The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, September 21, 1970, Page PAGE 3, Image 3

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    University has 2
veterans groups
Students wfth previous
military service have a choice
between two veterans
organizations on the University
campus.
A service and socially
oriented group, the Student
Veterans Organization, and an
anti-war group affilfated with
the Nebraskans for Peace,
Veterans for Peace, are active
on the Nebraska campus.
Beginning its third year, the
Student Vets Club provides in
formation and assistance to its
eighty-plus members.
Dan Cuda, Student Veterans
president, said that the club
has developed a book exchange
and test ffle, and presently is
working on a loan fund for stu
dent veterans. Smokers, keg
parties and community service
projects round out their ac
tivities. ' Veterans for Peace, ac
cording to president Mike
Wilson, informs people that
"every veteran that comes
back from Vietnam isn't a flag
waving chess pawn."
The group wants to help
draft-age men with selective
service problems and talk to
citizens about the war. "What
vets think has a special mean
ing because people say, 'Well,
you've been there, " Wilson
said.
Vets for Peace has ten
members, mostly Vietnam
Coupon
(clip)
Good for on
5c cup of coffee,
tea or cokt
jHintrii fi Par?
1123 R
Void after 9-21-70
Student Vets!
Get acquainted with the
N.U. STUDENT
VETS ORGANIZATION
Smoker at the LEGION CLU3
5730 "O" St.
Tuesday Sept., 22nd.
8:00 P.M.
veterans, including a law stu
dent and a graduate assistant
in sociology. Both groups have
booths in the Union and wel
come veterans from all races
and both sexes. Neither has any
blacks now, but the Student
Veterans Organization does
have one woman. Its members
ages range from 22 to 25. Most
are married.
Steve Timm, Student Vets'
membership chairman, points
out that his club is not political.
"All opinions on the war are
found within the group," he
said.
ASUN committee
interviews set
All full-time students inter
ested in ASUN and other com
mittee appointments must sign
up for an interview time out
side Room 335, Nebraska Un
ion, or call 472-2581 by 6 p.m.
Tuesday.
Appointments will bo mad for:
ASUN committees Human Riplits, Con
stitution, Stlllman, Legal Rights and
Faculty Evaluation;
Faculty Senate committees- Intereol
logiate Athletics, Calendar and Exam
inations, Commencement, Convocations,
Duplication of Courses, Grading, Hon
ors Convocation, Libraries, Scholarships
& Financial Aids, Scholastic Appeals,
Student Suspension, Human Rights,
Parking AoDoals and Perklnd)
Others: Electoral Commissioner, Stu
dent Tribunal, Council on Student Life,
Pub Board, Union Board, Housing
Policy, ROTC Advisory, the Standing
Committee on Student Organizations
and the ASUN Treasurer (paid posi
tion). technicolor
MP
I- h
Grads9 meeting Tuesday
GSA plans constitution
The Graduate Student
Association (GSA) planning
committee will present a
preliminary constitution for
consideration by all of the
University's graduate students.
A meeting for this purpose will
be held in the Nebraska Union
at 7 p.m. Tuesday.
The GSA has been in opera
tion since last May. In a
meeting then 44 graduate
students, representing two
thirds of the University's G6
graduate departments, selected
a 12-member steering com
mittee. This committee drafted
the organization's preliminary
constitution this summer.
"The organization was
formed because graduate
students want a louder and
more organized voice," said
John Stone, graduate assistant
In Concert
Thurs., Sept. 24
0 p.m.
U of N Coliseum
33-00 advance
$3.50 at door -.
Ticket sales begin Sept. 14 in Nebr. Union
No chairs
Public invited
Prwnfcd by th Nobrtk Union Concert Commute
in the speech education
department and temporary
chairman of GSA. "We want to
be able to go to the Graduate
Council with more than just our
individual gripes."
Stone said a coordinated,
logical approach to problems
would be a first for Nebraska
students. Old problems such as
overly - burdensome teaching
loads and insufficient contribu
tion to course requirements
could be more effectively eval
uated and dealt with by a uni
fied body, he added.
The association's aim, he
continued, is to have complete
representation from all
graduate department.
Stone hopes for a large
turnout from among the
University's 3,300 graduate
students at Tuesday s meeting
"We are not going to adopt a
constitution," he said. "We're
going to talk about what this
preliminary one needs.
"We can't claim to be
representative cf graduate
students unless they know what
we're doing," Stone continued.
"We don't want to railroad this
constitution. We want a lot of
discussion."
The GSA chairrnnn said that
the faculty and administration
have given the fledgling
association outstanding suppori
so far. "We are not out to
patronize the administration."
Stone said. "They legitimately
want to know our problems. We
hope to be able to tell
them."
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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1970
THE NEBRASKAN
PAGE 3