THE DAILY NEBRASKAN FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1969 PAGE 4 Op inions vary on role he played by chancellor to ., ' Continued from page 1 History Professor L. E. Am brosias commented that the chancellor is in a position to gt an overview of the three campuses and the elements within them. He can coordinate activities and ' eliminate overlap of Uni versity offerings, he said. " ' The chancellor must also foster good relations with the Unicameral and the people of the state, he continued. His Black coeds vie for beauty crown ..The Afro-American Col legiate Society is sponsoring . the first Miss Black Nebraska Coed Contest and Dance Nov. 1 at 7 p.m. in the Nebraska Union Ballroom. Sixteen freshmen and sophomores will participate; there are nine contestants from the University of .Nebraska, two from Nebraska Wesleyan, one from Doane College and four from the University of Nebraska at Omaha. Tickets are now on sale and donations are needed. This contest and dance will be the first major attempt to raise funds for minority ..... group student scholarships. Music will be provided by .'.,"The Imperials." Items Offered 1917 Honda 450. Excellent condition. Bolt otter. 477-7651 alter 3 p.m. Wedding dres complete with train and veil. Also bridesmaid' dress, par. feet condition 423-ov. Personals Roommate to share two-badroom house. Near east Campus. Phone 464-3369. Found ladles wrlstwntch. Identify. Re turned tor cost ol this ad. 45 4641. A New Wind Nov. 12 Male college student to share living quarters, I bedroom furnished duplex. $60 Including utilities 432-3044. Resoorch? Let Comptad analvie your data. Complete data processing and statistics! servles. P.O.' Box 1781. La Jolla, Calif. 92037. 714-459-3831. Alterations 5 p.m. It repair, call 423-6576 after Will do typing In my home. Call 434-3932. Help Wanted Wanted: part time evening host; pply tn person, Clayton House Restaurant 432-0333. Wanted: night clean up. Anply In person. Clayton House Restaurant 432-0333. College men, local corporation needs nine men, Flexible hours, 48M414. LINCOLN VV-fA 434-1 7421 54th & 0 Street . ..... VjjYsX pptx'ttyjtwti is W U1 BUTCH CASSCV AND Tl THE SUNOflNCf WO HNEBRASICA starts todayi VCt TVJ 432 3126 FM. SI Till I P.M. THEN $1.50. XjsX !2lh&P Street UNDER 14, SOc ANYTIME! FLY INTO 20 YEARS WILD EF.' ESS! O Srt MtWK TW MO MM VMOIM WMt mvmt hum wxf r SOLOI W CM.UXI job also entails relating the University to these groups so that they will know why it is essential to support the University. He mentioned that students are important in the chancellor's job of coordina tion. "The chancellor must be willing to work with all University groups," he said. Sociology Professor Alan Booth also said that the chancellor must relate the University to the community. However, he added, this in cludes the national and in ternational community. The chancellor has responsibility for obtaining many of the resources necessary to operate the University, he said. These include special education pro grams, research projects, top personnel and money. Booth said that the chancellor also has a role of coordination within the University. However, other administrators should bear the brunt of this job, he add ed. Another student said that the Chancellor must make University decisions since he Is the chief administrative official. However, he should work with the University community in making these decisions, he added. The chancellor is much like any president, the student said. He should listen to the views of students and faculty and they should listen to him. Jamie Traudt, a political science major, said the chancellor must see that the University moves In the direction that will provide the best possible education for the people of the state of Nebraska. "It is also important that The Ruppert's Rexall Pharmacy Poverty Prevention Program 10 discount off all regular priced merchandise Easy walking distance. 4 blocks South of campus. Free delivery on purchases over $5.00. TONIGHT at HURRY! CONTINUOUS SAT. m , the chancellor look closely at the University's position in society and determine how it can be most effective in serving the students and the community which it affects," he continued. Communication is goal of Cabaret by Diane Wanek Nebraskan Staff Writer To make a human rela tionship meaningful through communication will be the main theme of this year's first cabaret. Cabarets originated in Europe as a form of enter tainment. The German cabarets were satires and parodies, and the French cabarets were plays and music. The American cabarets were set up so the audience and the performer could not communicate. Charlie Armstrong's cabarets are set up to enter tain, but they are also set up so the audience and the performers can com municate. Armstrong produced four cabarets last year, which were judged a great success. The first was Cabaret '68, the second was a Hate Week cabaret, the third was an In ternational Cabaret and the last was a Rennaissance Ca baret. The cabarets are put on "an act of faith by the Nebraska Union staff," said Armstrong. Cabaret, Volume II, which wiiU be held in the South Crib Sunday Nov. 2 at 7 p.m., will N 7:15 & 9:20 PJVU 4th WEEK! SUN. FROM 1 PJW. Traudt added that the chancellor should be sub. jected to periodic reviews by the University community. "He should not have a blank check to do whatever he pleases," he said. deal basically with person-to- person communication. Its purpose, said Charlie Armstrong, coordinator for the cabaret, is "to make ideas meaningful, to make an idea an experience." The cabaret will be set up physically iso communication will be not only possible, but inevitable. No matter where the people are they will be in range of a performer, Armstrong said. Armstrong will be em phasizing American culture blue grass, rock and roll, jazz, impromptu theater, and psychedelic music. "When it comes dawn to the modern cultural revolution It started here, it is here." he said. Bruce Hiller, the author of the play "the Bread Also Rises," will be master of ceremonies for the cabaret. Stuart Forrest, a Centen nial College scholar, will read his poetry for the caba ret. An impromptu theater group called "Stage Left," who have performed at Der Und Stein, will perform. The String Ticklers, who are members of The Friends of Old Time Music, will play some true blue grass music. IT'S vj 1J -i j ij H:" . Wnv Aw: (II i t ; La 17 .-,J .j-3l I ay r i n ) ntr I J j l V ! ;rM!Sv ,11 h i . H'& i J 0 - Mk' -T- I JJ h) -J- . :xJ Engineering Graduates: Put yourself in our place... . . . and you will find the natural gas industry offers you immediate responsibility and a wide-ofen future. "Our place" is a 10,000-mile-long natural gas pipeline system plus a sophisticated communications network stretching over ten states from Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma to upper Midwest consumer areas. Our home office, with about one-fifth of our 2200 employees, is in Chicago; there are three production offices in Texas and many operational units along the pipelines. At NGPL, you will work with other highly-trained people who specialize in agricultural, chemical, civil, electrical, industrial, mechanical and petroleum engi neering. But you will never get lost In a crowd. Our Friday, Oct. 31 Nebraska Union 12:30 p.m. Placement 1 p.m. Philosophy Dept. "Prof. Sandanaga" 1:30 p.m. A.Ph.A. 7 p.m. MOVIE: "Wait Until Dark" 7:30 p.m. Inter-Varsity Christian Fel lowship 9 p.m. MOVIE: "Wait Until Dark" Feminine touch added to Review Kosmet Klub's annual Fall Review will be held November 1 at Pershing Auditorium. "I think the addition of girls to our Review will add an extra light touch this year," Walt Wood, fall show chairman, said. Previously Kosmet Klub has been an all male effort. The show will consist of six coed skits competing for the award of best "Ludicrous Legend" this year's theme. Travelers Acts, presentation of Kosiinet Klub scholarships and the announcement of the Nebraska Sweetheart and Prince Kosmet will also be part of the show. Students may vote for Nebraska Sweetheart and Prince Kosmet during in termlssion at the performance. Student ID's must be shown for balloting. Films scheduled Two films, "Great Expec tations" and "The Four Faces of Caesar" will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Fri day in the Abel Hall North Lounge. Admission is free. Spiro spoof parallels Paul McCarthy mystery Opinion by Mike Barret Nebraskan Staff Writer The rumor that Vice President Spiro Agnew died last summer and is being impersonated by an Agnew look-alike is sweeping college campuses and high schools. The bizarre myth is also popular in Washington, but administration spokesmen claim that Spiro is alive and denouncing hippies at a , swank desert resort .in California. Study groups are springing up across the nation to analyze the mysterious,' unusual, and tantalizing clues that supposedly in dicate Agnew's death. According to the story, the real Vice President hasn't been seen since the Republican National Con- Student loans okayed Los Angeles, Cal. (CPS) At least for the time being, UCLA students enrolled in a philosophy course taught by avowed Communist instruc tor Angela Davis will receive academic credit. Chancellor Charles Young ordered the s c h o o 1 's registrar to accept credit for Philosophy 99. At the same time, he warned class mem bers to check with appropri ate department head to make sure their academic status will be protected in case UC Regents de-credit the course. Early this fall, the Regents decided to fire Miss Davis because of her alleged af filiation with the Communist Party. On Oct. 20 a Superior Court Judge in Los Angeles ruled the firing illegal. The Regents however, are ex Thursday, Nov. for time and vention. In August of 1968 Spiro-look-alike contests were held and three finalists were selected (Ray Milland, Mickey Mouse and Ed McMahon), but no winner was ever announced. According to proponents of the theory, the first clue was from the vice-presidential Inaugural coloring book. A picture of the Inaugural ball shows Adminstration members standing around a half-filled punchbowl. The icecubes spell "Spiro R.I.P." Another photo in the book shows Agnew next to the President but the President's back is turned to him and there is a hand raised over Agnew's head a symbol that many regard as an anc ient Greek sign of death. Believers ask why Agnew pected to seek reversal of the court decision. Upon hearing of the ac creditation, Miss Davis told the campus paper, the Daily Bruin, that she had not ex pected the Chancellor's act ion, because he has been forced under a lot of pressure from the Regents. Robert Singleton, director of the Afro-American studies Center at UCLA and chairman of the Angela Davis Defense Committee, commended Young for "finally showing the leadership he should have shown in the first place." "The battle is not over," he said. "The Regents will con tinue to harass whomever they consider unfavorable. It is a very unfortunate thing for the black community." business demands individual talents and our Company rewards individual achievements. At the present time, about 80 of our management are engineers. If you are creative enough to welcome the challenges of increasing market demands and expanding gas technology, our place is the place for you I We would like to talk over your career plans with you. Write Chuck Rupe in Chicago to arrange an inter view. Or sign up for an on-campus interview on: 6 Contact your placement office location. nGP NATURAL GAS PIPELINE COMPANY OF AMERICA 122 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago, Illinois 60603 An Equal Opportunity Employer makes so few public ap pearances and why at each of the rare occurences there is always a secret serviceman holding a left, handed Greek mandolin. At still another event, the first triumphal return of the President after a world tour, Agnew was the only member of the reception committee to fall and cut his nose on the runway. Agnew's last speech men tions eight conspirators 33 times. The book of Revela tions chapter 8, verse 33, reads: "Let the many, tongued oppressors slip quietly from the earth." The administration's latest official photo shows Nixon in black, as an undertaker, Billy Graham as a religious figure, Mrs. Nixon as a gravedigger and Anew with black suit and white socks, like a Grecian corpse. Clue seekers also point to three letters, "BIS" for "Bunch of Impudent Snobs", a favorite Agnewism for protesters, and a number, 2,116 (the number of mistakes and retractions Agnew made during the 1963 campaign. The numbers, un scrambled, give a Dover, Maryland telphone number, which is to be called during the middle of the day. Concerned students and political scientists, convinced by the unusual string of coincidences, give instruc tions on what to say. "Ask for the Greek Lyre and say the ritual phrases 'parental control and 'fake intellectuals' and you will get a one way ticket to Dover and be transported to Spiroland." V U