WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1969 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN f: V : i I f ; it .1: pi hi :. hi -I '5 I. V I it . M v V1 : .. f . iu:iiHiiiiiiiiiiitlllllllllllllllUtllltllllll!llllllilll!llllllllllllllillllllllltllllll!lllillll!llll!fi giiiiMiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiHifimiiiiiimB: iminiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii iriimiii iiiiiiimmimuuin 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 rp tl I f : PC-'- f IC'l M 11 ZZx I t 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 How long will these outdated ideas continue?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! 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