Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 18, 1974)
V' v- .- . . w- t'".'' im9 M m m m m mt vm tm m ma a uuuu UUVU ARS AGO HHBIIHHaHBniBinHHB? JB KM HW & 3 s HSU SS O so u I I I 1 SO YE j I k optical iiliTllT To celebrate our opening in Lincoln, we make this Aid (QdAEQ REGARDLESS-of your Prescription OUI ONE LOW PRICE - ! HO uut cost - INCLUDES Sing Vivon Unm 8i(ch:I Ltnut Trifoctl Units C'e'0f Tmttd ltnt IMPACT RtSiSTANT tmstj Your thoict or ANY FRAME in our li'ge iect.on of sty'ts ind toict (wire ocludtd) Brine your EYE PHYSiCMN't (M.O.) or OPTOMETKISrS prMcrlptkm to t tilted in ttw fram of your cholcf from our tergt Micciion. f-MVI LINCOLN 5 -' H nnwNTDWN W W ' W v ' i, 1101 "0" STREET CORNER OF 11th AND "0" STREET TELEPHONE 432-4824 9 f ' errs. STUDENTS r YOU PICK APR DQQ HII ALL FAECES HAS THE MACHINE ! ! ! Rechargeable Battery Mini Size 8-Digit Display ACAdapterCharger wtmn. sum ra tm f m jsMk mm, wmn ITOB UlAllllmilULKJi a a With Carrying Case 4 Hechargr;afaie Baiiery Memory Square, Square Root, Reciprocal ACAdapterCharger With Carrying Case B Recharaeable 8-Digit Display 2 Digit Exponent Figures Hi ' ACAdApUrCharger J Co J ff (U) m m I f y All Transindental Functions & SR-50HP-35 Capabilities. Stack Operation Registers Plus Memory 10-Digit Display, 2-Digit Exponent i Li') J f 1 . 1 ,'-'V f I: better than U s " - ,,' SR Wat 30 " Less Money .CHINES USICOIfDITIOPJALLY GOAIlAi X Y(Al Ml(VAYS DO EETTtft T...r;;I 177-7131 Sept. 18, 1914 "With the advent of the football season there is a clamor for football seats throughout the entire state. Already more than a thousand orders have been placed with Manager Guy Reed. The student tickets went on sale yesterday in the basement of the Administration building. The price of a ticket is $4, which gives admission to all athletic events on Nebraska field. Tne equivalent if purchased at the gate would cost $13. At the Kansas game, on account of the fact that it is the homecoming and that the demand for the seats is greater than the supply, there will be an extra charqe of 50 cents for reservation. ' ' " "Professor Gursey Jones missed going to Europe this summer and, incidentally, seeing the war. This event came as a surprise to everyone, including Dr. Jones, for his passage was engaged and everything ready for a trip across the 'big drink.' The reason for the delay was a mystery. It was even rumored that he had received a tip from the Kaiser and stayed home. Anyway, the fact remained that he spent the summer in Cambridge, Massachusetts, insiead of in England as he had planned." Student regent goal of ASUN senators Concerned Citizens for Higher Education, temporarily an ASUN-based organization, will spearhead efforts to ratify a constitutional amendment on the November ballot that would provide for student representation on the NU board of Regents, according to Bill Norton, ASUN press secretary. The group's core members, ASUN senators, are recuriting persons involved in a variety of careers across the state for the organization, Norton said. Members will work to get voter approval of Amendment No. 1 on the ballot. The organization, according to Norton, will function tike a political campaign, lobbying for passage of the amendment across the state and at the State Legislature. Introduced by State Senator Richard Marvel last spring through the lobbying of the ASUN Legislative Liaison, the amendment was approved 35-10 for inclusion on the November ballot. The committee will contact the senators to determine whether their positions on the amendment have changed, Norton said. One reason for the committee's concern of opinion and the recuriting of persons not affiliated with UNL is to establish the committee's credibility, according to Norton. "We should not say this (committee) is students for the student regent," he said. "When anything says 'student' on it, people become leery about accepting It " Nebraskans received some Insight into what students are capable of doing this summer when ASUN president Ron Clingenpeel traveled to the western part of the state, conducting information sessions on ASUN and the student body interests, Norton said. A commonly held assumption of university students, however, is that they are 18-25 years old and lack the maturity and responsibility to participate f t policy-making decisions the Board of Regents .akes, Norton said. Such a notion doesn t take into account student groups such as veterans, married women returning to school, and many part-time students, he said. Students from UNO and the University Medical Center will be encouraged to work with the UNL-based committee for amendment passage, Norton said. As outlined in the amendment, student body presidents from the three campuses vill compose the non-voting, advisory student epresentation on the board. An outcome of coordinated efforts by the :ampu3es will improve the present lack of :ommunication between the campuses, according to Norton. "At this time, I don't know what Omaha is doing bout working for the amendment)," Norton said. The pooling of efforts to work for the amendment also could produce a hotter 'pull-together" among the student body govern ments in other issues, Norton said. Should voters approve the amendment in November, NU would join the ranks of 330 colleges and universities already providinq student representation on school governing boards, according to statistics contained in the Legislative Liaison's report. If the amendment is not ratified, "it'll bo a long time before it comes up again," Norton said. I rrr-riar icC page 6 daily nebraskan Wednesday, September 18, 1974