Freudenburg . . . Continued from Page 1 about. Educational life ought to bo about things like Pete Seeger singing and children laughing in the background," he said. He said he also sees the need for the university to pay more attention to the options of education, providing the greatest number of people with the greatest number of alternatives that would serve in ways helpful to them and to their growth. Teachers should raise the level of consciousness of the students in their classes and pay more attention to students' needs, problems and priorities, as well as to their own roles in helping in the development of a human being, he said. He said he thinks there are some dedicated instructors at UNL and some "professors of top caliber who want to make this a better place for students and a place for Nebraska to be proud of." At the same time, he said other professors are "just floating around." "One way or another, the University of Nebraska will nuke it into the 80s, though I doubt if with any flair or style," he said. Thounh ivesently working in the area of (:fiu dinHal irUwm, Freudenburg, in his last three yais, It, is U'im-, connected with ASUN, the UNL Lnvironmental Task Forco and the Residence Hall Association (RHA). He worked on the RHA visitation proposal two years ago as a rophomore when the Regents allowed dormitory students to have six hours of open visitation a flay. "That was one year the Regents did compromise," he said. "It is iionic the way they keep encouraging students to work their way through channels, but when students do propose any major change in policy, it is shot down. The Regents haven't exactly reinforced their words." He said he thinks the boycott by dorm residents of extended RHA hours on home football game Saturdays is an example of students' trying to improve their situation and the "archaic rules they have to put up with." 'The don 1 1 is the closest thing students have to home. As long as they're in the limits of the law, they should have a considerable say as to what they have the right to do at home,'' he .;aid. Tin. rcgenis are showing themselves not open to comimriicatiou. Maybe they are pacifying their constituents," He sees value in working within the system, but "not if it is just an exercise in futility." Freudenburg considers his work in student affairs a valuable part of his education, supplementing his integrated studies major. Since coming to Lincoln from West Point, Neb. he has changed his major from computer science to integrated studies in communication. "I have filled a number of functions as I have changed and grown while here," he said. "I was the product of a small-town Nebraska high school who found myself enthralled with what I saw in Centennial College-open minds, a lively sort of atmosphere and intellectuals who were not dry." He said his work in student affairs gives hirn more of a sense of being a student at UNL than most students have. "I am more a part of the campus and the student body and more aware that we're in it together and have to work together to make things better. That's what got me into student government in the first place." TIMES'S RUNNIN' OUT All those persons who have records or money remaining with ASUN from the old record store, please pick them up in the ASUN office, 334 Union by November 1. Any remaining after that date will become property of ASUN. springbok i S'"'":- ; 1 : n y gj A place for everything There's a place for everything when you let Spring bok Desk Toppers and Ensembles organize the desk in your bedroom, kitchen, office or class room, Lots of brightly colored feminine designs fo choose from, in sets of four items or individually. Pick a set for yourself, give another to a friend. pr f Sears ri&wrf 0i-n H- S M. nrl.iy - S.ituf'Mf 1135 H 432-0111 your own variety of looks with separates from Scars Junior Bazaar Now, wi, , on, you need a rsa t i le va r I rol . You need our mix ami malcli separates for a variety of new looks. I?ycl to match paslek I'ant-. I'elile .'-II, Average :-l.'. Tall 7-1.") S I .". V.'s! sizes S-M-L 10. Blouse Junior sizes 5-1 $10 ( Jf ARGK IT on Scars Revolving Charge SI lor AT SKAKS AM) SAVK S i f i J 1 1 1 ! t "ti ( ! 1 1 (in i tit i 'I'll nr Your Minify Hurl; Scars SIARS (i All WAV . . . 467-2.11 1 SIOKI HOURS Mom. I il SKAHS, HOF.BITK AM) CO. 10 ') S.ituiil;iy Suiiiliiy ') n o 12 (', "Elm's ook 2710 Vine Antiques-Books Collectables Sat. -Sun. 10 a.m. 6 p.m. t OCTOBER 28 ESHMEN A WHAT'S THIS ALL ABOUT? WHAT'S IT WORTH TO ME? WHO CAN GEY IN ON IT? TO WHO OFFERS 11 WHAT ELSE IS AVAILABLE FROM IT? WHO CAN I TALK TO ABOUT IT? . . a scholarship . . it pays all tuition, all textbook costs, laboratory toys, ami $100 per month, tax true. . . Fieshmen who enroll in Aero space Studies (AS 180) for the Spring somes tor. Sophomores who quality for the two year program. . . Air Force ROTC . . a commission as an Air f orce officer, leadership, travel, a private pilot's license; at Air Force expense while a student at "he University, financial benefits such as star ling pay of $10,281 got flying officers $( r74 if married and, after four yean, $1 7,055 ($17,50? it married). . Air Force ROTC (Department of Aerospace Studies) Hoom 209 M & N Built; .g, 4 W 8103. friday, October 19, 1973 !iily ru.'hr,i:,F.jti puqo