The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, February 21, 1973, Page PAGE 7, Image 7

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    injinf ads
Greeting salutatlonsi . . . Where's
your green candy?
MISCELLANEOUS
DAILY NEBRASKAN WANT ADS
can be placed in person in Room
34, Nebraska Union, weekdays 8-12
and 1-5, or called in between 8-10
only at 472-2588. Cost is $.08 per
word, per day. $1.00 minimum.
Payment in advance preferred, but
phone orders may be charged.
Rates quoted are for cash orders or
charge orders paid within five
business days. Ads not paid within
five days are 50 cents additional.
Deadline for ads is 3:00 p.m. day
bafore publication. No refunds.
Complimentary ads may be run
only If error is brought to the
Nebraskan's attention the business
day after publication.
OQ
KfflOKE
10AE4
FOR SALE
Best Pipe Shop In Lincoln.
Thousands In stock. Cliff's
Smoke Shop, 12th & O.
Discontinued and floor model
General Electric Component
stereos & portable T.V.'s prices
reduced. Terms available.
Goodyear, 1918 '0'. 432-6521.
We've moved and don't need our
. new Signature Humidifier. Used
only one month. Mediteranian
Style. Sells originally for
$119.95. Best Offer. 475-0002.
New Hotpolnt, Avacado, Electric
Range. Used only three months.
Clean, Excellent Condition. Sells
for $ 1 69. Will sacrifice.
475-0002.
1971 KaiAaeakl F7
' condition.' 47&89'98 afte
Enduro. Good
r 6 p.m.
'69 Nova Sport Coupe, 307,
3-speed, Buckets, $1400.
489-0192 after 5 p.m.
'68 Triumph Bonneville. 47 Indian
chooper, rebuilt engine 1300 c.c.
476-8058.
'65 Ford Wagon. Radio & heater.
$250. 472-3191, ext 237.
Akal X 1 50 D Tape Deck. 7 inch
reel, Crossfleld. Bernard, 522
Harper Hall. 477-6061.
Four speakers: buy all or two. Two
corals, 2 mo. old, 10" woofer,
4" mid-range & 1 horn-type
tweeter; Two Utahs, 11 mo. old,
10" woofer, horn-type
mid-range, 2Vi" tweeter.
477-2050 or Rm. 232 Abel for
demonstration.
Garrard SL658 Turntable. Shure
M95E Cartridge. Nice price,
good condition. 477-631.
Garrard SLX-3 Turntable. One year
of careful use. Best offer. Call
488-9040 after 5:00.
Nearly-new 21-Inch Gitane
10-speed bicycle. Call Cheryl at
472-2802, 477-2867 evenings.
HELP WANTED
4 college men needed part-time.
$50wk. Also summer work.
488-4424.
Summer employment opportunity
available for Summer
Orientation Program. Student
hosts will be hired to work from
June 1 to Jluy 13. $500 plus
room and board. Apply at
Student Activities Office, Suite
200, Nebraska Union.
SERVICES
WATCH REPAIR All makes-also
Timex. Dick's Watch
Service-East side-Campus
Bookstore-at the Yellow Door.
Pregnant and distressed? Call a
friend . . . Birthright, 477-8021.
HOUSE OF FLOWERS 135 S.
12th. 432-2775.
BRIDAL SERVICE Will work as
consultant for all aspects of
wedding Including making &
designing Bride's and attendants
gowns. 434-9291.
Winemaklng supplies, concentrates
& equipment Reasonable prices
& courteous fast service.
Cbrnhusker Winemaklng
" Supplies. 467-1801. ' "
Students desiring free hlep on tax
returns come to UMHE, 333 N.
14th or call 475-7343.
Termpaper Arsenal, Inc. Local
Agent Call after 4:00 p.m.
799-2807.
THINK ABOUT IT!!
PEACE CORPSVISTA
are coming to
University of Nebraska,
looking for you on
March 1 2th
DR. STOAMGELOvij
or How I Learned To Stop Worrying
end Love the Bomb
Nominated for an Acadamey Award for Best Pic
ture of 1063, DR. STRANGELOVE is a bold and
funny anti war satire. Stanley Kubrick brilliantly pre
sents the prospect of nuclear destruction which is
turned into the comic reality of what happens when
military madmen press the wrong button. The film
stars George C. Scott, Sterling Hayden, Keenan Wynn,
Slim Pickens and Peter Sellers, who won an Oscar
nomination for his triple fole in the movie. Ending in
a symphony of nuclear holocaust, DR. STRANGE-.'
LOVE is another Kubrick masterpiece and one of the
,great films of the 60's.
Friday Febr. 23 ct 7:00 end 9:30 P.M.
Henzlik Hall Aud. 75c with Uni. I.D.
TERM PAPERS
Send for your descriptive, up-to-date,
128-page, mail order catalog of 2,300
quality termpapers. Enclose $1.00 to
cover postage and. handling.
WE ALSO WRITE
CUSTOM MADE PAPERS.
Termpaper Arsenal, Inc.
519 GLENROCK AVE., SUITE 203
LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024
(213)477-8474 477-5493
"We need a local salesman"
Theses, dissertations, and papers
typed andor edited for spelling
punctuation, form, etc. Quick,
reliable service. Reasonable
rates. 489-3283.
LOST
Lost: Old English Sheep dog, 4a
ma old, female, black & white.
Small white patch on left rear.
Wearing choke collar. 435-7949
or 477-6167. Reward.
One watch, In men's can Oldfather
1st floor. Self-winding, Sears,
Twistoflex Band, Reward. Call
475-1362.
PERS0NAL tj
This portion of the infinite void
filled courtesy of Free Theatre.
uu
EEED
They'll never be
CHEAPER!
See the varied
SELECTION
during our sale
of used paperbacks.
19$ -99$
LI
NEBRASKA
BOOKSTORE
1135 R
FOR RENT
Rooms 1 blk from campus.
Completely remodeled. Showing
Thurs. 5-9 p.m. or weekends by
appointment 475-80Sa
ROOMMATE WANTED
Wanted female roommate. Prefer
upper classwoman or Graduate
student. Own room. Beautiful
house. $62mo. 477-7834 after
5.
Wanted: female roommate to share
apartment near East Campus.
Cheap. 467-1316.
1 or 2 roommates wanted. No
gender preference. 4 bdrra.
house. Must like cats. 477-3668.
2 or 1 female roommates
wanted-good location & plenty
of room. 475-2429.
ORGANIZATIONS
Savings on Travel Abroad:
International Student ID's,
Youth Hostel cards, and "Whole
World Handbooks" on sale nowl
Overseas Opportunities Canter,
Suite 200 Nebraska Union.
NOW'S YOUR CHANCEII
Volunteers needed In areas of
tutoring, talent groups, all
community needs. Student
Volunteer Bureau, Suite 200
Union.
The Home Economics Chapter will
meet on Thursday, 6:30 at
C.Y.T. Library. Mrs. Sally Van
Zandt will have the program.
Charter Meeting of Undergraduate
Psychology Major Organization.
Thurs. Feb. 22 7:00, No Door
Prizes.
OVERSEAS J08S-summer or
permanent Australia, Europe, S.
America, Africa, etc. All
professions, $500-$1,000
monthly, expenses paid,
sightseeing. Free Info.
wrlte-TWR Co. Dept. D6, 2550
Telegraph Ave., Berkeley, CA.
94704. . -
FLY TO EUROPE HALF PRICE
Save up to $400 on special
round-trip charter flights
departing and returning this
summer. Write: DeBry and
Hilton Travel Services, Inc.,
2363 Foothill Drive, Salt Lake
City, Utah 84109.
A GOOD WORD
Kites rise highest against the wind. ,
(Winston Churchill) UMHE, 333
N. 14th St Welcome any time.
SWAPPER'S
MART
Want to buy, trade, or sell.
Advertise In Daily Nebraskan
Want Ads. Special Feb. 28, Mer.
1 & 2-"Swapper's Mart".
$.05wd, $1 minimum. Must be
paid in advance.
mmf . Til mini
(Ml
THE SCANDAL
OF SECRECY
John W. Gardner, Chairman
Common Cause
Former Secretary
of Health, Education and Welfare
One of the weird and nonsensical facts about our
government at all levels is that much of the pub
lic's business is done in the deepest, darkest secrecy.
Citizen,s assume that only questions of national se
'"curity'and some aspects of criminal justice are dealt
with in secret. Little do they know! "Most oTthe time
our public officials act as though the way they con
duct our business is none of our business.
In 1972 roughly one-third of the Senate Public
Works Committee meetings were held in secret. The
figure for the Senate Agriculture Committee was 59
percent, for the House Appropriations Committee
over 90 percent. The House Ways and Means Com
mittee, which drafts the laws governing every federal
tax dollar you and I pay, Is notoriously secretive. Se
curity is so tight that even the staff assistant of a Con
gressman who is on the Committee can't attend the
closed meetings. What are they hiding?
All sessions of congressional committees and
records ot all votes taken at such sessions should
normally be open to the public. Committees should be
allowed to close a meeting only for considerations ot
national security or Invasion of personal privacy, and
the procedure tor closing It should be carefully pro
tected against abuse.
In the Executive Branch, virtually everyone asso
ciated with national security acknowledges that the
system of classifying documents to preserve secrecy
has been badly abused all too often for the pur
pose of concealing bureaucratic error. And the zeal
for secrecy extends to every government agency un
der the control of the Executive Branch. Regulatory
agencies often meet behind closed doors, omit public
hearings, and suppress reports the public should see.
Of course, the secrecy involved Is only secret-from-the-public.
The special interest lobbyists know very
well what goes on In those hush-hush meetings. Quite
often they're right In there with the decision makers.
The only one who has splinters in his nose from bump
ing against closed doors is John Q. Public.
Now there is a resolution before the Senate
sponsored by Senators Humphrey (D Minn.) and
Roth (R., Del.) (plus 11 other sponsors) which would
open all Senate committee meetings. A bill (S 260) re
cently Introduced In the Senate by Lawton Chiles of
Florida and In the House (HR 4) by Dante Fascell, also
of Florida, would open all Legislative and Executive
Branch meetings except those dealing with national
security or Involving personal privacy.
Information Is power, and secrecy Is the most con
venlent means of keeping that power out of the hands
of the people. What the people don't know, they can't
object to.
It's time to change all that. And you can help. Write
your two Senators and your Congressman. Tell them
you want them to open up the system. Or join Com
mon Cause (2100 M Street NW, Washington, D.C.
20037) and ally yourself with 200,000 other members
in getting these changes made. We're going to give
this nation back to its citizens. The student member
ship rate is $7.00. Don't just stand there!
This space Is contributed as a
People Service by The Van Heusen Company
J
daily nebraskan
page 7
Wednesday, february 21, 1973