Monday, October 31, 1966 Page 4 The Daily Nebraskan . N 1 m m I -j.it k v?, ,1 i 7, if if i , I , . Alabama's Paper Wins Garbage Can Campaign Leaky garbage cans, par ents day, and interference of segregation with home coming plans are but a few of the extra-cirricular activ ities keeping Alabama stu dents from studying for mid terms as the semester en ters its eighth week. The Crimson and White of the University of Ala bama's campaign to replace old, leaky and tippy gar bage cans with new ones succeeded. The Alabama campus now has $5,000 wor th of new cans. The Crim son and White urged stu dents to use them. The Illinois Student Sen ate considered a motion to censor the University's president. The Students claim that the administra ion had told them they could toave members of their con sultative committee see the final list of candidates for a new dean of student af fairs if they did not inter fere with the original searching committee. The students claim that the administration did not consult them as it had prom ised. OSU Alumni Last Oklahoma State Uni versity ranks last in the Big Eight in alumni giv ing, reports the O'Collegian. The president is m a k i n g strenuous efforts to change the situation. Kansas University has re ported a 37 per cent in crease in English majors and a 25 per cent increase in the school of religion. The Tulane Hullabaloo Placement Placement interviews for the week of Nov. 7 have been scheduled. Additional information is available in the Placement Office in the Nebraska Union. MONDAY, Nov. 7 Eastman Kodak Co.-Tennesee East Biaa: Pd.d., Chem. Procter It Gamble Manufacturing Co.: B.8., M.S., Chem., E.E., M.E.. Ch.E., E.M., At. E., C.E. U.S. Bureau of Public Roads: B.S., ICS., CE, Arffliir AAfletaea k Co.: B.S., M.S. M A.-Aoct.. Bu Adm. Also Engineer ing. Law and Lib. Arte with at least ibours of Aoctg. Union Pacific Railroad Co. -Trans-WHtatka Division: B.S.-C.E.. ME.; B S.B.A.lUml. Training-. Other mar 1(tocrt Laboratories: B.S.B.A.-Bug. Adm.. Arts Sciences, etc. TUESDAY, Nov. S Olanese Corp.: All deaTees-M.E.. Ch.E., Chem., Phyatcis B.S.B.A.. MJ.M.A.-Bua. Adm., Lib. Arts B.S., M.A.-Acct. Standard Otl-Div. of American Oil Co.: B.S., M.B.A.-Bus Adm., Ch.E., M.E., C.E.. E.E., Agr. Morton Chemical Co.: AM defrees Chem., Ch.E. Pan American Petroleum Corp.: All degrees-Creol.: B.S. -Geophysics, Math.. Physics, Aortf., E.E., Ch.E., ME. Good rich -Gult Chemicals lncorp.: All dtcreea-Chem.i B.S.. M.S.-Ch.E., B.S., M E Proctor Gamble Manufacturing Co.: as before. WEDNESDAY, Nov. Celaneae Corp.: as before. Standard Oil-Div. of American Oil Co.: as before. Proctor k Gamble Manufacturing Co.: as before, Peat, Hanrtrk, Mitchell It Co.: B.8.. M.A.-Aectf., Bus. Adm. Those with degrees In law or engineering with an interest in income tax or manage ment control. U.S. Forest iervlce-Dept. of Agri culture: B.8., M.S.-C.E. or closelr related fields. Nebraska Dept. of Roads: B 8 -C K Aaron., Bus. Adm., Acetg. Ohio Edison Co.: B S E E., M E. THURSDAY, Nov. 10 Trane Co.: B.8.-M.E., E.E., Ch.E., E.M.. Af. E.I M.8.-ME. Interested In pus Events k People Apply for a position "wit-h the Doily licbraskan See: Jan Itkin Business Bob Ginn Room 51 Student Union urged students to refuse to contract with any facility for homecoming if it was segregated. The paper urged students to set the community an example of race relations even if it meant no homecoming cel ebrations. New Stadium Kansas State is consider ing building a new football stadium. KSU currently has the smallest stadium in the Big Eight. It is also t h e only Big Eight University which has not increased its stadium size since World War II. The Minnesota band was unable to makes its annual trip to the Michigan game because of lack of funds, the Minnesota Daily re ports. Cindy Hardin, daughter of Chancellor Clifford Hardin, and a student at the Uni versity of Kansas has been named runner-up in the American Royal Queen con test in Kansas City. Liquor Sales Increase Bars in Ames, Iowa re port that liquor and beer sales have increased, ac cording to the Iowa State Daily. Tavern owners cred it the increase to the addi tion of go-go girls for en tertainment and the de creasing novelty of liquor . by the drink. A W.E.B. DuBois Club is being formed on the Uni versity of Illinois campus. The DuBois Clubs are so cialist youth organizations which have been accused of being Communistic. Interviews Swift it Co.-Research & Development Center: All degrees -Chem., Analyt. Chem,, Biochem.i B.S., M.S.-Ch.E., M.E.; B.S. -Home Economics, Agr. Econ.: D.V.M.-Poult. Path. Northwestern University: Any major students desiring to study for M.B.A. Cummins Engine Co., Incorp.: AM degrees-Bus. Adm., Lib. Arts. Union Carbide Corp.-Chemicals, Ole fins. Plastics Silicones Div.: B E,. M.S.-Ch.E., ME. EE., I.E., C.E., Chem.; M.S. -Math Acctg, FRIDAY, Nov. 11 Trane Co.: as before. Procter Gamble Distributing Co.: as before. Swift at Co.: as before. Union Carbide Oorp.-chemicals, Ole fins, Plastics It Silicones Div.: as be fore. Texaco Inoorp.-AIl degrees-Ch.E., Geol.; B.S., M.S.-C.E., C.E., E.E., C E., Applied Math. Procter It Gamble Distributing Co.: B.S.B.A., M.B.A.-Bus. Adm., Lib. Arte., Sales. I '' A' ' ' I , , t , i" 1 mjy " rr TURN ON TOMORROW Fee, , ke being one of the brains behind the coming gas turbine age , . , or helping to develop a new aircraft alloy ... or finding out how to feed 4 billion people? Try your genius at International Harvester, where computers and research are as familiar as tractors and trucks, We are a company that supplies mechanical power to a world that is increas ing its population by more than 60 million a year. Our hori zons are unlimited. But our immediate job is to attract young people who can match their strides with today's onrushing technology. We have openings in research and development, design and testing, manufacturing and sales. We intend to offer the best combination of opportunity, Kansas University is con sidering abolishing its Eng lish proficiency exam. This exam is required for grad uation. The student must show a good over-all ability to use English and to write it effectively. Parent's Day Iowa State sponsored it's annual Parent's Day for the Kansas game. The Uni versity also entertained the parents with special p r o grams. The former president of the St. John's chapter of the American Association of Un iversity Professors claims he was forced to resign be cause of his strike activ ities, reports the D o wn towner. St. John's was the scene of a faculty strike last year. Minnesota has fewer men in residence halls this year than last year, according to Minnesota Daily. G.E. Donation General Electric has do nated $22,500 to Washburn University for lighting on campus. A study at the University of Georgia has reported that tooth decay may be conta gious in humans as well as animals. This would make kissing a g e r m spreading activity. The Georgia paper expressed its confidence in the ability of American lov ers to cambat this obstacle. Girls living in dorms or iginally designed for men have the same problem in aU schools. The Kansas State Daily showed a pic ture of a girl in such a dorm staring at her cramped closet and high shelves. , Union Food 'Rotten' A student at Washburn University complained to the Washburn Review that the student union food was "unappetizing, tasteless and generally rotten." He also complained about its high price. A poll by the Kansas State AWS showed students in disagreement about their rules. Some though the rules were silly and unnecessary. Others thought they pro vided a guideline and a framework. International Harvester puts the future in your hands njlD T ? lilnl mk" ) l'k ' A- H " ' DIANE HICKS . . . "serve University women as they deserve to be served." Ad Hoc Committee Asks Change In AWS System Standing members of the Ad Hoc Committee for the reform of AWS have sent a statement calling for a con stitutional convention to AWS Board. "We want the AWS Board to admit the present organ izational system is not the best possible system and then take the initiative to call a convention to con struct a constitution which will serve University wom en as they deserve to be served," Diane Hicks, Ad Hoc chairman said. Although AWS Board is proposing constitutional changes, "it is only doing a patch-up job," Miss Hicks said. A change in the whole structure is needed, Miss Hicks explained. The convention would be comprised of elected dele gates from each living unit and class representatives elected on an apportioned basis. The two basic changes called for would be to give voting power to the house of representatives and to make the AWS president separate from both the AWS board and the House of Representatives, Miss Hicks said. "The present House of Representatives aids and allow s," Miss Hicks de clared, "when they should responsibility and individual treatment. International Har vester is a 2-billion-dollar plus annual business. We are the world's largest producer of heavy-duty trucks, a major pro ducer of farm and construction equipment, an important steel manufacturer, too. POWER and the people who pro vide it are our lifeblood, We need talented and imaginative graduates in liberal arts, accounting, chemistry, mathe matics and business administration, as well as engineer ing. We probably need you." Intrrfstnel? Conlad your Plsccmpnt Officer now for a dale to see an IH representative when he visit-; your campuf.. Or II Interview are not Sched uled, write directly to the Supervisor of College Relations, International Harvester Company, 401 North Michigan Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60611. AN tQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER be voting on and initiating rules and changes." With three different gov erning bodies in operation a system of checks and bal ances would develop and all the power would not exist only within the AWS Board, Miss Hicks ex plained. The Ad Hoc Committee also contends that the AWS Board is not representative of University women. Fresh men women are not repre sented at all. Instead of the present system of s e 1 c c t i n g six women from each class as Board members' the Ad Hoc Committee suggests that class representatives including freshmen be elected on an apportioned basis. The Committee believes that under this type of a system the class with the largest enrollment would have the largest representa tion, corresponding with the structure of the United .States Congress. Miss Hicks noted that the AWS at Kansas University allows two freshmen women on the board. The freshmen are elected at the end of the first semester after they have been orientated with the structure and programs of AWS. Du Bois Gains Recognition By Temple Student Affairs Washington (CPS) The W.E.B. DuBois Club has finally obtained official rec ognition at Temple Univer sity, but chapter members are still having difficulties on other college campuses. The Student Affairs Com mittee at Temple University in Philadelphia recognized the local chapter this month despite federal government allegations that it is a Com munist front. The DuBois Club was re fused recognition last se mester because the group's constitution had required chapters to follow national policy. Since the constitu tion has been amended, making individual chapters independent, the applica tion now meets with student activities regulations requir ing local autonomy. At the University of Illi nois, Ralph Bennett, local chapter founder, has formal ly sought recognition of the DuBois Club so that it can use University facilities. Bennett claims that Uni versity recognition will test the 1948 Clahaugh Act which forbids the University to ex tend facilities to "sub versive, seditious or Un American" organizations. The application will force the University to either "recognize the club, break the Clabaugh Act and be come a leader in the fight for academic freedom," or "suppress the group and li mm 'mil -""'i-i'i i iniin -nr -irtMit "i in iiiMiiiimiiiiih ILcisf of lei JMiaHBMIkMilM an Mamwa IMflfe d0k Mi,l m clocf oss and isusiitsssi went back to collocjo- ilnd not just for t be football cjamss- We'd like to clear up what appears to be a misunderstanding. It is somewhat popular on campus to decry a business career on the grounds that you stop learning once you start working for Clich6 Nuts & Bolts. That idea is groundless. Wc can't speak for Cliche, but we can for ourselves-Western Electric, the man ufacturing and supply unit of the Bell Sys tem. 6 out of 1 0 college graduates who have joined us over the past 1 0 years, for exam ple, have continued their higher education. How'rc these for openers: W.E's Tuition Refund Plan lets em ployees pursue degrees while work ing for us. Over 6 thousand have at tended schools in 41 states under this plan. Wc refund more than $1 million in tuition costs to employees a year. To name another program: advanced engineering study, under the direc tion of Lehigh University, is con ducted at our Engineering Research expose Itself as creating an atmosphere of constraint and oppression," Bennett said. The University will proc ess the request through reg ular channels, according to Dean of Students Stanton Millet. At Indiana University in Bloomington, trial proce dures are pending for two men arrested on Sept. 15 for trespassing as they dis tributed DuBois Club liter ature. An IU Board of Trustees ruing states that the Du Bois Club cannot operate on 'Open Air' Quiz Taken By Anthropology Class Recess in college? Or was it some new type of field trip? Passersby may have raised more than one eyebrow as they spied an entire class taking a quiz on the lawn outside of Burnett Hall Friday afternoon. Dr. Paul Turner explained that his Anthropology 12 class wasn't conducting an experiment in the effects of the surroundings on students' grades, but that the 23 students were forced to evacuate their basement class room when the lights blinked off at 1:40 p.m. Power in six other campus buildings was also out for the 25 minute period, because of a blown fuse in the main power circuit, Paul Owen," University power plant engineer, reported. Owen said Burnett, Andrews, the athletic field house, the east and west stadiums, the greenhouse, Bessey, and Avery were the buildings affected. yeaiT thousands m m m Center in Princeton, N. J. Selected employees arc sent there from all over the country for a year's concen trated study leading to a master's degree. You get the idea. We're for more learn ing in our business. After all, Western Electric doesn't make buggy whips. We make advanced communications equip ment. And the Bell telephone network will need even more sophisticated devices by the time your fifth reunion rolls around. The state of the art, never static, is where the action is. At Western Electric, what's happening is the excitement and satisfaction of con tinued doing and learning. If this happens to appeal to you, no matter what degree you're aiming for, check us out. And grab a piece of the action. campus as a registered or ganization while being in vestigated by the Justice Department as an "alleged communist front." One student's original suspension has been re voked, and he has been placed on disciplinary pro bation. The other man was identified as a model for the art department. Since the judge slated to try the case in October was a member of the IU Board of Trustees, the case has been postponed until No vember while Bloomington Superior Court seeks a replacement. Western Electric MANUFACTURING 1 SUPPLY UNIT Of THE BELL SYSTEM Y " V A VV