The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, March 17, 1975, Page page 11, Image 11

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    Candidates seek recoanition
The party started out as a joke, according to
second vice presidential candidate Rick Horton.
But the electoral rules, which Horton
characterized as favoring "the incumbent" USE
party, and "a number of other tilings, have
turned us into a bunch of militants."
PAP organizers have proposed hiring an
executive director for organizations such as
ASUN and the Residence Hall Association.
According to Horton, the idea behind the
executive director would be to have a "Ralph
Nader type" to lobby for student interests and
"provide expertise for the student regent."
Eventually, ASUN would be restructured to
eliminate executives and place policy
responsibility with a 15-member council, under
the proposal.
Dennis Snyder, presidential candidate of the
would-be Amurica Party (AMP) was unavailable
for comment.
AMP also battling
The group has joined PAP in battling the
electoral commission for recognition as a party.
According to a party spokesman, the party
acquired 529 signatures, but only about 390
were accepted.
Thursday Snyder called for students to
"watch how student fees are spent."
Presidential candidate Charles Rosvold is not
affiliated with a party.
"I would have liked to have formed a party
but there was the problem of a time squeeze,"
Rosvold said. He said he was unaware of the
filing deadline until three days before the date.
Rosvold says he is running because "I can do a
better job than those in there now" by being
more forceful in presenting student views.
"ASUN needs someone in there who is not
willing to back down," he said. "As president, I
would be dogmatic (in support of student views)
to the point that some people might say Pm a
pest."
Rosvold has said ASUN "is just a student
lobbying agent." He characterized it as a
"toothless dog but it can bark."
Vince Powers is also an independent
presidential candidate. He has urged students to
withhold student fees as an indication to the
regents that students want self government.
'Zumberge moonlights'
He has charged that UNL Chancellor James
Zumberge is a director of the First National Bank
who moonlights as chancellor (an allusion to
Zumberge's position on the bank's board of
directors).
"ASUN is not a student government but is
chancellor James Zumberge's government
because he controls the student senate budget,"
Powers said.
"The chancellor is not our father," he said.
"Students should fight for their rights with their
only weapon-money."
Independent ASUN first vice presidential
candidate Gay Statmore said "ASUN's main
thrust should be improving the quality of
education at UNL, based on the money
available." He is campaigning for better
communication with the Legislature concerning
UNL's needs.
Statmore is the only vice presidential
candidate not affiliated with a party. He said he
is running because he doesn't think ASUN knows
what its job is.
"We're here to get an education. We should be
concerned with that first," he said.
, 'It
LI1IC0LI1 GEIiERAL HOSPITAL
GREATEST RESOURCE
is it's people
BE ONE OF THESE VERY SPECIAL PEOPLE!
CONTACT: LINCOLN GENERAL HOSPITAL
PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT
2309 SOUTH 16TH STREET
LINCOLN, NEBRASKA
xjditions
Now
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1975 & 76
Scarlet & C
ream
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For information see:
Prof. Raymond Miller
Rm. 205
Westbrook Music Bldg.
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THP Pll MS OF STORM DE HIRSCH
"All Storm De Hirsch films rely to some degree on new
exploration in visual technique. It is an impulse that
hearkens to the days of the curiosity of D.W. Griffith, the
same kind of excitement in masking the screen that has led
to the rebirth of the mask and the iris dissolve in such
recent films as James Ivory's SAVAGES and Truffaut's
L'ENFANTSAUVAGE. Likewise, De Hirsch.
"Her cinematic tropes are stunning yet simple. That is their
beauty. The recognition of uieir significance is a joy in
itself, recalling the philosophy of Kasimir Malevich, who
held that the cognition of a feeling within a work of art is
testament to its purity. But since De Hirsch feek that "I
never have to push my intentions on the viewer," he art
goes a step further than Malevich's anti-objectivity into an
all-subjectivity, allowing a full and complete likeness of
reality to repose within the individual receptor.''
-Casey Charness, Columbia University
Screening Schedule:
March 18-THIRD EYE BUTTERFLY (10 minutes)
AN EXPERIMENT IN MEDITATION (silent18
minutes)
THE TATTOOED MAN (35 minutes)
March 19-HUDSON RIVER DIARY
BOOK I: CAYUGA RUN (18 minutes)
BOOK III: WINTERGARDEN (5 minutes)
BOOK IV: RIVER-GHOST (9 minutes)
THE COLOR OF RITUAL THE COLOR OF
THOUGHT (Trilogy26 minutes)
1- DIVINATIONS
2- SHAMAN: A TAPESTRY FOR SORCERERS
3- PEYOTE QUEEN
March 20-GOODBYE IN THE MIRROR (80 minutes)
Screenings at 3 & 7:30 p.m. Admission free!
Storm De Hirsch will be present at each of the evening
screenings to tai k to the audience about her films.
Sheldon Art Galleryj 2th & 'FT St.
(Mil) ,(f
WarChild
CHR 1067
Jethro Tull'8 startling new album
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At prices you can't afford to pass up.
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A Passion Play
CHR 1040
Living in the Past
2CH 1035
Thick as a Brick
CHR 1003
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Aqualung
CHR 1044
Benefit
CHR 1043
Stand Up
CHR 1042
This Was
CHR 1041
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page 1 1
daily nebraskan
monday, march 17, 1975