Page 4 The Doily Nebraskan Monday, October 3, 1966 pHH(immiiiiiit!iinuiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiini!iniiimi!Niiinmiiitnim I On Derby Day, Derby Day j ( h k i Yf P - A: r Lwv, SDS Plans Teach-in China, Black Power and ( SDS has been asked to spon the draft will be focal points sor Arnold Tatum, a well- of Students for a Democratic i known conscientious objector, on WHITEWASH . jeans and legs marks a Derby Day participant. "TUBLNG" IT pledges try to race in this "close" competition. 1X k ' i ' ! m XCI t - v ,W . v , I .... rr T ? . 2) i V 4 DRUMMLN'G LP THE SPIRIT . . . captured Phoux Br John Nonendwfs a trophy for the Kappa pledges. Society (SDS) activity, as the movement strides into its sec ond year on campus. The first teach-in this sem ester will feature represent atives of all major civil rights groups in a debate-discussion on Black Power, the concept of the political-economic pow er of American Negreos as a unit. Representatives have been invited frm the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), Na tional Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), Student Nonviolent Coordinating Com mittee (SNCC), Southern Christian Leadership Confer ence (SCLC), the N o r t h e r n Student Movement and the Southern Organizing Commit tee. The Black Power teach-in, which is planned sometime within the next month, will be an attempt to inform the public about Black Power as viewed by the different civil rights groups. A teach-in on China sched uled for next semester will mainly by informative, accord ing to Al" Spangler, SDS pres ident. This program will have speakers from the University faculty present a picture of China today. KNUS To Begin Testing Tuesday KNUS, the School of Journ alism student radio station, will present a two-hour test program beginning at 8 p.m. Tuesday. According to L e e Coney, director of the broadcasting sequence in the School of Journalism, the purpose of the broadcast will be to test the station's transmitters, lo cated in University dormitor ies on city campus. Dormitory students may re ceive the broadcast at 880 kil ocycles on any AM receiver. The program will include music, sports, news and state and campus news. The program schedule for the broadcast includes: Music, 8 p.m.; news and weather, 8:30 p.m.; sports. 8:40 p.m.; music. 8:45 D.m.: Nebraska land on Parade", 9 p.m.; music. 9:15 p.m.: news and weather, 9:30 p.m.: sports, 9:40 p.m.; music, 9:45 p.m.; sign off, 10 p.m. I n If A 1 Li! )Li L.t V n iWi 1 i ft If nl QJUuuuDM I II II if It i I II it 11 II II 1 UUUUULSo n n JUL ffD w (Superstar from Oldsmobile!) - - j? 4C3 CID V-8. Full 115-inch wheelbase. Heavy-duty springs, shock absorbers, shaft. Sway bars, front and Available also if you wish wide oval tires. Rocket Rally rear. High-performance Pac, UHV ignition. axle. Dual exhausts Beefed-up wheels. Red-Line or White-Line tires. Bucket seats. Louvered hood. Higher oil pressure. They're all standard goodies et one modest price. superstock wheels, front disc brakes and the like. Try one and you'll agree: 1967 Olds 4-4-2 is the sweetest, neatest, completest anti-boredom bundle on rubber I Obey Lawi, Drive Safely. Oldt Th.fiti el your ufelf, toe, wild (lit CM-dcvcloptd cnffry.abwfbin tlnrinf column lhal cjn compfff os Mvri impact up to Vt inthft; with four-way ha;ird wrmn flathtr; oulsidt rtarmw mirror, dual maitf cylmdr brafct tyitem, pluf many olhof ulclylealurn-all ttandard lor 67. who will be in Lincoln Oct. 18, according to Spangler. He indicated no decision had been made on the matter. "We would like to have some kind of program con cerning the draft," stated Spangler. At the moment, the litera ture tables sponsored by SDS provide the most concrete SDS activity in the area of the draft, Spangler said. Con troversial and informational literature is for sale by the organization this year, as a continuation of its educational program of last year. Regional unity will be an issue in the SDS movement this year. The first regional convention of the year will be in Kansas City and will con cern methods of social change considering hosting a regional convention such as the one planned for Kansas City. No decision has yet been made. KSU Dean Suggests Rights Bill Like NU's MONDAY IXTERVARSITY, 8 a.m. Nebraska Union. PLACEMENT OFFICE Luncheon, 12:30 p.m., Nebras ka Union. PAXHELLENIC, 3:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. UNION FILM COMMIT TEE, 3:45 p.m., Nebraska Un ion. PUBLIC RELATIONS, i:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. PHI MU-Balfour, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. TASSELS, 4:30 p.m., Ne braska Union. DELTA ZETA,. 5:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. TOWNE CLUB, 6 p.m., Ne braska Union. UNICORNS, 7 p.m., Ne braska Union. TAU KAPPA EPSILON, 7 p.m., Nebraska Union. M A T H COUNSELORS, 7:30 p.m.. Nebraska Union. TUESDAY CAMPUS LIFE, 4:30 p.m., Nebraska Union. AG ECOX CLUB, 7 p.m., Nebraska Union. MU EPSILON XU, 9 p.m., Nebraska Union. Newspapers on other cam puses around the country either present problems and controversies similar to those at Nebraska, or in some in stances make comments per taining to the situations at the University. At Kansas State Universi ty, the campus newspaper quotes Chester Peters, dean of students, as suggesting that the President's Commission on Student Government con sider drawing up a Student Bill of Rights. Peters points out in the ar tide that "University of Ne braska students nave p r e- sented such a proposal among their demands for better stu dent government." He is quoted as saying that before the commission can proceed in its study of stu dents' role in government, a definition and philosophy of what student government is must be presented. Davidson Quoted The Daily Illini at Illinois University quotes nation al SDS Vice President Carl Davidson, former Nebraska I SDS president, at the organ ization's national convention Aug. 27-Sept. 1 in Chicago. The article points out that emerging most clearly for the convention was the pic ture of SDS as a "communi ty of organizers." After this comment David son is indirectly quoted as saying there are about 50 members who have given up the 2-S student deferments to do travelling and organizing on campuses across the coun try. At Iowa State, the paper reports that the Iowa College Council delegates' discussion will center around seeing that higher education institutions receive adequate allocations from the state legislature. The legislative approach program was believed to cen ter around five parts: stu dents going to Des Moines to talk with senators and repre sentatives, arranging for leg islators to visit the campuses and see the needs of the in stitution, the printing of a booklet informing legislators of the situation, writing let- V Wff- j f H0t0 it!' what V KIND OF QCt ) nt m met I (?ICJT- J -in t9Hwfwia- f SW MM To oOM,g . BOTH Jl0i?$- ters to editors of papers across the state, and county by county lobbying while the legislature isn't convening. DuBois Club Opposed Illinois State Representa tive Charles W. Clabaugh promised to lead a fight against the proposed Univer sity Chapter of the W.E.B. DuBois Club, in an interview with the Daily Illini. Clabaugh, stating that he based his opinion on Justice Department reports, said the club is a "first-rate commu nist organization." Department of Justice of. ficials and FBI director J. Edgar Hoover have charged that the club is a communist front organization functioning as the youth wing of the Communist Party. DuBois Club officials, t h e Illini reported, have denied the charges as being "defin itely untrue ... the group is a very broadly based social ist youth organization." The Associated Students of the University of Colorado (ASUC) may finance the court costs of a CU graduate student charged with 'oper ating a motor vehicle without a valid driver's license", ac cording to the Colorado Daily. The student did have a val id Pennsylvania operator's li cense. County Judge L. R, Wingfield proceeded to inter pret valid to mean a Colora do driver's license. The Student senator intro ducing the resolution to ASUC said that the outcome of this case might well affect every non-resident student. CAMPUS HEADQUARTERS for Fine Footwear Famous Brands for Less mrv dlm 1317 "0" St. Factory Outlet For Fine Footwear 1 KEW YOKX, SATOICAT, JANUABT 1. 23C0 u. s. 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