the fall, ' what's the most discussed topic last week's stimulating, dynamic lec ture by a 76-year-old grandfather in Zoology 435 describing the en vironmental changes undergone by the platapuss in the physioloical age? Or is it what happened at last week's football game or the upcoming Webraka contest? EDUCATORS REFUSE to believe that anything could be more impor tant that the course they teach, yet Enterprising Young Ladies Earn Good Money $$ In Your Spare Time Be a "Holiday Girl" In your dorm On campus At home Pleasant Easy Exciting HOLIDAY MAGIC COSMETICS CALL Sit INC 477-7405 WRIT P.O. BOX 2041 LINCOLN, NEB. Putting ycu first, keeps us first mum I " " '-'',-'i"--),.k ".. . ' " .-.A-..:,..-...,-r : ""T-vy . it --9 Q) f, ', j " J Under Chevrolet's hood you 11 find the biggest Standard V8 in its field-327 cubic inches of it Or, you can order ail the way up to our SOO-hp 427-cubic-inch V8. And il that won't haul it, see s it's a known fact that the sports pages receive greater readership than other parts of a newspaper. A school's athletic program can give a collge either a wining or a losing reputation which can attract or deter students. The influence on Alabama football by coach Bear Bryant has brought a supposedly poor southern university into one of the best known colleges in the land. Alabama has a multitude of problems, but its fine football teams have definitely boosted its im age. NITS SWIMMING team, coached by one of the nation's finest mentors in John Reta, recently finished fifth at the Big Eight's swimming meet. While this team was not in the same class as the winning Kansas Jayhawks, we salute them for an excellent year which saw six new Nebraska records set and a victory for the first time in 25 years over Iowa State. Those record-setters included Dave Schmidt in the 200-yard backstroke and 200-yard individual medley, Dave Backer in the 200-yard freestyle, freshman star George Sefzik (who we feel is NU's most promising athlete) in the 1650-yard freestyle and 500-yard freestyle and Walt Brzezinski in the 100-yard backstroke. Brzezinski has also qualified for the NCAA national championships in that event March 27-29 at Bloomington, Ind. NEBRASKA MAY have dropped a 30-3 wrestling decision to nationally rated Iowa Statesaturday night at the Coliseum, but the Husker matmen showed considerable improvement from the beginning of the season. We wish coach Orval Borgialli and his squad, led by heavyweight star Gene Libal, the lone decision winner over Iowa State, good luck in t h i s weekend's Big Eight meet at Ames. Iowa. NU BASKETBALL has closed for another season and despite faltering in the Big Eicht title race, the Huskers of coach Joe Cipriano deserve credit for their efforts. No championship was produced but this squad lacked seniors, height and all-conference caliber players. 3ui61 !si on t mill it, 0 n R our truck line. We have the right connec tions for your traUering too. Like bodyframe trailer hitches and trailer wiring hamess&i. So drop down to your IFC accepts amendments Continued from Page 1 pledge men who are mature enough so that you can talk and explain things to them as well as criticize them." Putting the pledge against the wall at attention where he is afraid of what is going to happen to him is not the answer to good pledge educa tion, he added. "Line-ups don't give 'the pledge a desire to be an active." he continued, "They give him a desire not to ba a pledge." Much of the objection voiced on the clause referred not directly to the clause but to the authority of IFC to determine to some extent the pledge training programs of individual houses. "There is too much control over the pledge education programs by IFC," John Russell, of Sigma Chi, said. " An executive committee member or pledge education com mittee member could not understand our pledge education program unless they lived in the house themselves." "I don't like a police force telling me what to do," according to Dan Durrie of Phi Delta Theta. "I think IFC should just print up advisory sheets on pledge education and distribute them to the houses." PLEDGE TRAINING is a kind of inspection where the pledge is being Inspected just like in a line-up, Gary Raymond, representing Triangle, ad ded. Discussion groups simply don't yield the same results as line-ups. "If a pledge wanted to be lined-up, he could join the army," Bill Palmer, Delta Tau Delta, said. "Actives should set an example that pledges want to follow." In minor amendments, the council added a clause guaranteeing eight hours of sleep for pledges and another defining study areas for pledges. The duration date of the contract was amended from each change of house officers to stipulae from the first day of classes for the academic year 1969 70 to the first day of classes for 1970 71. AN EVEN SHARPER disagreement arose over whether IFC should cause the name of any fraternity violating the contract to be published A clause Was added to the contract rwovirtina that IFC could publish the names of such houses only after a 13-12 vote. Following the completion of the contract amendments, Durrie moved that the contract be rescinded in its entirety. A motion was made to table the proposal and an objection to con sideration was voiced, but both mo tions failed. Durrie's proposal was then voted on. It failed 19-6. Line-up vote Those fraternities voting for he ad dition of the sentence which both de fines and prohibits line-ups were: Acacia, Alpha Gamma Sigma, Beta Sigma Psi, Beta Theta Pi, Delta Sig ma Phi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Up silon, Farmhouse, Kappa Sigma, Phi Gamma Delta, Pi Kappa Alpha, Pi Kappa Phi, Sigma Nu, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Theta Chi, and Theta Xi. Those houses voting against the ad ditional sentence were: Alpha Gammo Rho, Alpha Tau Omega, Chi Phi. Phi Delta Theta. Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Alpha Mu, Sig ma Chi, and Sigma Phi Epsilon. Impala Custom Conn equipped lot tnulerinf l2&i!3 S1ib Chevrolet dealer's and get a load off your mind. And put it in a Chevrolet. THURSDAY, MARCH 13 (All events in the Nebraska Union unless otherwise Indicated.) 12:00 p.m. Tri-University Project 12:30 p.m. Placement College of Engineering St Architecture 2:30 p.m. Union Talks & Topics, Press Confer ence Amitai Etzioni University High Auditorium. Basketball Queen Interviews Centennial Concert Rehearsal 3:00 p.m. Union Contemporary Arts 3:30 p.m. Student Action Front Interviews Kosmet Klub Union Talks & Topics Amitai Etzioni University High Auditorium People to People Hyde Park 4:00 p.m. Student Affairs Committee Union Special Events 4:30 p.m. YWCA Cabinet Meeting Student Centennial Meeting SDS 6:00 p.m. Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia AUF Executive 6:30 p.m. Christian Science Organization 7:00 p.m. Pi Tau Sigma Smoker Quiz Bowl Baptist Student Union Spanish-Portuguese Club Gamma Alpha Chi AUF Quiz Bowl Isolation 7:30 p.m. Math Counselors 8:00 p.m. Greek Week Theta Nu NU Meds Young Republicans Centennial Concert Marian Anderson Head Nebraska Want Ads UNIVERSITY THEATRE Does it's Thing THE KILLING OF SISTER GEORGE Howell Theatre TONIGHT and Mar. 14, IS, 16 at 8. Ttmplt 108 472-2073 ad IT irini You know it. And we know it. Any job that doesn't give you a chance to learn and grow is just a job. And at Bank of America, were not merely offering jobs. We're offer ing challenges to test your skills. No matter what your major is. "We're offering a couple of other things, too. For openers, starting salaries that are attractive. And for a fellow up, people to Officials raise possibility of U.S. campus conspiracy by John Nollendorfs Nebraskan Staff Writer The possibility that the nationwide campus disorders are being instigated by an interstate conspiracy was raised ait a recent meeting of governors' representatives and U.S. Justice Dept. officials In Washington, D.C. Attending the meeting was Robert E. Barnett, special counsel to Giv. Norbert T. Tiemann, who said that a number of questions were raised abauft the campus disorders across the nation. He said several representatives were pushing for a Federal Grand Jury investigation on these incidents "because they thought there were overtones of an interstate con spiracy." "Many of the representatives, especially from California and Wisconsin, were quite adamant about the obvious interstate aspects of it." Barnett said. U.S. Deputy Attorney General Richard Kliendiest, Barnett reported, said that the Nixon administration was looking into the matter, trying to gather the data for a grand jury case. Barnett said that the feeling he got from Kliendiest was that the ad ministration was being as sincere as it could be, "and they were not going to run just willy-nilly into a grand jury investigation to get publicity." THE JUSTICE Dept. officials, he said, reported that they had run into some jurisdictional problems because they were not sure of the interstate aspects of the campus riots. He said that the department could not go on rumor, as they have to gather the facts." After the facts are gathered and GETTING MARRIED? 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"KLIENDIEST MADE it quite clear," Barnett said, "that the Nixon administration firmly believes that the civil rights issue is a local pro blem, and that we should handle these civil rights problems at a local level. If they aren't handled there, the Nixon administration is going to handle them whether we like these laws or not." Omaha live-in set A live-in will be held on the Omaha Near North Side March 28, 29 and 30, according to Mel Leutchens of the United Methodist Student Center. Students interested in participating I should register at the Student Center by March 18. Registration must be accompanied by ?a. 1s?g QUI D) Mm United Artists il is egflwt j