The daily Nebraskan. ([Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-current, December 02, 1966, Page Page 7, Image 13

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    Friday, December 2, 1966
The Daily Nebraskan
PageJJ ...
Governor's Aide To Seek
Liaison With Lawmakers
A University professor
may be the first executive
assistant to the governor
to work closely with the
Legislature and the gover
nor. Clayton Yeutter, appoint
ed by governor-elect Nor
bert E. Tiemann as his
executive assistant, said
he was not aware of any
like assistant in previous
administrations.
He said he is anticipat
ing to work more closely
with the Legislature than
has any other oerson in
the governor's office in the
past.
Yeutter said he will bas
ically be responsible for
liaison between the govern
mental branch and the
state legislature.
He said he will help Tie
mann select department
heads and approve their
operations. He will also re
solve the problem of inter
Professional IFC Elects
Chairman, Exec Council
University profes
sional fraternities began
work on an orgnizational
constitution at a meeting
Tuesday night by appoint
ing a chairman and execu
tive council to study the
problem.
The chairman is Bruce
Giles and members of the
executive council are Ken
Hobart, Glen McFarren,
and Carol Morgan.
According to Bruce Mc
Nickle, Delta Sigma Pi rep
resentative on the constitu
tional committee, it is
hoped the constitution will
be written and approved
bv the ASUN by Jan. 27,
1967.
McNickle said the profes
sional IFC will act only as
a coordinating body for the
professional and profession
al honorary fraternities on
campus.
The purpose of the group
will be to create a better
public image for the pro
fessionals, create bet
with Old Spice Lime
Precisely what things depends on what you have in
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Old 8pie LIME Cologne After
1967
ENGINEERING AND MATH GRADUATES FOR PRODUCTION,
RESEARCH, QUALITY CONTROL, DESIGN, INDUSTRIAL EN
GINEERING, TEST ENGINEERING, AND FIELD ENGINEERING
The Inland Steel Company, East Chicago, Indiana, in
vites you to investigate our many career opportunities.
Consult the specific job descriptions in the pocket of
our brochure. Our representatives will be on your cam
pus on Tuesday, December 6th. Contact Mr. Frank M.
Hallgren for an appointment.
An Equal Opportunity Employer la tho Plant for
departmental coordination,
he said.
Yeutter said he Is par
ticularly interested In state
Yeutter
ter communication and ex
change of ideas between the
professionals and to create
more professional brother
hood, McNickle said.
He said there is a "def
inite need" for people on
campus to become better
acquainted with the profes
sional societies.
McNickle has previously
indicated this organization
might undertake such acti
vities as sending a profes
sional fraternity booklet to
incoming freshmen, spon
sor professional functions
and a "professional week."
provide united publicity and
give member organizations
hints on how to recruit
members and initiate pro
grams. McNickle stressed this
would not be a "control or
ganization," but rather a
coordinating group for these
fraternities.
If the professional IFC is
formed, it would be the first
of its kind in the nation.
Shave, Gift Sett. By the makera
INLAND STEEL COUPHV
INDIANA BAUOS WORM
EAST CHICAGO, INDIANA
government and worked
closely with the Legislat
ure during its last session.
Yeutter wrote the Income
tax bill which was passed
by the Legislature but re
pealed by the voters.
He said he has known
Tiemann personally for
many years. When Yeutter
was a 4-H member in Daw
son County, Tiemann was
the assistant county agent,
and was his livestock judg
ing coach in 1947 and 1948.
Yeutter worked with a
group of nine attorneys for
Tiemann's campaign and
worked with the Curtis for
Senator committee during
the 1966 election cam
paigns. He has been a full-time
faculty member at the Uni
versity for one-and-a-half
years and taught agricul
ture economics and agri
culture law.
His relationship with the
University will be com
pletely severed Jan. 1 when
he will move into his of
fice in the State Capitol
immediately adjacent to
the governor's office.
Yeutter was graduated
from the University Law
College In 1963. He re
ceived his Ph.D. In agri
culture economics in 1966.
While in office as execu
tive assistant, he will con
tinue to operate a farming
and cattle feeding business
in Dawson County near
Cozad.
To Initiate Frosh
Initiation of new mem
bers into Phi Eta Sigma,
freshman honorary, will be
Sunday at 2:30 in the Ne
braska Union.
Male students are eligible
if they have a 3.5 average
at the end of either the
spring or fall semesters of
their freshman year. i
The student must have j
carried at least twelve :
hours each semester.
Transfer students are eli
gible if they have not ac
cumulated over 20 semester
hours.
QOO
pi JIIU1MW
of original Old Spice.
Progress Program
FRIDAY
ENGLISH Department, 12
p.m., Nebraska Union.
PLACEMENT Office
Luncheon, 12:30 p.m., Ne
braska Union.
APha, 1:30 p.m., Nebras
ka Union.
BUSINESS ADMINISTRA
TION Marketing & Bus.
Org. 141, "Dr. Lawrence
Jones," 1:30 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
FACULTY - GRADUATE
Club, 4 p.m., Nebraska Un
ion. ASUN Big Eight Student
Government Convention
Banquet, 6 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
EDUCATORS Investment
Club, 6:30 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
INTER-VARSITY, 7 p.m.
Nebraska Union.
ALPHA PHI OMEGA Re
hearsal, 7 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
PALLADIAN Literary So
ciety, 8 p.m. Nebraska Un
ion. SUNDAY
HILLEL, 5 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
STUDENT Religious Lib
erals, 7:30 p.m., Nebraska
Union.
jr.. ih- Ifr ' ;v V j
SHOP AT SEARS AND SAVE
Satisfaction Guaranteed or
Your Money Back
Viet Nam: Haves
Cont. From Pg. 1, Col. 2
political and cultural effects.
China is now one of the
most powerful nations in the
world, yet her expanding he
gemony is constantly frus
trated by American and Rus
sian power on her very bord
ers. Similarly, despite the
development of Chinese tech
nology, the gulf between her
living standards and ours
grows greater each year. She
is constantly reminded that,
as the most powerful of the
underdeveloped nations, Chi
na is also one of the poorest.
Her struggle against the
U.S. Is an economic one a
struggle of have-nots against
haves, of the exploited
against the exploiters. Chi
nese pride dictates that her
response to oppression must
be revolution.
To China this struggle
still has an important intern
al aspect. The "cultural rev
olution," in addition to being
a preparation for possible
battle against foreign foes, is
also a very real struggle be
tween revisionists and revo
lutionaries within Chinese so
ciety.' Bourgeois USSR
There is one more thing
which many Americans have
not yet understood: in China's
eyes, Russia has changed
sides. To be specific, the
Soviet Union is now a bour
geois power imperialistic,
quasi-capitalist, white and
increasingly urban. She has
betrayed the revolutionary
nations. The implications of
Sears believes
responsible young adults
deserve credit
Sears
this development seem as far
reaching as any since the
Second World War.
A short decade ago, China
hailed the Soviet Union as
the world's formost revolu
tionary nation. She patterned
her economic, political and
social development after the
Russian model. The interna
tional solidarity of the pro
letariat, led by Moscow, was
a countinuous theme in Pe
king's radio and press. The
U.S.S.R. was the champion of
the oppressed against ag
gression by the bourgeois im
perialist powers.
Today, she has joined
them. The signs have be
come so obvious since 1956
that only a few need be men
tioned. In 1964, Mao Tse-tung
inferred to visiting Japanese
newsmen that Russia had
stolen from China most of
the land east of Lake Baikal;
"we have not yet requested
the settling of the account for
this," he said.
Si no-Soviet Conflict
Tensions along the Sin o
Soviet border has led to an
estimated 5,000 border inci
dents since 1959, according to
Chinese Foreign Minister
Chen Yi; the figure is prob
ably not accurate, but it is
indicative.
Since the early 1960's, Chi
na has repeatedly attacked
the Russian doctrine of peace
ful co-existence, which she
correctly interprets as tacit
Soviet approval of the inter
national status quo. In early
October of this year Peking
officially branded the U.S.S.R.
137 So. 13th
Phone Sears
475-2651
Fight Have-N6ts
as Public Enemy No. 2 of
world wide revolution. On
November 4, China charged
that the U.S. and the Soviet
Union were "collaborating for
world domination."
The Russians are white.
Incidents of racial tension be
t w e e n African students in
Moscow have received in
creasing attention in the Pek
ing press, and it may not be
long before Moscow's expul
sion of Chinese students is
interpreted in racial terms.
Affluent Russia
Finally, the growing Soviet
concern for production of con
sumer goods (not to mention
heavy weaponry), the in
creasing affluence of Russian
society, and its cultural rap
prochment with the urbanized
West make Russia and easy
target for attacks along the
urban-rural line of Lin Piao.
China believes Russia has
switched camps, and Indica
tions are that she is in fact
doing so. If this is true, the
YWCA To Hear
Rocky Mt. Rep
A representative from the
Rocky Mountain Region
YWCA will speak to the
YWCA cabinet Saturday at
2 p.m. about the national
Y's integration resolution.
The resolution was passed
by the national YWCA and
states that all YWCAs will
be integrated by April, 1967
or will lose national membership.
Sears
Opening your first credit account?
. . . Starting a new job? . . . Newly
married? ... A new homemaker? . . .
A new parent? ... If your means are
modest and your needs are many,
Sears stands ready to help you with
Credit.
If you want an account with a de
pendable store, come in and have a
talk with a credit counselor at Sears.
This is a promise:
Sears will give your credit re
quest prompt attention. You
don't need a cosigner. Your
character and ability to pay are
your best references.
Enjoy the convenience of a Sears
Credit Account. Buy the things you
need now . . . use them now . . . pay
for them in easy monthly payments.
When you visit Sears, plan to spend
a little time browsing around. YouH
be happily surprised with all the
good things in life that can be yours
at Sears today!
HOLIDAY STORE nOURS
MON.-rai'M.
f iM A M. to
t:M T.M.
DAILY
:M A.M. to
l:M F.M.
implications for Viet Nam
are far-reaching.
It will mean, first of all,
that Russia has as much in
terest as the U.S. in p r e-
venting a victory of Chinese
style People's War. Recent
diplomatic reports do seem
to indicate that she may be
looking for a conference ta
ble i.e., a peaceful compro
mise and a return to the sta
tus quo in the American fash
ion rather than a total un
compromising struggle a la
China.
Secondly, it will mean that
Soviet aid to Hanoi will con
tinue to be symbolic and per
functory so long as the U.S.
is committed militarily in
South Viet Nam. It might
even mean that If China
shows serious signs of want
ing to Intervene militarily,
Russia might try to keep
China off balance by height
ening Sino-Soviet border ten
sions. Thirdly, it will mean that
if the Viet Cong and or
Hanoi is unable to win a Peo
ft
ple's War victory against the
S. and the government of
South Viet Nam, it could
spell the downfall of the hard
Mao-Lin line in Peking and
the beginning of "Chinese re
visionism." Practical Chinese
communists would have no
choice but to take the Soviet
road again toward peaceful
co-existence and, hopefully,
prosperity.
With this much at stake,
Mao and Lin should not be
counted out of the Viet Nam
war. "
AT.
t:M A.M. to
in rjc.
tlKU, BOEIUCK AND OO.
' m . 0. f, -
1