thursday, October 9, 1975 page 4 daily nebraskan edibriQlpi wwr m 1 doing ttffit TtfS IS RIDICULOUS! RALPH g "ill Hte- Ran " Sl 1 owV ivwr my. 1 Ml ANT TO 60 HOME 0 am rL o UtJflPR MY MSL O PRESENTING TUB HOMECOMING AMD WLi BE LAST Ytflfc WUER... t 1 1 J TV 44 1 mi rt; SCAHY BRANCH! . CUpi JAtM. J (c'" Dear editor, We would like to inform students of the university of the serious situation that the School of Social Work is in concerning accreditation. This affects not only the 400 students and 22 faculty members in Lincoln and Omaha, but many social welfare agencies throughout the state that hire professional social workers. - Because disaccreditation is pending, steps are being taken to improve the NU program, making it the quality program it should be. The School of Social Work needs support of the whole student body to keep our accredita tion. Knowing that the student body is simply unaware of what can be done, rather than apathetic toward our situation, we'd like to ask all university students to express their concern for continuation of the NU School of Social Work, in letter form, to: Mr. Fred Stam, Director or Mr. Diane Bernard, Chairman Commission on Accreditation . v ' coCSWE 345 E. 46th New York, N.Y. 10017 The Council of Social Work Education needs to know l A .A.. J . 1 J. l 1 uiai siuucnu auiui uux kiuhu. ' Janice Schoen . Denise Kosmicki Editor's note: For more information on the Graduate School of Social Work accreditation, tee DaOy Nebraskan, Sept. 24 and Oct. 8. Straight talk Dear editor, , . I am writing in response to David Kirshenbaum's letter (Daily Nebraskan, Oct. 8). I am the student who received the $15 from one of the head people at Campus Police. When I was towed away, I felt the university police had no legal right to tow me to I went down and raised hell at the office. Finally, after two days the nervous fellow behind the desk came to the scene of the wrongdoing. While en route to the scene, this guy said, "What we need is babysitters instead of teachers." He also told me they Mhad my car marked and wanted to pick on me. M-W M.0-rt If. ntM WBt right, he said there was nothing he could do. Then I told him it was time for me to call my lawyer to investigate the incident, whereupon he whipped out $15 and gave it to me. Now ask yourself, what is going on with those people? It is too bad there were no witnesses to the action. Maybe there is something shady going on. I'm not saying there is, but could we hear it straight from Gail and John (Gail Cade, Campus Police chief, and John Duve, UNL paildng coordinator)? .. John Luhrs. ' Interviews Our representatives will ba on campus today to intsrvisvv individuals Interested' m flying. Wa'ra looking for s:n;or$ end Juniors who wculd lik to nuko flying a csrtsr liter 'graduation. Good starting ttlary end benefits. Call ths UtiL Piaea msnt Offict to srra-i'i en appoint with Cob May or Dava Frsnic. ;,. ,v .: Payoff logic 1 Dear editor, To R.A.E.: I was distressed by your letter concerning the practices of the Campus Police. Compassion is not the issue, nor, I dare say, the motive behind the Campus Police staff member's attempt to give my sister $5 to pay off her parking fine. Fatigue or irrationality would probably better explain his actions. If R.A.E. had read M.E. Tune's letter with hisher glasses or, heshe would have discerned the real point of the complaint. The point is the discriminatory enforcement of parking regulations on this campus. Some days parking violations are enforced, some days they are not. Some people are ticketed while others are not. Some people who appeal their tickets get them voided while others are jacked around by insane members of the Campus Police. In conclusion R.A.E., I would refer to two other irrelevant points you make in your letter. M.E. Tune was not asking the man for $5. (She is not rich, but she is not impecunious, either.) She was merely asking for fair warn ing and fair enforcement of parking regulations! Finally, as for your assertion that "love still does exist, even on the UNL campus,' M.E. Tune does not question the existence of love and neither do I. We are just aware that love involving $5 i3 illegal in every state except Nevada. Correctfully yours, M.K. Tune Why not woman? - Dear editor, The year is 1975. Why then are we-still cursed with such negligent statements as "The new chancellor needs to be a man who. . . "? Why, Adam Breckenridge? (Daily Nebraskan, Oct. 6.) L. Larson Freudian angle . Dear editor, Richard "Sigmund Proud suffers from a delusion that leaders of the women's movement have a deep-seated hatred of men, due to unhappy childhoods or marriages. It is clear that Proud, probably because of a traumatic toilet-training experience, is fixated at the narcissistic anal stage of psychosexual development, making him incapable of accepting women as equals, and resulting in his obsessive compulsive need to smear advocates of women's rights. Beverly "Anna Freud" Hohensee , Omaha, Neb. Marsha Jark: Long Hard Climb Library users have options By Marsha Jark The library system, like other institutions on thh campus, has its problems. As with other bureaucracies, many of its employes have risen to their level of incompe tence (the Peter Principle). However, it does not deserve to be maligned as it has been in the past. Much of its problem lies with a budget that is not sufficient to bring it to the point of excellence. The reason for that may simply be a matter of visibility. It is easier to appropriate funds for a new building than it is to buy 400 books a year. A building can be pointed to, but no one points out new books on the shelf or demonstrates a new card system to show a legislator or taxpayer that their money is well spent. Unwanted hassle results whm the cheapest method is used to circulate books-the cheapest method takes the longest time. However, library patrons can cope with this tMm f)! W J . . -V j Ul WfttlVAtA The undergraduate library, which has experienced the most flak in past months, offers a variety of visual aids to help people find their way around. Prominent red signs hung from the ceiling indicate the card catalog, third floor stacks and the children's literature room. There is also a stop sign at the out turnstyle and a large sign pointing to the pencil sharpener near the circulation desk. Some of the present misunderstanding between the library and patrons centers on third floor stacks at Nebraska Hall, which house books using Dewey Decimal System call numbers. Many bound psrioaiuus nave, been recatalogued from Dewey to Library of Congress numbers and moved to Love North. Because of a communication lag, patrons sometime are advised to travel to Nebraska Hall to look under a Dewey call number, then must head back to Love to find the book under a Library of Congress number. This irrita tion can be circumvented by having Love call Nebraska Mall to see if the book is there. The library sometimes takes one step, forward and two steps backward. In an attempt to become more accessible to students, loan periods have been made equal for graduates and undergraduates, fines have been lowered and it soon will be possible to renew books by mail. On the other hand, the undergraduate library, located near three residence hall complexes, will close at the end of this semester. Books hitherto accessible will be moved to Love and disappear into a kbvrinth of stacks. Perhaps we should philosophize with Winnie, a character in the play Happy Days by Samuel Beckett. Buried up to her waist in a mound of dirt, Winnie can still look at herself in the mirror and say, ". . ah well-no worse-no better, no worse -no change. . . Editor's note: In Wednesday's Daily Nebraskan, Arthur Hoppe's byline and .column title, "Innocent Bystander, inadvertently were left off the column ( Uncle Jerry risks patients pot shots"). spzcfMsirs, i::t. Our businas Is tha repair of VW vehlclvi and tha telling of barti and accessories for Volkswagen vehicle t. Brake Work Engine FUfeuildin fv1airttnanee!ntpectiona Si Ammmlm Tfen Ubrieatiom & C r Front f !J ft SMcntfe Vtork Hat Vtnmt Aliment Dynamic Wheel Maraine An Independent Service Center ft. 6 io$m. GAS. Intoshi Phase Linnari & 1 ills, 9 hi i 77 nw Ebctrcnss t 2433 M. S3r4 lMm 320 N. 13tir S m