i n i win ii m i in m m ill m miwiiipniiiiwii m imm ninminwMMMwuHi - - - - - - . . ,,. . .... . i Mni nn wi,ii-i-fiVHrfW?lt'iff"fflr"ff -"rfr-nr'-fT't '-f , " -0?- -w.wtf.r, -KvwatotakViiAyi Faculty Senate. . Continued from page 1. faculty senate in the budgetary process, existing committees can do the job. The report urged the academic planning committee to take the leadership in advising the administration on such matters as capital construction and strengthening new academic programs. The report urged the liaison committee to take the leadership in advising on faculty salaries and fringe benefits. THE SENATE directed each of the two committees to designate a member to act as a coordinator of that committee's budget advisory efforts with the other committee and the senate. The senate unanimously approved the annual reports of the academic privilege and tenure committee and the research council. NU department change curricula " i (tftL : r a READ DAILY NEBRASKAN WANT ADS Assistant Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S) John Janovy said one of the more important changes in second semester's A&S curriculum is the addition of a course "Survey of Slavic and East European Civilization." Janovy said the course will be listed in the history, geography, economics, political science, and Germanic and Slavic languages departments. THE NEW COURSE will be listed in the five departments as No. 68. Over 20 curricular changes FRESHMEN: nine 0 9 0 i iniversitv bookstore V MSm - w m E ttMii.iiiifliiiiiiiiaMiMi are made per month according to Janovy. They can include simple changes in course name, description, number of credit hours. Other changes could be the adding or dropping of courses. For the first time, the department of computer science will come under the College of Arts and Sciences. THE COMPUTER science department is currently re-evaluating it's introductory offerings "to better serve students with different types of needs," Janovy said. The special topics course numbered 198 is being used by more departments according to Janovy. An ecology oriented course is offered in biology and several special topics courses are planned in physics and history departments. Among the new courses approved by the Arts and Science Curriculum Committee are "rnysics ot Music and "Indians of Contemporary North America." THE EXTENSION division will return Japanese to its course offerings. A geography course "Quality of the Environment" is also planned. Two graduate courses in geology will be offered for the first time. They are "Ground Water Geology" and "Hydro Geology." Janovy also noted that Zoology 10 will be available without a laboratory for three credit hours. ' AMONG THE proposals which the curriculum committee is scheduled to consider for possible new courses are: The Arts Today, Anthropological Approach to Indian Education, Philosophic Classics, Introduction to Plains Archeology, Ethnology and Museums and Our Physical Environment. Regents subcommittee begins work on housing by Bill Smitherman Work of a Regents subcommittee set up to consider solutions to the UNL married student housing problem is scheduled to begin in November, according to Regent Edward Schwartzkopf of Lincoln. Schwartzkopf, who chairs the subcommittee, said it will have representation from several areas. The sub committee will have student input as well as input from the community and the Lincoln Housing Authority. Though he did not give details on how representatives from the community would be chosen, Schwartzkopf said they would be voting members of the group. ASUN President Steve Fowler said student members of the subcommittee should be selected next week. Regents John G. Elliott of Scottsbluff and Robert Prokop of Wilber will also serve on the subcommittee, Schwartzkopf said. "We know that a problem exists," he said. "What we are concerned with now is finding answers. We want to attack the problem and find solutions to it." Schwartzkopf said it is uncertain when the subcommittee will have a report ready for the Board of Regents. It will depend on the depth of the report, he added. In an Oct. 13 letter to Lincoln Mayor Sam Schwartzkopf, NU Director of Institutional Research and Planning Harry S. Allen said the purpose of the subcommittee study is to "investigate and report back on alternate ways in which NU might partially contribute to the solution of low-income housing." Among the ideas to be considered by the Turn to page 12. C-OCKjbu.A' 5-10 Speeds in stock r 222 No. 10th-432-9408 SALES SERVICE PLANNING A PARTY or HAVING A MEETING? have it at... PRIVATE PARTY OR MEETING ROOM SMALL OR LARGE GROUPS POPULAR PRICES CLOSE JO CAMPUS here' Johnny's Restaurant 17th and & M St. serving breakfast from 7:00 A.M. open nites till the wee hours PAGE 2 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1971