The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, October 12, 1966, Page Page 5, Image 5

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    . 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.
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Comb those natural curls right out of your hair with
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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
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Values 10 $7 2.D
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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".
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