The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 27, 1978, Page page 11, Image 11

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    friday, October 27, 1978
daily nebraskan
page 1 1
RHA proposes 24-hour visitation on twoSelleck floors
h nrnoosal. and encouraein
By Kim Wilt
An "open visitation option" proposed by the Resi
dence Hall Association would be an "opportunity for stu
dents to set up rules that they'll have to learn to live
with," RHA president Bill Skoneki told Council on Stu
dent Life members last night.
Speaking at a special meeting called by CSL Chairman
John Benson to discuss the proposal, Skoneki said stu
dents "have, to set their own rules, they need to be self
regulating." The proposal would allow visitation up to 24 hours on
floors 7200 and 7300 of Selleck Quadrangle for a one and
one half year trial.
If the proposal is approved by the NU Board of
Regents, students on both floors will vote on whether
they want the option. If the vote is unanimous, and if resi
dents less than 19 years old get parental consent, the op-
Publications Board
considers changes -
By Martha Murdock
The Publication Board, which sets policy for the Daily
Nebraskan, met Thursday evening and discussed changing
publication policy for the newspaper.
Daily Nebraskan Editor Carla Engstrom said the
newspaper is confused with the Journalism School's
Summer Nebraskan, Advertisers confuse the two publica
tions, and the university sends Summer Nebraskan mail to
the Daily Nebraskan.
Engstrom suggested that either the Journalism School
change the name of their paper or cease publication and
turn over summer production to the Daily Nebraskan.
The board unanimously voted to investigate the possi
bility of a summer publication called the Weekly
Nebraskan
"The summer paper would give students experience
working on a weekly. It would have academic value,"
said Engstrom. The board tried to set up summer produc
tion by the Daily Nebraskan one and a half years ago.
The board also discussed the possibility of publishing
the Dally Nebraskan five days a week instead of four days
i week
We'd really be the Daily Nebraskan, said the editor,
"which would be tremendous."
An advertising class took a survey and found that 80
percent of UNL students would favor seeing the paper
come out on Tuesdays, according to Engstrom.
Several board members emphasized that the paper
would need more office space to comfortably publish one
more day.
The newspaper's buisness manager, Jerri Haussler, said
that in the last few years, "the staff has grown from 35
people to 130 people, but we're still working with the
same equipment and space."
The board discussed the addition of wire service
coverage to help fill the additional pages per week.
Board members agreed that this year's Publication
Board will make major decision about the paper's future.
A,4,mr4eiro msnaoM Denise Jordan said that the paper
must consider its own growth. "There are a lot of people
a v, thP ctatt unn are exciicu auuui
UUWU Ulblb vll ui
newspaper," said Haussler.
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tion will go into effect the second semester of the 1978-
79 school year.
If the vote is not unanimous, or parental consent is
not obtained, the option will take effect in the fall semes
ter of the 1979-80 school year.
Housing Director Doug Zatechka said that his office
has not studied the proposals completely, but they were
looking at other universities of similar size and complex
ity, "to see how they've dealt with it."
Zatechka said he wanted to make sure that those stu
dents who wanted a "more regulated environment" would
be given a way to deal with the open visitation option.
He proposed a "roommate contract" in which room
mates would decide issues such as when members of the
opposite sex would be in the room.
CSL approved a motion that it sent a letter to NU Pres
ident Ronald Roskens, Executive Vice President Steven
Sample, UNL Chancellor Roy Young and Vice Chancellor
for Student Affairs Richard Armstrong, alerting them of
Clocks lose hour,
sleep in Sunday
This is the weekend students can catch an extra
hour of sleep that they lost during the midterms by
turning the clock back one hour Saturday night.
A federal law, administered by the Transporta
tion Department, specifies that daylight-saving time
applies from 2 am. on the last Sunday in April until
2 a.m. on the last Sunday in October in areas that do
not exempt themselves.
The idea .originated in Great Britain during World
I as an economic measure. It was adopted in the
United States in 1918, but was repealed one year
later. It was incorporated again after World War II,
at the discretion of the individual states and cities.
the develonment of the proposal, and encouraging them
to take what ever action they felt was appropriate.
In other actions, CSL approved the nomination of four
students to the Publications Board.
John Kreusher, Mark Bower, Mark Schmiederskamp
and Clark Ackerman were approved unanimously as
members of the board.
One more opening on the board exists, which
Benson said would be filled when someone applied.
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