V" ' V " " - '1 - . ' doily nebroskon VofoO. Ne E.1 ,or t,.., a,,;,,.." o if"' l"M"r Ml"v The Daily Nebraskan s ,.,. m .. m.,.1aqod by students . ho Un.ve-s.ty of Nebraska Lin,o n. lt 'v cm ro'a.v independent of the U-i vers ty faculty, ailm n stration ami u,,um ,,0(ly The Daily Nebraskan ; pub. shed t,v th p.,i,. ons Commune on Monday, Wednesday. Thursday and t-r day tl , o.iqhoat the t.H and sp' ny semester except ho.idays .mi) v.k ., i Copyr.qht 1973 The Daily Nebraskan M.,,- may M -t,pr .,,, -V , ",UM ' a"nouteo to Daily Nebraskan, except. ooi.ond class postage paid at i. n oin. h,.,,si.., Address The Daily Nebraskan 34 ,,sk ,, unoni4:h , R St'L'Hs Lincoln Nt'h' 68008 Tt"ephnr e 40;' 4." -",R8 .rig Gel your Volkswagen pointed FREE! You can earn e.'is : t fnr ooir,g nearl r - ..: paint your car REE. .r : . for dnviny j; afo rui , it to i:. for !' e !..:- :o, , ,. f;v. Beellebea'de of , : - 7785 Sunso' P . J Los Anqeie.-:. CV ' . m : 'Jv Or c.ill (213) 876 !i,l 7 ( ij Dynel Pile Huort Lining Gt'iiuifiH Wolf fur on Hood Heavy Duty Concealed Zipper " if, i V-lii Double Elbow &3 ''''.lelin.ifi"Hanii 'Ckess 7 ' vXXX M - ''J! 1,7 "Hani i i 40 1 S 1 nn nw if "3. , H- Sun- li Cjin ii-, I'Iu'n ,nl)cl I'o Know II It Is (H-miiiit- AIR FORCE ARTIC SNORKEL Reg. $59" r : HWlDito o W95 W T " CSL rehashes, apparently settles open meeting issue Decisions governing Council on Student Life (CSL) closed meeting procedures Thursday night were settled aftei an hour of discussion and two amendments to previous policy. The decisions involved whether reporters should be allowed to sit in on closed meetings anci what pioceduro should be taken to make public action occurring durinij a closed session. By a 10-2 vote, an amendment to the "closed sessions" clause of CSL's rules and procedures stated that reporters would be allowed to sit in on a closed session unless excluded by a majority vote of the council. The amendment, pioposed by CSL member Ann Pederson, ;jiso states mat the reporter shall not publicly disclose information he obtains at 3 closed moi't'nri. According to the CSL "dosed sessions" clduso, the council may hold closed meetings wbenovc-i dealing with "persona! matters" of an individual or gi oup. Closed meetings with the option of excluding reporters serve to protect the rights of the individual or group when publicity might be harmful to those people, the council concluded. The second amendment, offered by CSL Chairperson Don Shaneyfelt, provided that final action of the council in closed sessions be announced in public session. Voting would be by roll call with the results announced in order that the public would know how individual council members voted. That amendment and the rest of the closed sessions clause was approved by an 8-2 vote, with two members abstaining. Action affecting those decisions came from recommendations of a "Freedom of Access to Nonacademic Information" report prepared by a CSL ad hoc committee, earlier this semester. In other matters, a report by Ken Bader, vice chancellor of Student Affairs, concerning whether lounges and hallways of dormitory floors should be public areas was not given to the council, according to Shaneyfelt. Regents to explore Scott uses V The property committee of the NU Board of Regents will meet in Scottsbluff Saturday as part of its assigned study of possible uses for the Hiram Scott College facilities. The committee includes Regents Kerrnit Wagner of Schuyler, Robert Prokop of Omaha and J.G. Elliott of Scottsbluff. The regents have been faced with a decision regarding the defunct college, offered as a gift to the state by Scottsbluff-Gering community interests. A study committee named by Gov. J.J. Exon recommended against NU acquisition of the property, but the regents directed their own property committee to inquire further into the suitability of the property for agriculture research. The committee will meet at 10 a.m. Saturday to consider the property as the site for an animal diagnostic center and reassemble at 1:30 p.m. to explore agricultural research poiential. Both sessions, to be held at the library science building at 'uram bcott, will be open to the public. First aid teamwork proposed for accidents in UNL buildings i By Jane Owens TOU tali 'JOWli III.;: slop-, i Andrew, Hall, bum your finqurs on a bun'eu burner during chi.-rn lau or faint while playing tenni;; on a wai m ) ty. If a UNL piofessor's plan is put to work, ilii'ii: will bo tour oi five persons dt the scene almost immediately, ptcpoied to administer first aid. Hoping someday to have about four people trained in first did in each campus !"ilding, Rollin Schnieder, associate professor of agricultural engineering, this week began teaching first aid classes for UNL employes. The classes were set up because of the number of accidents that happen on i c if) r 4 W f; f Mm . J W MA i.' t tw m. ri H E I TO M M. Ht nvery Saturday and Sunday 17th and Van Dorn Sunday thru Thursday 11-11 Prd,iy and Saturday 11-12 campus, Schnieder said. "I get several requests to start a (first aid) class after persons see accidents occur and realize few people know how to handle emergency situations," he said. The 54 students in the class read and watch persons demonstrate how to give first aid for wounds, shock, sunstroke, bleeding and other injuries, then practice on other class members, Schnieder added. A first aid inuructor since 19G0, Schnieder said he hopes to offer a second clcss "within the next few months. "We still have a Iono way to go (before having lour persons trained in first aid in every campus building)," he said. "It probably will be three or four years before that goal is reached." Correction... The Daily Nebraskan reported Thursday that the Student Bar Assoc. Minority Recruitment Committee received $900 from ASUN for scholarships. The story should have explained that $b00 of the money went into a financial aids fund and $400 went into a recruitment fund. MID-OTY TOYOTA NEW CARS 1200 'Q' 475-7C61 USED CARS AND TRUCKS f ; i" i if ! , ,. ., ,.,-. . ww-,,,,,,, 107-2559 patje 2 daily ' -f rt i!'-i! i friday, november 30, 1973