The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 19, 1969, Page PAGE 4, Image 4

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    WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1969
THE DAILY NEBRASKAN
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I Remarks I
besides
opinions on
by Mark Gordon
Sports Editor
Aooarently someone else
wmirs trulv expresses
athletics on this campus. After two
years in this position, we nave u.iauj
received our second letter, this one
from John Baker who stresses a point
we have also repeated.
"Several times I've tried to find
a place where I could shoot a few
baskets in the evenings unsuc
cessfully. The University just doesn t
understand me and doesn't realize
that I am here. The University just
does not realize it seriously lacks
many things.
"I haven't asked for much. I don t
want to take over the administration
building. I don't want to smoke pot
in ray room. 1 don't even want tree
tuition. I just want to shoot little tiny
insignifictnt harmless baskets. Now,
I ask you, is that so much?"
We don't think that is too much
to ask and, in thanking Mr. Baker
for his comments, we also ask why
can't intramural facilities on this
campus be improved the point
where they are just average?
There are several piaces where
basketballs can be tossed at hoops,
but due to the cooperation of the
Womens Physical Education depart
ment, these are unavailable to 85 per
cent of the student body.
Intramural director Ray Chatfield
and his predecessor Joel Meier realize
in what a pitiful corner this campus
will find itself in a few years unless
the well-thought out plans that are
collecting dust are implemented.
ww : 11
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r I t 1
Why should a traditional
club tie have the new
full fashion shape?
Only tha new more luxurious full
fashion shape (fuller under-the-knot.wlder
throughout) is right with
today's bolder shirt collars, wider
jacket lapels. It shows off to best
advantage the authentic British
club insignia and Imported silks of
Reslllo's outstanding traditional
clubs. Reslllo Traditional Neck
wear, Empire State Building, New
York. N.Y. 10001.
P.S. All Reslllo ties have the new
full fashion aliape.
Ben
Simons & Son
Lincoln
Brandeis vi's Store
Omaha
Whenever we press for more in
tramural space, we are looked on by
various persons, who shall remain
nameless, as if we are trying to com
pletely topside the boat. How long
will these outdated ideas continue?
We agree with Mr. Baker, and we
wish other persons would, too.
NU wrestling is finished for another
year as five or six persons on this'
campus will tell you. But before we
leave the sport of Coach Orval
Borgialli. we want to say thank you
for a job well done to the entire team
and 191-pounder Gene libal.
With his Nebraska career finished
and graduation approaching, Libal
was undoubtedly the finest NU
wrestler in the last seven or eight
years. He concluded his senior year
Saturday with a third place finish in
the 191-pound class at the Big Eight
meet.
Many times, he has been forced
to wrestle heavyweight and meet op
ponents outweighing him by as much
as 40-50 pounds. Despite these
obstacles, he has pinned two former
national champions while wearing NU
togs. It's champions like Libal that
give hope to a fading NU athletic
program.
The 16th annual University of
Nebraska Invitational Rifle Meet will
be held Friday through Sunday at the
Military & Naval Science Building at
14th and Vine Street with 30 teams
entered, making this the largest meet
in history, according to Jim McCabe,
meet spokesman.
NU will enter three teams in the
event featuring one of the best rifle
teams in the nation, the University
of Alaska sharpshooters from College,
Alaska, with Barbara DeSpain, prop
ably the top female shooter in the
land.
The meet starts af 2:30 Friday
afternoon and runs into the night.
Saturday and Sunday it will begin
at 7:30 a.m. and conclude at 8 p.m.
Some entered teams include
Missouri, Kansas State, Oklahoma,
Chicago Loyola, Creighton and South
Dakota State, McCabe said. NU stars
include all-conference shooters Alan
Anderson and Manfred Wunderlich.
Happy shooting . . .
Statistics can be deceiving.just look
at the Big Eight's final shooting
percentages and one might think
Nebraska had a championship
basketball team intsead o a squad
which tied for sixth place.
NU was second In team field goal
percentage with .447 and in free throw
percentage with .722 and third in re
bound percentages with .517.
Nebraska averaged 73.9 points per
game, while foes scored 76.3 per
outing.
Individually the final Big Eight
scoring figures look like this Cliff
Meely, Colorado, 24.9; Bill Cain, Iowa
State, 22.8; Dave Robisch, Kansas,
19.1; Dom Tomlinson, Missouri 17.8;
Gordon Topt, Colorado, 16.5; Aaron
Jenkins, Iowa State, 16.3; Jerry
Venable, K-State, 16.0; Marvin
Stewart, NU, 14.6; and Garfield
Heard, Oklahoma, with 14.3.
Rebounding charts show Cain with
14.3 per match, Meely with 13.9,
Nebraska's all-time single season re
bounding leader Leroy Chalk third
with 10.9, K-State's Gene Williams
with 10.8, Heard with 9.5, Jenkins with
8.4 and Robisch with 8.4.
Sport Magazine quotes UCLA
basketball coach John Wooden, as Ail
American Lew Alcindor is about to
graduate from the Bruin clan, as
saying in replying as to whether
coaching would be more fun when
Alcindor is gone: "I'll be glad when
I can coach to win again instead of
not to lose."
That sounds like the problems the
Milwaukee Braves had when they won
two consecutive pennants and the
problems of the National Basketball
Association's Los Angeles Lakers with
keeping peace in the family between
superstars Jerry West, Elgin Baylor
and Wilt Chamberlain. Wouldn't it be
nice if NU had difficulties keeping
ail its superstars happy??
Visita tion peti tion
plea, not ultimatum
continued from page 1
tion in the dormitories" in voting
defeat.
"This is the Nebraska to 'protect
our youth,' " Miss Harding said. "But
the more protected we are, the more
we become spineless, incompetent
ninnies.
"It is unrealistic and hypocritical
to say students can't decide their own
moral values when they have been
doing so every since they were old
enough to drive Daddy's car," she
aid- . .
MISS HARDING said that the
College Relations Director
co Sheraton-Park Hotel, Washington, D.C. 20008
Please send me a free Sheraton Student I.D. Card:
Name:,
Address:
WeVe holding
the cards.
Get one. Rooms are now up to 20 off with a
Sheraton Student I.D. How much depends on
where and when you stay.
And the Student I.D. card Is free to begin with.
Send in the coupon. It's a good deal. And at a
good place. .
Sheraton Hotels & Motor Inns (S)
Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inn. A Worldwide Service or rrt V
Regents were afraid of losing face
which would happen if there were a
sit-in, and thus the potential show of
strength could be "very effective."
Miss Conway noted that there is
sentiment for revision of visitation
rules among dormitory residents.
"This topic has been discussed all
year in the dorms," she said. "We
are for more relaxed home at
mosphere, and less in 'loco parentis.' "
Miss Harding said that for the last
few years, the liberalizing of such
rules has been "pounded down and
down." She cited examples of the
refusal to permit open houses in Abel
Hall.
Siefker said that the Associated
Women Students organization (AWS)
was a further example of control over
students' lives.
"That group doesn't make rules,
they just implement those of the ad
ministration,' he said. "It's more ef
fective to use students to suppress
themselves."
Miss Harding emphasized that the
organizers would prefer to have no
"direct confrontation," but wish to
force the Regents to an "extreme posi
tion." She also suggested that inclusion
of students and faculty on the board
would really help the problem of
communication that exists between
the Regents and the students.
Miss Harding said that students
would act to try for reconsideration
of the Regents' vote.
"We're not going to taka this lying
down," she said.
VCT777S
Continuous
TIT
mimi
432-1463
13th &P Street
"ONE
OF THE
YEAR'S
TEN BEST I"
.-Noll's A!prt
and Arthur Knight
Saturday Review
Vx3
mm
From 2 P.M. N
STARTS
FRIDAY!
"THE MOST
DAZZLING
DIRECTORIAL
DEBUT OF
THE YEAR!'
Time Miftin
MAVIt!ON
COLOKttl
Head
Nebraska
Want Ada
Current
'
Red Cross
to recruit
Americasi National Red Cross is
seeking college graduates who are in
terested in professional Red Cross
work. Miss Annabella Gorham, assis
tant director for recruitment, Midwest
area Red Cross Headquarters in St.
Louis, Mo., will be on campus March
26 for placement interviews with
graduating seniors.
Miss Gorham is interviewing tor the
following positions:
Women Clubmobile Recreation
staff for one year assignemtsn in
South Vietnam or Korea ;
Social worker staff in military
hospitals;
Recreation staff in military
hospitals;
Assistant Red Cross field directors
(men) at military installations world
, wide.
Interested seniors should register
for interviews at the University
Placement Office. Interviews will be
scheduled March 26 from 9-11 a.m.
and 1:304:30p.m.
Further information may be ob
tained by phone from the Lancaster
County Chapter, American Red Cross.
4Re-examination
opens channels'
Continued from Page 1
According to Ross, the
University has continually
re-examined itself and made
sure that all channels of
communication are open and
used.
"In 1964, we didn't sit
down and set up rules con
cerning demonstrations," he
said. "We, instead, viewed
the situation in a more
positive light.
"We have reached the
point, however, where this
type of behavior has become
so widespread that we would
be sticking our heads in the
sand if we didn't look at this
problem In the open," Ross
added.
The result of looking at the
"problem in the open" was
the formation of a committee
on student disruptions made
up of faculty, administrators
and students.
The committee has finish
ed its work and submitted to
the Student Affairs Com
mittee a proposal outlining
suggested action in the event
of a campus disruption.
"This proposal must be
approved by ASUN Senate,
University Senate and the
Board of Regents as well as
the Student Affairs com
mittee," Ross said. "It is
simply a policy
framework."
University President
Joseph Soshnik refused to
answer any specific ques
tions concerning Martin's
statement. He instead Issued
a general statement on
campus disruptions.
"Personal responsibility
carries with It an obligation
not to infringe upon the
rights of others. These
traditional concepts are
carefully enunciated in the
'Student in the Academic
Community ' document.
"The concept of free ex
pression and personal
responsibility are equally
important in an academic
community. The concept of
'due process of law' Is
simultaneously one to be
uniformly preserved," he
said.
Placement interviews
Wtdnnday. Mtreh It
BANK Of AMFRICA: A above)
HOWARD, NEEDLES, TAMMEN BERGEN
DOFF: B.S., M.S.-C.E.;
LOCKHEED-CALIFORNIA COMPANY (A division
of LockhMd Aircraft Corporation): B.S., M.S., Ph.D.
M.E., E.E., C.E., B.S., M,S.-Matn., Physics;
M A C Y S-M I S SO U R I -KANSAS DIVISION:
Bachelor's. Master's. M.B.A.-Bus. Adm Lib. Arts;
MAGNAVOX COMPANY: B.S., M.S.-Acctg., Ch.E.,
M.6., B.S., M.S., Ph.D.-E.E.i
PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS
STEWARDESS: All malors-Bachelor's preferred;
ST. JOSEPH LIGHT J, POWER COMPANY: B.S..
UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK: B.S., M.S.-Bus.
Adm., Agrlc;
Thursday, March wo
CESSNA AIRCRAFT COMPANY-INDUSTRIAL
PRODUCTS DIVISION: B.S., M.S.-Ag.E., M.E.;
EMPLOYERS MUTUAL OF WAUSAU: Bachelor's
Bus Adm., Econ., Acctq., Math., Lib Arts;
GOODYEAR AEROSPACE CORPORATION: B.S.,
M S , Ph.D.-E.E., Physics, B.S., M 5 ,-M.E.j
LOCKHEED-CALIFORNIA COMPANY (A Dlvlilon
Of Lockhoed Aircraft Corporation): As "bovej
MARVIN E JEWELL t, COMPANY-CERTIFIED
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS: Bachlor's-Bu. Adm.,
AGEIGY AGRICULTURAL CHEMICAL COMPANY:
Field Sales Representaflvt-Any Agriculture
Degrees;
SHOP
NEBRASKA)
WAV
DANCE
to the
Se.nJee EiieaeafAa
MIIUHW I UIIIIIW4
Saturday, March 22
Notional Guard Armory
Siward, Nebraska
a m
Movies
'
sjumi.hMi by Theater.
a.n, siu racai p.m. ron
Code ratings Indicate a volun
tary rating given to the movi
by tb motion picture industry:
(G) Suggested for GKNKKAL
audiences. (M) MATUKK audi
ences (parent discretion ad
vised). (K) RESTRICTED- er
gons under 17 not admitted with
out parent or adult guardian.
(X) iPanooa under 17 not ad
mitted. LINCOLN
CooperLincoln: 'Romeo & Ju
liet,' (M) 7:00. 9:30. Sat & Sun
day I'M, 4:30. 7:00. 9:35.
Varsity? 'Play Dirty', 1:00,
3:06. 5:13, 7:18. 9:24.
Stuart: 'Rachel Rachel," (M)
1:13. 3:13, 5:13, 7:13, 9:15.
Nebraska: 'University of Ne
braska Foreign Film Society',
7:00 & 9:00.
State: 'Duffy', 1:00, 3:03, 5:10.
7:13, 9:20.
Moon',
Joyo: 'The
(G) 7:10 & 9
Stalking
10.
OMAHA
Dundee: 'Funny Girl', (Q
every eve at 8:00. Wed., Sat. k
Sun.. 2:00 ft 8:00.
Cooper 70: 'The Shoes of The
Fisherman', G Every eve at
1:00; Wed.. Sat ft Sun.. 2:00 ft
8:00.
KOSMET KLUB'S
CAAAE
LOT
Tickets Available
at Union
Pershing Auditorium
or from Kosmet Klub Worker
Some helpful hints for those
who are very rich, very beautiful,
veryhip,elaboratelyoversexed,tuned
in, turned on, and bored to death.
Duffy
JAMES COBURN JAMES MASON
JAMES FOX 'SUSANNAH YORK
eMWTMfl
rv
ill
tt'ttnplav DONAID CAM ME 11 mo HARRY JOE BROWN JR. Product) t MARTIN HANUUI
-TECHNICOLOR- A COLUMBIA PICTURE
NEBRASKA
434 312
'12th 4 P Street
Continuous From
STARTS
THURSDAY!
2 ML
"A powtrlul hatr!na film! A nwcllmly Infimata mov!r
Stn Francitco ( ntmtn
"JOANNA" IS A FEAST OF SURPRISESI It is free, tender, life-loving,
creative and concerned about values, a milieu In which inter-racial
sexuality is a simpla fact rather than a rebel cause." m
IJJ xfv t . V j
K
PLUS.
Sptctal FvoturtK "TH! WORLD Of FASHIONS
YmiRDAY-TCDAYtHd TOMORROW."
.iiiuiuMLMwy .in n.i-i.jniniiiiii .mil ojh.,im miii hum; uiun urn., M't'i
TJSS ACCUIMEO MOTION PI CTUR -Jow WF AC CS"
. (X) NO ONE UNDER 17 ADMITTED
i W 1
n j
rum
V A
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Wash. wt. toak. hunt,
gqulnt, w3h, soak. cry Hff.
Contact lenset wtr d
ttgnod to b convenlqnc. And
they art up to a point Thoy'r
convenient enough to wear,
onco you o-' ucd to ttwi, btrt.
until ruccntly, you hud to ut
two or more diHurant lena solu
tion to properly prepare and
maintain contacts. You
needed two or three differ
ent bottles, lens cases, and
you went through more than
enough dally rituals to mnke
even the most steadfast Indi
viduals consider dropping out
But now caring for your con
tacts can be as convenient as
wMilng uiaiTi. Now Mwfe's ten
sine, from the makers ot Murine.
Lenslne Is the one lens solution
designed for complete contact
lens care . . . preparing, cleans
ing, and soaking.
s
Juct
a drop or
twool Len
slne bo to i e
you Insert
your lens pre
pares It tor
your eye. lenslne makes your
contacts, which are made ot
mmiarn njnnttna rnmnnhhla
. with your eye. How? t er
. sine Is an "Isotonic" so-
A lutlon. That means It's
I 1 mad to blend with the
eye s natural fluids. So
a simple drop or two
coals the lens, forming a
sort ol comlort zone around
1
Cleaning your con
tacts with Lenslne fights
bacteria and foreign de
posits that build up dur
ing the course of the day.
And for overnight soak
ing, lenslne provides a
handy contact canisScr on
CI
the bottom of every bottle. Soak
ing your contacts In lenslne be
twuen wearing penods assures
you ot proper lens hygiene.
Improper storage between
warnings permits the growth of
bncinria on your lensns. This Is a
sure cause of eye Irritation and, .
In some cases, It can endanger
your vlulon. Bactorla cannot grow
In Lenslne. Lenslne Is sterile, soil
sanitizing, and antiseptic.
Let your contacts be the con.
vonlonce ihey were designed to
be. The name of the game la
Lenslne. Lenslne, made by
the Muiine Company, uio.
eyou
out tor
contao