r Wesleyan students protest tenure decision About 100 Nebraska Wesleyan University students came near to occupying the school's administration building in protest late Monday afternoon. The students' threats came at a rap session after their efforts to overturn the provost's tenure decision on English teacher Nancy Wolf seemed ineffective. The recently formed Coalition for Faculty Justice invited faculty members and NWU president Vance Rogers to discuss the situation with students in the Campus Center lounge. Rogers said he had just returned from out of town and had only recently been made aware of the controversy. The English department vote was 6-1 in favor of retaining Wolf, the one dissenter being department head Prof. Harold Hall. Students pointed to the 6-1 vote in calling for the provost to reverse his decision. According to Robert Battle, editor of the NWU student newspaper, The Wesleyan, and member of the coalition's steering committee, Hall sent out 26 questionnaires to Wolf's former students for evaluation of her teaching ability. He said that of the 26, 10 were returned. The content of the letters can only be released by Wolf, he said, but students questioned the validity of the sample. The editor said Wolf, who has been at NWU six years, has not made any public statement yet. Rogers said it will be up to her to request an investigation by the Faculty Affairs Committee if she wants one. Monday was the fourth meeting of the coalition. The 100 students were less than half those who attended last Wednesday's meeting, but those present seemed determined to get some kind of action. Bartle urged students who had been in Wolf's classes to write their own letter to Hall and relate their opinion's of her ability. Rogers indicated that he had many fetters in his office already, and that he was open to objective evaluation of the situation by students. The majority of statements indicated that many were bent on sitting-in at the administration building. One girl said she thought they were not being taken seriously. When students seemed about to head for the building, Rogers asked students if they couldn't agree to some kind of a time table for reconsidering Wolf's case. The students agreed to wait for Hall's decision, which Rogers said he would request by 10 a.m. Wednesday. Rogers said a final decision would be made by 4 p.m. Wednesday. The meeting broke up leaving students apparently temporarily satisfied. A petition is being circulated by students calling for Wolf's reinstatement. A resolution passed by the coalition was also read at the gathering, recommending Wolf be retained and that students have a voice in tenure decisions. Hall's recommendation will be considered when the NWU Board of Governors meets Feb 10. New voters schedule Organizers7 Conference7 Peterson begins I eave-of -absence Tuesday mornhg, for the first time in more than 20 years, Wallace C Peterson did not have an office to go to. The 50-year-old U.S. Senatorial candidate, an economics professor at the University of Nebraska, officially began a four month leave-of-absence without pay to devote full time to his campaign. Theodore W. Roesler, a long-time UNL economics professor, is taking over chairmanship of the economics department. 1-1 1x14 Color Bridal Portrait with 16 Color Candids in Album 2 Parents' Albums 12 Each Call Us For Spring Formal Photography DON MANKE PHOTOGRAPHY 70th & Vine 434-4050 The Nebraska Youth Caucus will hold an "Organizers' Conference for New Voters" Feb. 19-20 at the Nebraska Union. The conference, which will be open to the public, will feature all shades of the political spectrum, according to Acting Chairman Wayne Werning. The Caucus is a bi-partisan organization for youth which will focus on voter registration, delegate selection and party and election reform. It was an outgrowth of the Emergency Conference for New Voters held in Chicago at Loyola University in December. Werning, a junior at Concordia Teachers College in Seward, said the conference will focus on the ' development of useful political skills. Werning said that there would be a general session where delegates can discuss issues and possibly pass resolutions and statements of policy. He said that the conference "should be more representative than the one held in Chicago." To assure this representation, he said that conservatives are going to be specifically invited. Noting that the young people of Nebraska could have in past years significantly changed the state's political make-up, he thinks that the newly enfranchised citizens, if organized, can be a powerful bloc. Zumberge Continued from Page I assume the role of parent to the student (the concept of a loco parentis). Zumberge compared the Board of Regents allocating funds to ASUN to the situation where a father gives his son an allowance with restrictions on how its spent. The movement of campuses has been away from in loco parentis, Zumberge said, and universities should "get out of the business of playing mamma and papa." He suggested that ASUN should devise a system where they could levy taxes as a legislative body, on students for ASUN programs. "The price you would pay is to respond to students as electorates," Zumberge added, which might make the students more interested in student government. Obtaining revenue from a source other than the Regents would avoid "the annual ball game of seeing what you can get by the Board of Regents," he said. Zumberge told CSL members that he would like to see the University remove itself from control of extracurricular activities such as housing and a student newspaper. A more natural cljmate for out-of-classroom education would be fostered for students and faculty if it wasn't "manipulated from the top," he said. A veteran of many Antarctic expeditions as a glaciologist, Zumberge said he will continue to pursue activities in the polar regions. He is currently helping plan a new international expedition to the Antarctic, he added, and the headquarters for planning wil! be at UNL. Next Tuesday, CSL will meet with Samuel I. Fuenning, medical director of the University Health Center, to determine why a new policy of issuance of birth control pills was adopted. The first half hour of the meeting will be open to hear statements from the audience. recycle your daily nebraskan vMiiifife VIS XT FOR THE YOUNG BUDGET Beautiful styles! Brilliant diamonos! Budget prices! Easy credit, of course. ROYALTY t300 ALSO TO SOO WEDDING RING 7.S0 MAN'S ISO AUFHAMS ALL UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA EMPLOYEES TEAMSTERS LOCAL 594 PUBLIC EMPLOYEES ALL EMPLOYEES WELCOME TO MEETING SATURDAY FEBR. 5, 1972 at 2:30 p.m. LABOR TEMPLE 4625 "Y" St. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1972 THE DAILY NEBRASKAN PAGE 3