Welfare . . . j Cont 'ied from Page 1 La: ; in 1969 she came back 1 ) the University to work, and is now a participant in NU's federally-funded Triple-T program (Training Teachers of Teachers). As a community representative in the program she promotes its benefits to parents of elementary school children involved in TTT's experimental open-classroom method of teaching. Now she is earning money on her own, but the albatross is still around her neck. The government is threatening to cut NU's TTT funds. If she loses her position as a result, she says, "the experience I got in TTT won't help me find a job anywhere else." So Joan Wooten, at 36, still depends on welfare, but she can live with that humiliation. She has no money in the bank, but she can live with that anxiety. She can live with any problem, as long as her family remains active, clean, well-clothed, and together. Study in Guadalajara, Mexico The G uadalajsra Summer School, a fully accredited University of Arizona program, will offer July 5 to August 14, art, folklore, georgraphy, history, political science, language and literature courses. Tuition, $160; board and room, $155. Write Dr. Juan B. Rael, Office of Summer Session, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721. Isour image Qiinnfon Some people may have us wrong. It's possible. For instance, we Paulists are known for the printed and the spoken word. Books, radio, and TV. The glamorous world. But there is another, bigger world in which the Paulist moves . . . A dusty corner in Utah where Paulists offer material and spiritual relief to migrant workers. An area known as East Village and a Paulist who understands the meaning of "taking a trip." A Newman Center on a troubled college campus and a priest who is not a judge but an understanding ear and a mediator. Being a Paulist isn't easy. Being a Pauiist isn't glamorous. It's better. For more information on Paulist priestly spirit write to: IUt. DmiU C. CaaspfecH, C&.T. cftethctg Room 112 415 West 59th Street New York, N.Y. 10019 PAG' 8 W Rozman fund hits $600, more needed A legal fund drive tor Stephen Rozman has collected more than $600 but about ten times that amount is needed, according to Margie Griffin, one of the fund originators. Checks should be made out to the Rozman Legal Fund and sent to Edgar Pearlstein, Physics Department, University Lincoln enrollment sets new record Second semester enrollment on the Lincoln campuses of the University of Nebraska has reached a new record of 19,578, according to President Joseph Soshnik. The current figure is 952 more than the second semester enrollment at a comparable date a year ago. Additional late registrations of 1 50 to 200 are expected. The final second semester enrollment a year ago was 18,823. The second semester enrollment is always less than TO Written i Can Hear It NowThe Sixties JK LISTEN TO: (90.3) Wed. Feb. 17 3-6 p.m. taumu.! 'iics c. wwtco m at a of Nebraska, Griffin said. There will be a meeting in the northwest corner of the Union lounge Tuesday at 4:30 to discuss fund raising ideas, she announced. Bake sales, car washes and bazaars were being considered to raise the money, Griffin said. the first semester. The enrollment at the start of the 1970-71 academic year was 20,810. Here is a summary of the enrollment by components: Agriculture, 1,321; Arts and Sciences, 4,471; Business Administration, 2,009 Engineering and Architecture 2,161; Home Economics, 895 Teachers, 4,056 student s-at-large, 224 undeclared, 688; Dentistry 273; Law, 327; Pharmacy, 263 and Graduate, 2,890. and Edited by Fred W. Friendly and Walter Cronkite. lt THE DAILY IMEBRASKAN Monday 12:30 p.m. - Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship, Nebraska Union 2:15 p.m. - Ad-Hoc Comm. on Campus Disorder, Union 3 p.m. - International Open House News Conference, Union 4:30 p.m. - Tassels, Union 5:45 p.m. - Unicorns, Union 6 p.m. - Towne Club, Union 7:30 p.m.- Prayer & Praise Group, Union 7:30 p.m. -- A. S.U.N. Education Comm., Union 7:30 p.m. - Math Counselors, Union 8 p.m. - Sigma Delta Chi, Union 8 p.m. - A.A.C.S. Union 8 p.m. - Union - Bridal Show, Union ' 9:15 p.m. - Kappa Psi, Union tJ? SPONSORED .Miller oid MONDAY,, FEBRUARY 15, 1971 CSL studies discipline The Council on Student Life will hold an open hearing on Feb. 16 concerning the University's Discipline Code and Procedures. The hearing, which will be in the Nebraska Union from 2-5 p.m., is part of CSL's investigation of disciplinary rules and procedures on campus. Anyone may testify before the Council concerning discipline on "the University campus. In addition to the hearings, CSL will conduct other studies and confer with ASUN before drafting their final report. In other business, the Council received a motion that ASUN investigate police actions in campus activities. The motion will be considered at CSL's Feb. 19 meeting. Regular CSL meetings will be Friday at 2 p.m. in room 232 of the Union. The actual recordings of some of the most sorrowful and some of the most joyous events of the most explosive decade in the his tory of mankind. Hear over 75 historical record ings of the major social, political and cultural events of the 60's including the assassinations of John and Robert Kennedy, the first Moon landing, Bob Dylan, the riots in Watts, Newark, and Detroit (from the streets), the Cu ban missile crisis, The Beatles, reports from the Vietnam War (under gunfire), Martin Luther King, the Chicago convention demonstration and Woodstock. Hear these historic recordings narrated by Walter Cronkite, the man who makes history into news. And news into history. It took 3,650 days to make. And you can hear it now. BY: Paine