Davis may Michael Davis said Tuesday night that he has not yet received a letter detailing the reasons why the Board of Regents last August blocked his appointment as a philosophy instructor. The Regents, at their Monday meeting, announced they have mailed the letter but would leave it up to Davis discretion to make it public or not. The Regents said if Davis would make any part of the letter public, they would release all of it. "Maybe in tomorrow's mail," Davis said. He said he "was somewhat certain" he would ygw spoctarty:Th REUBEN A Never expect less than the best Always choose Keepsake Choose Keepsake Guaranteed, registered and protected against loss. f Wxfnasdayt 8 M V 7:30-:M ttr J indrawn Enjoy .tot5j lunch too. S?"- Choose ( ( wvS Wisely V OAKUM MM ttlBOIN BIN II I release letter make the entire letter public. At the Tuesday afternoon Faculty Senate meeting, a report from the Liaison Conv nuuee on uie ljvu waat was accepted with only a bit of discussion. The report said substantially the same thing as a document released last week at a public hearing the Liaison Committee The Davis case falls in the "area in the hiring process where subjective judgments must be made and where reasonable men may disagree," the committee said. The report continued: "We have concluded that the action was taken within the borders of the legitimate discretion of the Board and that there is no threat intended to the fragile fabric of academic freedom.'" In response to a question from the floor, Campus President Joseph Scshnik said that the acceptance of the report does not indicate Senate approval of any statements in the report. Rockets play to help huy 'Samly' Centennial College will spon sor a dance Saturday in the Cather-Pound cafeteria with Rick and the Rockets from 9 12 p.m. Funds from the dance will help purchase "Sandy in Con fined Space", a bronze statue for the Sheldon Sculpture Gar den. 4-1 1 Club to meet The University of Nebraska 4-H Club will meet at T p.m. next Tuesday in the C. Y. Thompson Library on East Campus. The meeting was origi nally scheduled for Oct. 13. MERCY - M For the Class V campus, scene ... LIFE STYLE HAIRSTYLES how you like your hair to took. Then we do our areat haircuttina to mv vour hair than nnrf Tett us thing -bounce, to us. v 9 and expression. Stop in 300 ISO Sham, W Irosfc A Blowtr drying, g Downtown. 432-1646. Gateway 434-5906. BEAUTY SAION White student at black college criticizes exchange program At least one student thinks his experiences with the ASUN exchange program with predominantly black Stillman College in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, may not have been worth his semester of time. Ron Whitten transferred to Stillman, a teachers' college with about 700 students enroll ed, in the spring of 1970. Whitten didn't have to go through much red tape to get into the program. "I filled out one form," he said. "The at titude was 'if you want to go you can go.' I dont think they had too many applicants that semester." Whitten noted that when he arrived at Stillman College "they weren't expecting me. They knew somebody was coming, but they didn't have my name." According to W h i 1 1 e n Stfllman's orientation program for white students like himself was rather incomplete. "They just tossed me right into general registration," be said. Stillman is "run like a high school," continued Whitten. ASUN can pick committees The appointment of student members to Faculty Senate Committees which have student representation is now the sole function of ASUN because of action by the Faculty Senate Tuesday. In the past, student govern ment suggested two names for every student vacancy on such committees, ASUN President Steve Tiwald said. Campus administrators then selected the actual nominee. "It got down to the question of who was picking student members of these com- - r . . r - before school starts. Talk "Their relevancy classes, like Black History and Black Literature, are all mickey mouse. I got all A's, and the three students who were there the semester before me got all A's. None of us are A students here." Whitten added that NU gfves credit for work done at Stillman, but not grades. The curriculum also left something to be desired, ac cording to Whitten. "The whole thing was covered in three mimeographed pages," he said. Roger Rinne is co-ehairman of the ASUN committee in charge of the Stillman ex change program. Rinne has participated ih the program himself. "I agree that Stillman is run like a high school," he said. "If you are after an academic education you might as well stay here." According to Rinne the pro gram is designed to enable white students to work with, relate to and live with black students in their own environment. mittees," Tiwald said. "Do students pick them or aid ministration?" Generally, but not always the administrators appointed the person ASUN considered to be the top nominee, Tiwald continued. So, with the approval of Tiwald, the Faculty. Senate recommended the change in appointment policy. Now, student representatives on Faculty Senate committees need only to be full-time students in god academic standing who have been ap proved by the ASUN Senate. In other action, the Senate Announced that the 1971 Summer Sessions wul begin June 7 and July 15, slightly earlier than last yea. Final registration for the summer sessions will take place during Regents' Continued from puge 1 $9.6 million. The Regents' orginal strategy was to separate the $9.6 mill km from the regular capital construction budget since the fnnds represent projects already ap proved by the Legislature. However, Gov. Norbert T. Tiemann told the University that it must put all its con struction projects in a single budget. In other action Monday the Regents: Ap roved $133,000 for remodeling and equipment replacement in the residence kalis. Most of the fnnds will be wed to renovate the main ranges of the residence halls. Directed aO University campuses to report at the December Resents meeting want U being none to Improve the quality of teaching. Approved Edwin B. Steer as professor and chairman ( "It was very successful in my case," Rinne added. Whitten is not sure if it worked in his case. "Some of the students there went out of their way to be friendly, and some of them went out of their way to antagonize me," he said. Whitten found that most of the discussion of current issues on the campus involved a minority of students, most of them from the north. On the whole "there was no academic atmosphere" at , Stillman, he said. "If most of them were in volved it wasn't apparent," said Whitten. "All that went on was fun and games." Whitten thinks an exchange program with a black school more up to NU's academic standards, such as Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, would provide a mora fruitful ex perience for ; exchange students. "That is dinifcely something we should consider, com mented committee co-chairman Rinne. the last two days of the final exam period. ' Re-elected 6y acclamation Robert Narveson, associate professor of English, to a se cond one year term as secretary of the Senate. It is traditional that the secretary, who handles the Senate's voCumnous paper work, be elected for two successive terms. i Heard that the Report of the Committee on Com mencement is "continuing a study in an attempt to arrive at a reasonable comprojmise in the matter of graduation ex ercises predicated on the changing environment of the University community." The next Faculty Senate meeting is scheduled for Tues day after noon. Nov. 3, at the Nebraska Center. action electrical engineering, effective July 1. 1971. Stenr is currently an associate professor of elec trical engineering at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Endorsed a constkuthiaal amendment on the Nov. 3 general election ballot which would nutke revenue bond financing for dormitories and other student facilities clearly legal. Agronomy club trips out Three Agronomy Club members- are attending the National Future Farmers of America convention in Kansas City, Oct. 13-15. President Charlie Hav licek, Jim Reeder and Ken Brums will present a slide show and the .Agronomy Ca reers Display. ', PAGE 2 THE NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 14, 1970