Snow removal crews launch winter offense 7 rfsr 1 J ..fit t 4fl. ?Ii?T Is if legal to ski on a two-way street? Cornhusker Co-op to go coed "After 2b years of providing all-male housing, Cornhusker Co-op is planning to become coeducational. Their new house at 23rd and U street, near the Acacia and Beta Sigma Psi houses, will be complete in May and will open coed facilities next fall. The idea to become coed was formulated last fall by Co-op president Dennis Demmel. He presented a report on the proposal to the Housing Policy Committee, which passed it. The Council on Student Life added their endorsement and it is now subject to review by the Regents. MEMBERSHIP IN Cornhusker Co-op is not selective. Anyone is allowed to fill out an application, according to Demmel. There will be three floors for living, one for women and the other two for men. In addition, there will be two housing directors, who according to the report will be either graduate students or full time faculty members. One purpose behind becoming coed is stated in the report as allowing students of the opposit sex to meet one another in a relaxed atmosphere. Another is providing for more informal interaction among its members. MEMBERS WILL be using the same stairways and lounging areas in addition to the same dining room. All must be full-time University students. Cornhusker Co-op is University approved housing that is student owned and operated. Therefore, freshmen are eligible. It is co-operative in the sense that all the members take a part in keeping it running. They are assigned work details on a rotational basis for different areas of the house. According to the report, this not only functions to keep the house in order but also creates better relationships between members. THE MEMBERS of the house choose officers and there is an executive council. Activities are co-ordinated in the house concerning athletic, social, educational and community events. One reason for the Cornhusker Co-op is to allow students to enroll at the University who would otherwise have difficulty meeting expenses. Living costs in the Co-op are about 25 per cent lower than the dormitories, states the report. - The precedent for co-ed living was set at Burr Hall on East Campus and has been followed by Schramm Hall and Centennial College. The experiment has been a big success, according to arry Pilger, chairman of the Housing Policy Committee. Anyone's objections to it are the result of ignorance, he added. Snow strands cooks; Jackman juggles menu The raging storm whipped towering drifts around the Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity house Monday night. The Fijis' two full time cooks were stranded miles from the cold ovens of the Fiji kitchen and about 7u members wondered trom where their Monday night meal would materialize. To the rescue: Scott Jackman, Fiji member. Responding to the old adage of necessity being the mother of invention, Jackman called on his experience as a cook last summer at the Ogullala Holiday Inn. A colossal culinary creation of pork chops, baked potatoes, tossed salad and cherry pie a la mode emerged from the Jackman kitchen. Of his choice of cuisine Jackman said, "It was all we had. We were lucky to have it." Jackman refused to take full credit for filling the collective Fiji stomach noting that Fiji housemother Mrs. Warren Andrews helped with the preparation. Fiji house members lauded Jackman's effort with '"better than usual-not as greasy" and "great; a real fine meal." "7HFLP ( LINE iv Ann nnn University ground crews Tuesday were busily digging out the University from 1 1 inches of snow and predicted that most of the student commuter lots should be cleared for Wednesday morning's classes. The University's Physical Plant employed 30 men and 15 pieces of snow removal equipment Tuesday to clear the snow that forced cancellation of classes all day Monday and most of Tuesday. However, dormitory parking lots were clogged with cars and the ground crews were not expected to start clearing those lots until Wednesday. Gail Gade, director of campus security and traffic, said Tuesday the snow plows will clear out the snow within a few feet of the cars in the dormitory lots so the vehicles can be backed out. On East Campus, crews spent most of Tuesday clearing roads and were expected to have most of the parking lots cleared by Wednesday. A Physical Plant spokesman said only a few commuter lots on the city campus would not be cleared for the start of Wednesday's classes. He said the metered lots near Selleck Quadrangle and the Nebraska Union and the small lots south of 17th and R will not be cleared until later Wednesday. The fairgrounds parking area had been cleared by Tuesday and the shuttle buses were scheduled to be in operation Wednesday. By Tuesday on the city campus, most of the faculty and staff lots had been cleared and the streets around the campus were open to traffic. Wednesday, Feb. 24 11:30 a.m. - Cornhusker Mar keting Club; Union noon - General Motors Scholarship Luncheon; Union 12:30 p.m. - Placement Office; Union Inter Varsity Christian Fellowship; Union 3:30 p.m. - Miss U. Of N. -Committee; Union 4 p.m. - ASUN Senate; Union 4:30 p.m. - Council for Ex ceptional Children; Union 5:30 Engineer Toastmasters; Union 6 p.m. - Special Services-Tu toring; Union Husker Honeys; Union Kosmet Klub Exec; Union 6: 1 5 p.m. - Red Cross; Union 6:30 p.m. - Masters Week; Union Kosmet Klub; Unoon Builders Exec; Union 7 p.m. - Builders; Union 7:30 p.m. - U. OF N. Wild life Club; Union Math Counselors; Union 8 p.m. - U.N.S.E.A.: Union Kappa Alpha Psi; Union Telephones: editor: 472-2588, news: 2589, advertising: 2590. Second class postage rates paid at Lincoln, Neb. Subscription rates are $5 per semester or $8.50 per year. Published Monday through Friday during the school year except during vacation and exam periods. Member of the Intercollegiate Press, National Educational Advertising Service. The Daily Nebraskan is a student publication, independent of the University of Nebraska's administration, faculty and student government. Address: The Daily Nebraskan, 34 Nebraska Union, University o' Nebraska, Lincoln, Nebraska 68508. i i f - FOR SALE Your golden words on a 3x12 BUMPER STICKER. $1.00, copies 25c, red. green, or white (30 letter max.) The Snide Co. Box 93, Route 1, Blaine, Wash. 98230 MISCELLANEOUS HELP WANTED Two Fuller Brush routes available earning $4-6 per hour. Guaranteed $2.05 per hour. 477-6814, 489-4729. Sewing and alterations. Call Pat Moore at 799 2615. WATCH & CLOCK REPAIR' CAMPUS BOOKSTORE' 13TH & R' PIZZA DELIVERY. Pizra King. 489-6541, 5520 South St. Quality personalized sewing. Plan spring fashions now. 475-1443. IX. .-wfi via V ? 1 rrfw v. eeMMK 4,! " - tt inM imhhmmt wmA Triiiiiiinuiiiiiriirii'aiiiiiiiiiii -.-- jam, KM Scott Jackman . . . necessity is the mother of invention. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1971 THE DAILV NEBRASKAN PAGE 7