The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, November 03, 1980, Page page 7, Image 7

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    monday, november 3, 1980
daily nebraskan
page 7
Parking lot protestors question alcohol policy
By Ward W. Triplett III
and Maureen Costello
It was billed as a protest demonstration of the campus'
policy on alcohol, and a large turnout was urged in order
for it to be effective. Instead, no more than twelve
students turned out in the Harper Hall parking lot
Saturday afternoon.
The protest failed in it's attempt to bring to the NU
Board of Regents attention what students called the
"double standard" policy it has adapted toward on -campus
drinking.
"The alumni are allowed to drink, but we're not,"
said Keith Grotelvschen, a Harper 6 resident. "It seems
the regents believe that it is OK for you to violate a state
law if you are an alumni of the university, and you are
making contributions to the school. All we ask is that
they enforce the policy on them if they are going to
enforce it on us."
Craig Priefert, another student, said, 'The regents care
more about the alumni than they do about the students
who pay tuition." He thought the protest was useful
because "working through the system, we would only get
a minimum done."
No one student in particular came up with the idea or
the organization of the protest, said Harper Student
Assistant Mike Dempsey, who along with several other
SAs had planned to watch over the protest to make sure
thing didn't get out of hand.
Confusing policy
"This was all spread on word of mouth," Dempsey
said. "There is no telling how things like this will turn
out."
Although there were no SAs directly involved, they
were also in favor of a change in what Bob Gonderinger
of Harper Six called a confusing policy on the alcohol
subject.
"If you talked to three different sources, the regents,
the police, and housing, you'd get three different inter
pretations on what the policy is. It's tough to justify
some of the things they say is part of our responsibility,"
Gonderinger said.
He said that the SA staff will be writing letters to
housing, in particular to director Doug Zatecha, asking
Professor is elected to
ACSP committee
Roger M. Massey, professor and chairman of UNL's
Department of Community and Regional Planning,
has been elected to represent the North Central Region
on the executive committee of the Association of Col
legiate Schools of Planning.
Massey will represetn 25 of the 95 institutions through
out the United States and Canada in the ACSP.
He also was elected executive director of the American
Planning Association's education division.
The APA develops continuing education programs and
helps schools establish and strengthen planning programs,
Massey said.
Stake Special!!
Two Stake Dinners: includes
choice of potato and the salad bar
for $9.50
Nov. 3-6 5 p.m.-lO p.m.
Doesn't include stake and shrimp combo.
Chesterfield,
Bottomsley & Potts
245 North 13th Street
A CAREER IN LAW
Denver Paralegal Institute
will be on campus
NOVEMBER 6
Contact your placement office
to arrange a personal interview.
For more information contact
DENVER PARALEGAL INSTITUTE
908 Central Bank West
1108 15th St.
Denver, Colorado 80202
(303) 6234237
Approved by the American Bar Association
H5)
for a clarification of the rules.
"One of the Smith SAs was telling me how she wrote
up a girl on Sunday for having liquor in the room, and the
girl said 'well, you saw me in Sellecks's parking lot yester
day with my parents and didn't say anything then, and I
was drinking that time'. Really, she's right. It's frustrat
ing. Are you an adult in the parking lot but not in the
dorm room?" Gonderinger asked.
But we've been told not to bother someone in another
complex by one source, and something else by another. It
comes down to the SAs discretion. There's just nothing
set."
The SAs were not advocating Saturday's rally and
thought it wouldn't change matters anyway.
"Realistically, I doubt the alcohol policy and rules will
change before I leave here, unless the board of regents
gets people with different attitudes and different ideas
real soon," Gonderinger said.
Ineffective turnout
The students also thought their protest, especially
with the small turnout, would be ineffective, but said it
may start people thinking. The main goal was to include
all people under the same policy, at all places on campus,
although interest varied from the student to student.
"I'm 21," a student from Harper said. "And if I had
not elected to go to college, I could fill a room up to my
chin in beer cans. Why should a desire for higher
education curtail my rights? But what I am really opposed
to is the regents' discriminatory attidtude to students in
the alumni situation. Why should they be special?"
The students were disappointed with the small attend
ance, but thought it will be better next week once
students become aware that scare tactics didn't prove to
be true.
It was rumored the day before that more than 100
students had planned to join in the beer drinking, but
stayed away when trouble was thought to be inevitable.
"Someone told me that the Schramm SA's were going
to come down and write up everybody so those people
didn't show up," one student said. Dempsey said he
received an anonymous phone call that said there would
be police intervention and arrests would be made.
However, none appeared in the hour the students spent
in the lot.
A $200 cash prize will be awarded to the first
person who finds the silver bullet.
Official Rules
1. The hidden COORS Silver Bullet is a life
size bullet that is used as symbol for
COORS "Silver Bullet" Light Beer.
2. Silver Bullet seekers will not have to move
any objects or destroy any property to
find the Silver Bullet.
3. Employees of the Daily Nebraskan and
Coors and their families are NOT eligible
to participate in this contest or claim con
test prizes.
4. COORS does not accept any responsib
ility for damage to any UNL or private
property or personal injury liability that
may be connected with this promotion
contest.
Third Clue
The silver bullet is in the best place a
COORS Light can be.
m