. A Wednesday, October 12, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Page 5 Placement Interviews for the week of Oct. 17 will be held in the Placement Of fice on the third floor of the Nebraska Union. MONDAY, Oct. 17 Eaftnum Kodak Company: B.S., M.S. E.E., M.E.. CH.E.. I.E., Chem., Phys Ici. Mobil OU Company: Ph.D. Chem., Phyilci, Math., M.E., E.E., C.E., Geol, Zeta Beta Tau Returns After 5 Year Absence Zeta Beta Tau fraternity has returned to the Univer sity campus after a six year absence. A group of thir teen comprise the pledge Colony. Louis Gadless, ZBT field secretary, explained that the fraternity was origin ally established on the Uni versity campus in 1926 and went off campus' in 1961. ''National ZBT and the alumni felt that it would be best to pull the charter un til there was enough qual ity material to build with," he said. "Now we feel that we have that material," he con tinued, "and are looking forward to seeing this chap ter take its former place as a leader in scholarship, social and activities once again." Gadless explained that ZBT was considered a non voting member of IFC and would be considered such until the colony had 25 men with 2.0 grade averages. wsmm ifii Ls m' "Look what Curl Free did! So sleek I can't believe it's me!" eeOh...ifs beautiful! I've always wanted straight hair. Now I've got it. And I did it myself with CURL FREE. Gee, I'm just like the ad: fl was a curly-headed baby, but baby look at me now!'" GEORGEANNE ALEXANDER. Comb those natural curls right out of your hair with cool, creamy CURL FREE. Even if your hair is so tight and curly it puts up a real fightit will surrender to CURL FREE. Just keep on using it and you'll see. Placement Interviews International Businesa Machine Cor poralion: B.S.. M.S. Engineering, Hiyeies, Chem.i B.S. Math.! also any dm-ilJllne for positions a Marki'tlim RepreaenUUvea, SyMemi hiiineors, Programmers. American Oil Company: B.S., M.S. M IC. C.E.i all degreos-Ch.E. U.S. Naval Ordananoe Test Station: All degree-E.E M.E., Electronic E., Ch.E.. Aero.E,, Physics! M.S., Ph.D. Chem., Math. IT EMMY, Oct. 18 General Motors Corporation: AU e reea Chem., Physics, Math., M.E., This year, he noted, the members are living in dor mitories and apartments. Next fall, however, they will have possession of the house owned by ZBT on the south west corner of 14th and R st. "The Chi Phi's, I under stand, will be moving into the fraternity complex," he sad. Officers of the new col ony include: Ronnie Frank, president; Jeff Mayper, vice president; Marshall Turk el, secretary; Paul Landow, treasurer; and Rich Jacobson, historian. The other members are: Bruce Hoberman, Ken Hoberman, John Robinson, Phil Raznick, Barry Lott man, Jim Milder, Abe Gel bart and Jerry Goldman. According to Gadless, the colony will function as a regular fraternity this year "only without a house." He added that local alum ni have promised support and facilities for social events. EE,. I.E., Ch.E.. Met.E., Aero.E.. E.M. Con'lnetal Oil Company Research and Engineering Departments: All degrees- Ch.E.. Chem. lAnalyt. and Or ganic); M S., Ph.D. M.E., E E., Geol.. Pet.E.. Math., Chem Phy and Or -gani.c), Hydraulic E. Ethyl Corporation-Heeaich and De velopment Department, Engineering De partment: All degrees -Chem. Orn., Phys., Inorganic, Analytical) i all de grees Ch.E.. M.E.. E E. Eastman Kodak Company: as before. International Business Machines Cor poration: as before. WEDNESDAY, Oct. 19 General Motors Corporation: u be fore. Continental Oil Company Research and Engineering Departments: as be fore. Ethyl Corporation Research and De nt Department, EKNGINEERING De partment: as before. General Mills, Incorporated Grocery Products Division: B.S.-B.A., M.B.A. Bus. Adm., Lib. Arts. Continental Oil Company Refining Department: B.S., M.S. ME, EE,, C.E., Ch.E. Continental Oil Company Marketing Department .S.-B.A., M.S.-M.A. Bus. Adm. Lib. Arts, Econ., Related Fields. Continental Oil Company Market ing Department: B.S.-B.A., M.S.-M.A. Bus. Adm., Lib. Arts, Econ., Related Fields. Continental Oil Company Central Engineering Department: B.S.-C.E., E.E.i B.S., M.S. -M E. Kansas State Highway CKOMMISSI B.S.-M.E.S B.S., M.S.-CE., M.E. Los Angeles County: B.S., M.S.-C.E. THURSDAY, Oct. 20n General Motors Corporation: B.S. Bus. Adm. Du Pont and Company, Phd. Chem., Math., Physics, Ch.E., E E., M.E., C.E. Dow Chemical Company: B.S., M.S., Ph.D., M.B.A. Chem., Che., ME, E.E., Physics, Fharm.. Bioehem. Standard Oil Company of California Chevron Research Company: B.S., M.S. E.E., M.E.I all degrees Chem., Ch.E. Chevron Chemical Company: B.S. B.A. Bus. Atlm., Gen. Sue., Lib. AJvR Agri., Biol. Sci. FRIDAY, Oct. 21 Dow Chemical Company: as before. .istandard Oil Company of California Chevron Research Company: as before. Cheoron Chemical Company: as be- fore. Richards-Wilcox Division of Huoo Corporation: B.S.-C.E., E.E., M.E., I.E., Bus. Aam. Allied Chemical Corporation: B.S.- Agron.: B.S., M.S. Ch.E., M.E., E.E., I.E., Chem.i Ph.D. Chem. B.F. Goodrich Company: to be an nounced at later date. Du Pont and Company: as before. CFORCEANNE NEW i "WEB 1 : ii SDS In Universities, EDITOR'S NOTE: Daily Nebraskan Senior Staff wri ter Toni Victor attended the regional SDS conference last week-end in Kansas City, Mo. This is an ac count of the conference. it it it Social change, from Uni v e r s i t y improvement to slum reforms, was the sub ject of last week-end's Great Plains Regional Con ference of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Twenty-f i v e delegates from SDS chapters in Mis souri, Kansas, Iowa and Nebraska attended the two day conference held in Kan sas City, Mo. Six representatives from the University chapter of SDS were present. They were: Cater C h a m b 1 e e, Dennis Bartcls, Wes Coop er, Maggie Young, Jerry Hutchens and Joe Knight. Thane Croston, former Uni versity student and current ly editor of New Left Notes for SDS, traveled with the Nebraska contingent to Kansas City. The program at the St. James Methodist Church centered around the kind of social change SDS is striv ing for, the philosophy be hind the desire for change, and the methods for ac complishing the change. "We believe in participa- i ALEXANDER, CHICAGO Stresses Change tory democracy the right of the individual to make the decisions that affect his life. The people are always right, but only if they have all the facts," stated one delegate. A majority of the dele gates were university stu dents involved in university reforms. In the four-state area, university projects concern the abolition of the grading system and wom en's hours, and certain cur riculum and housing re forms on campus. The Campus Freedom Democratic Party (CFDP) at the University is a pro minent example of other or ganizations on campus who are working in the same immediate direction as SDS. "We are not going to .i,isi .wiM.'.ii'i .inm.miimiiiinj.jjiiui. mgm "WA" S-. HMI- --ITT The Cadence Countesses for 1966-67 are Joyce Car lisle, Nikki Farrer, Carta Grunczeinski, Lucinda Hunt er, Kris Juffer, Pat Keating, Courtney Larmon, Nancy Livers, Launa Manstedt, Kathy Place, Linda Ross, Lynn Trombla, Vicky Urn berger and Nan Webster. Kappa Kappa Gamma so rority has announced pledge class officers for '1966-67: Nancy Thorne, president; Ann Brayton, vice president; Susan Deitemeyer, secre tary; Vicki Schick, trea surer; Sally Reed, house chairman; Kathy Langdon, social chairman; Jeannie Pinkerton, public relations; Carol Andrews, cultural chairman; Jan Donnau, scholarship chairman; Barb Hosford, Panhellenic repre sentative; Carol Lyons, ac tivities chairman; Becky Stone, songs chairman; Rita Tarpley, gifts chairman; and Chris Kress, intramu rals chairman. Keep your finders l give It a try at our LUJCTCY SWEE MLIE! Our most popular Ivy dress shirt striped oxford weaves. Just 120 in this sale group so hurry in now to check your size for a tremen dous buyl Values 10 $7 2.D t Captain' ilalh Slums change the university in a year or two it will be 30 or 40 years, if then," said Mike James, head of t h e SDS JOIN project in Chi cago. JOIN is an example of SDS work in the area of slum reform. According to James, it is an attempt to organize poor Southern whites in the Uptown dis trict of, Chicago, in order to improve their social and economic position. Barbara Pondurant of the Topeka SDS chapter ex plained her program of so cial reform to the delegates. She is taking a year out from college to work for 70 cents an hour in a laundry in Topeka. She stated that her purpose is to organize the laundry workers into a union for better working conditions. Changes In U.S. foreign policy were also discussed as the delegates ruled out further demonstrations against the war in Vietnam, on the grounds that such action accomplishes little. Instead, Miss Young of the University SDS chapter, out lined a program in the re gion of debates centering around the war. The Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO), VISTA and the Olinsky model for social change all unaffili ated with SDS came under heavy criticism from dele gates. James criticized most government-sponsored pov erty programs on the grounds that they were or ganizations for social con trol rather than social change. "Social control of poverty districts is the price paid for moderate reforms," James stated. "Afraid to upset the apple-cart" and "restricted to short-term gains," were two major criticisms of ex isting poverty programs made by the delegates. . SDS has no real regional structure in the Great Plains area, but it was de cided at the conference to continue meeting informal ly. The next informal re gional conference will be held in Lincoln on Oct. 30 in connection with the Uni versity Black Power Teach-in. Manager Announces Coed Circulation Cut The circulation manager of the Daily Nebraskan, Jim Buntz, is now out of circulation ith all but one campus crr'. Buntz and Mary Keim announced the coed circulation cut at their pinning ceremony Monday night. PIXNIXGS Mary Keim, Alpha Phi sophomore in Arts and Sci ences from Sioux City, Iowa, to Jim Buntz, P h i Kappa Psi senior in Arts and Sciences from Omaha. Barb O'Neal, Gamma Phi Beta sophomore in Teach ers from Grand Island, to Bob Sutter, Sigma Alpha Epsilon senior in Architec ture from Grand Island. Judy Meyer, Gamma Phi Beta junior in Dental Hy giene from Lincoln, to Brad Pearson, Sigma Alpha Ep silon senior in psychology from Holdrege. Charlene Koves, Alpha Chi Omega, junior in music and speech from Hebron, to Davy Homolka, Beta Theta Pi junior in Business Ad ministration and Agricul ture from Papillion. Marlene Parli, graduate of Norfolk Jr. College, to Larry Viterna, Farmllouse senior in Agriculture from Verdigree. Carol Sagesser, junior in Teacher's from North Plat te, to Jim Schaller, Alpha Tau Omega junior in Busi ness Administration from South Sioux City. Patricia Napur, sopho more in Teacher's from Al bany, Ga., to Michael Nye, Delta Upsilon sophomore in Arts and Sciences from Shanks: Rights Workers Should Start On Whites Speaking to the United Campus Christian Fellow ship Sunday, Lincoln attor ney Hughes Shanks told members that it was time for white civil rights work ers to begin working with their own race. Shanks, a former mem ber of the Congress of Ra cial Equality (CORE) .ex plained the "Black Power" movement as being an act of Negroes in turning their backs on whites just to take a look at themselves. Shanks said that the time has come for Negroes to seek their own solutions to problems instead of follow ing the ground rules of the white man, as they have done throughout the history of the nation. Pointing out that Negroes have to develop their own political, economic and cul tural unity, Shanks said a Negro must overcome bar riers of culture, affluence and education to be ac cepted in a white society. Pointing to such promin ent Negroes as actor Sidney Portier and Ralph Bunche, member of the UN delega tion, Shanks said that these IS THE WIGGY SCENE FOR YOU? It's the latest hang-up. The psy- chadelic Go-Go scene. Soon it j will be 1he big noise on campus. The current issue of The Satur- i day Evening Post takes you on ' the rounds of New York's "total environment" nightclubs. Experi ence the frantic kaleidoscope of j flashing lights, movies, slides, colored smoke and deafening ; rock 'n' roll that give you an j LSD trip with no side effects. Get with New York's "Take-Over Generation" as they Jelly Belly i i their cares away. Find out what j to wear when making the new ' scene: bust shields, fluorescent mini-skirts, silver motorcycle jackets, aduminum wigs. Is this really a new art media as its in- ( ventor believes? Is it for your school? Find out in the October j 22 issue of the Saturday Evening ! Post. Pick up on it today, baby. San Antonio, Texas. Jan Johnson, Towne Club' junior in Teachers' from Lincoln, to John P. Butler from Hartington. ENGAGEMENTS Donna Heins, sophomore in nursing from Central City, to Dan Erickson, FarmHouse junior in Agri culture from Central City. Jennifer Milter, junior at Nebraska Wesieyan to Mickey Lund, FarmHouse junior in Agriculture from Bridgeport. Jane Packer, graduate of Bryan Xursing School, to Gary Wahlgren, Farm House senior in agriculture from Gothenburg. Ellie Meier, Phi Mu sen ior in medical technology from Randolph, to Lt. Hal Daub, Jr., Kappa S i g m,a alumnus from Washington University and the Univer sity College of Law from Omaha. Jean Wagner, graduate in art from Lincoln, to Alan Schlakbier, Theta Chi seni or in Arts and Sciences from San Diego, Calif. Susie Miller, PI Beta Phi senior in journalism ed ucation from Arlington, Va., to Mike Grace, Sigma Phi Epsilon junior in Business Administration from Sioux City Iowa. Sue Dort, Delta Gamma junior in Teacher's College from Lincoln, to Ron Kirk land, senior in Teachers from West Bend, Wis. Suzie Reagan, Delta Gam ma senior in Teachers from Omaha, to Ron Yost, Al pha Tau Omega senior in Teachers from Harvard. men have reached position and affluence but are still denied acceptance because of the color of their skin. Shanks said that Black Power is not an endorse ment of violence but is a look inward on the part of Negroes rather than a sep eration from society. At the same time the Ne gro is looking inward, Shanks said that the white civil rights workers should be returning to his o w n neighborhood to lead his own neighbors out of bias and ignorance. Quoting from data and newspaper articles he has gathered from around the nation, he said that police brutality centers around "Negro treatment." Noting that white investi gations had continually shown "no evidence of bru tality", Shanks said that he could only conclude that bigotry and discrimination were so engrained in the minds of the police that they consider brutal treat ment of . the Negro as being common procedure. In Lincoln, Shanks said that Negroes consider it "very dangerous to call the police into a ghetto." He said that there are now two patrolmen in each squad car patrolling the ghettoes. On the other hand, Shanks said that many policemen he has talked to approach a Negro neighborhood with "fear". NEW! NEW I V $ DREAM DIAMONDS 5rt CTar ve d9 Creators of over 0 million diamond aiut M-cddtng rings lince 18S0. So lovely to new every one who sees (hem will be amazed at (heir beauty. From $99 each style. ) ,i rmniiir,; ;., S . 432-1818 Open Monday and Thursday 'til 9:09 UNIVEtl IT OF NIIIAKA-LINCOLN ON SALE NO