Friday, December 2, 1966 The Daily Nebraskan Page 5 3 V " If 1 p-X ' if PIII!IHI'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIH!!!!IUIIIIH I ... City, State, National, World I I Week In Review Legislators Turn Down Tax Session Spangler: Philosophic Object Lacks Selective Service Status I COLONEL FRANCIS DRATH . . . says the draft will not take students until June, at least. The Nebraska Legislat ure ended its two-day Le gislative Council meeting Tuesday almost unani mously agreeing that the state's tax problems can solved at the regular ses sion that begins January 3. By a 40-6 vote the Legis lature turned down Sen. Terry Carpenter's proposal for a special session to pass sales and income tax laws. Sen. Carpenter had per sisted in his request after being rebuffed by Governor-elect Norbert Tiemann. The senator claimed that Tiemann had given h i m authority to initiate the action for him. Tiemann denied this af ter the senator had collect ed signatures of 10 legisla tors. The signatures auth orized Secretary of State Frank Marsh to poll the Legislative Council by handing each a ballot in side an envelope. At Tuesday's meeting Tiemann reiterated, In a statement read by Sen. William Hasebroock, that he had no wish to influ ence the judgment of t h e Legislature. He added, however that if a special session were called he would make his tax legis lation available. The possibility of referen dum drives, aimed at halt ing new tax laws and plac ing the issue on the No vember 1968 ballot was one of the prime reasons Sen. Carpenter sought a special session. Senators who voted for the special session were George Gerdes, Fern Hub bard, Peter Claussen, Jer ome Warner, Harold Stry ker and Terry Carpenter. Omaha World-Herald Draft Doesn't Take Mid-Term Students Leaders Applaud LBJ's Budget Cuts By Mick Lowe Junior Staff Writer Students now enrolled in the University and carrying at least 12 hours satisfac torily can rest assured that no matter what their grades they will be allowed to re main to continue school un til June, according to Col onel Francis Drath, Deputy Director of the Nebraska Selective Service System. Congressional law, ac cording to Drath, demands that no student be inducted until the completion of the academic year. Students who have been ordered to take their physi cal examinations will be re classified I-S. (II-S is the regular student d e f e r r ment.) A I-S classification is an interim student deferment, Drath said. If a student can bring his grades to "satis factory standard, he will be returned into the II-S cate gory." Drath pointed out that I S status is given only once, however, meaning that if a student allows his grades to drop after he has been classified I-S and returned to II-S, he will inducted at the close of the academic year. Drath defined "satisfac tory" as the "upper half of the freshman class, the up per two-thirds of the sopho more class, and the upper three-fourths of the junior class," or a score of 70 or above on the draft test." Only one-fifth of the stu dents who take the test, according to Drath, failed to score 70 or above. Frequently heard rumors that all students in a cer tain town are being drafted are incorrect, according to Drath, since local draft boards do not have to fill a "quota." Local boards are gov erned by the "availability of the number of qualified men," Drath said. "Normal ly the number you call is in proportion to the size of your registration." Concerning reports that application for conscien tious objector can postpone induction for up to two years (because of process ing), Drath admitted that the average minimum time requirement is six months, the average maximum one year. "Two years Is an exag geration," Drath said. But because the 10 application must pass through the Jus tice Department, hearings, and the local board, it is in evitably a lengthy proced ure. Many students, notably at the University of Michigan, have reacted to university distribution of grades to the draft board. "If we didn't have grades as a guideline," Drath ob served, "we would have to go on the draft test alone. NEWS OUTLOOK Everyone who didn't take the test would probably be inducted." The future of the Selec tive Service System is In doubt, according to Drath, not only in the number of men to be drafted, but a continuation of the defer ment policy. Secretary of Defense Mc Namara has announced that draft quotas in 1967 will probably be reduced from 35,000 men per month to 27 thousand. At the same time, the sys tem that allows college stu dents to stay out of war while forcing the economi cally underprivileged to fight has come under heavy fire. "There is no perfect sys tem," Drath said. "But I like the present system be cause it is flexible. You can adjust to a call for 1,000 men a month or 30 people a month." We Need . Engineers Chemical Mechanical 1 . Electronic Field Offers You The solid Propellent A challenging, enlightened, and reward ing future with opportunity for further study, prfoessional atmosphere, project responsibility, and management experi ence. U. S. Naval Propellanf Plant Indian Head, Maryland Wednesday, December 7 Interviews will be held an Campus. Contact your placement office for further information. (AP) Austin, Texas - - Both Republican and Democratic congressional leaders have applauded President Johnson's dec laration that he plans to trim federal pro grams by more than $3 billion next year. After confering with the leaders for several hours at his ranch Johnson held a news conference. The Senate and House leaders took part in the meeting with newsmen. "Our goal is to have in excess of $3 billion in program reductions," President Johnson said. He said the cutback will be accom plished by setting aside programs "if we think they can be done better tomorrow than they can today in the light of the war situation and in the light of other demands being made in the government." Asked whether he and Republican House leader Gerald R. Ford were "now generally happy with the effort the Pre sident is making to cut nonessential spending," Senate GOP leader Everett Dirksen replied: "Any effort in that direction, and particularly when It Is substantial, ought to make everybody who embraces a rea sonable or moderate or conservative view quite happy . . . moving in that direc tion certainly does make ns happy. It will have a definite impact on the infla tionary picture that obtains to some ex tent in the country." Ford said "it seems to me we are moving exactly in the right direction." Senate Democratic leader Mike Mans field also promptly endorsed Johnson's efforts to reduce expenditures. Johnson told the news conference that Budget Director Charles L. Schultze would meet with Cabinet members short ly to make further recommendations for cutting back government programs. He said he would take prompt action on them. Johnson told newsmen that military operations in Viet Nam continue to be successful. He said between $5 and $15 billion would be requested to meet war costs between next January and July 1. Johnson said that the possibility of an income-tax increase was discussed. The Christian Science Mositor West German Coalition Elects Ex-Nazi Bon - - West Germans got a prema ture Christmas present Thursday a new government with some prospect that it can function. The first act in a whirlwind of par liamentary activity was the election Thursday morning of Kurt Georg Kie singer, a 2 year-old lawyer-politician and ex-Nazi from Stuttgart as West Ger many's third post-war chancellor and successor to the luckless Ludwig Erhard. Kiesinger, minister president of Ba den Wuerttembury for the last eight years, won 340 of the fully valid votes of the Bundestag (parliament) members plus 1 of the 22 Berliners whose voting privileges are restricted at Allied insis tence. One hundred nine full members plus three Berliners voted against Kiesinger and the grand coalition. Twenty -t h r e e plus three Berliners cast bland ballots. Altogether about 80 members of the two major parties voted against or declined to support their new partnership. Kiesinger's cabinet will be installed Thursday. It includes in addition to Kie singer, 10 men from the previously rul ing Christian Democrats and their Va varian sister party, the Christian Social ists and eight men and a woman from the Social Democrats, until now in op position. For the Socialists under Mayor Wil ly Brandt of Berlin, who became vice chancellor and foreign minister it is the end of a long dry spell. They have not shared responsibility on the federal level since West Germany was established as such in 1949 and be fore that not since 1930 in Berlin. They naturally would have preferred to run the whole show with the small Free Democratic Party as partners but the majority was too thin and the risks too great. Against the will of the Christian Dem ocrats the Socialists apparently have managed to take over the government with the Free Democrats in the populous and troubled Ruhr region which includes one-third of West Germany's people. Erhard fcrst became chancellor in October 1963 upon the retirement of Kon rad Adenauer and had served since 1949 as minister of economics. Choking down the bitterness of the recent weeks in which the one-time pub lic idol has been deserted by friend and foe alike, Erhard said a dignified fare well with apparent relief in a 12-minute TV and radio speech. In many ways if it actually can tackle the awesome problems of econom ic stability and changing foreign policy a new government may be one of the rec oncilliations. The two major parties have fought each other to a standstill in the past. Now they must cooperate to survive in programs of reform that represent com promises for both of them. Lincoln Evening Journal WHO SAYS THE ELECTRIC UTILITY INDUSTRY ISN'T DYNAMIC ... CHALLENGING? 0 $145,000,000 construction program over next five years. 0 Major participant in 345,000 volt extra-high-voltage network emerging in the Midwest. 0 Addition of 50,000 kw steam -electric turbo generator to system. These plus many other engineering projects stimulate and continually challenge the professional engineering staff at KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT COMPANY. KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT COMPANY is an investor-owned, business managed company employing approximately 2,200 people at which over 100 are graduate engineers. Located in the "Heart of America", Kansas City offers cultural stimulation, major league professional sports and excellent housing facilities. Local universities and colleges offer unlimited opportunity for advanced studies. If you're o Mechanical or Electrical Engineer looking for a career in design, power plant operation, construction, sales, system planning or transmission engineering, we suggest you make an appointment at your Placement Office to talk to our Representative. We'll be glad to explore the opportunities that await you with KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT COMPANY. We'll be on campus December 7,' 1966. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER "The draft is undemo cratic and oppressive," ac cording to Al Spangler, campus president of Stu dents for a Democratic So ciety. Spangler said that he is opposed to conscrip tion of any kind, but that he realized "the tremen mendous problem that would occurr if the draft were abolished." Spangler said that h i s main objection to the draft was the lack of a defer ment for those people who are not categorically op posed to war, but who, for moral or philisophical rea sons, are opposed to the war in Viet Nam. "These people are not conscientious objectors," Spangler observed, "b u t they feel that they couldn't fight in this war. There's no out." "I think this kind of per son ought to have some kind of alternative. Per haps they could go to Viet Nam, not to fight, but in a capacity similar to the Peace Corps." The national SDS organ ization has passed a reso lution opposing the draft, "no matter what form it takes, because of its un democratic and coercive nature." The draft Is undemocrat ic, according to Spangler, because "people are draft ed who can't vote and who have no voice in the poli cies they're helping to car ry out. Also the draft hurts the person who can't afford to go to college." "If not enough people volunteer to fight in Viet Nam, then perhaps we should re-examine what we're doing over there. A number of revolutionary movements have been car ried out with just volun teers," Spangler added. f;:Z0:W, ... . til -'imifeAvv'. . pi'ttiv'.utj;: :iHIh: Mbr- mwh';! : Spangler ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES for Seniors and Graduates in mechanical, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, CIVIL (structures oriented), ELECTRICAL, MARINE, and METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING MECHANICS, APPLIED MATHEMATICS, CERAMICS, PHYSICS and ENGINEERING PHYSICS Pratt & Whitney Aircraft CAMPUS INTERVIEWS MONDAY, DEC. 5 Appointments should be made in advance through your College Placement Office U BWWON Or HMTre WCMPr oonn I tm Chi 0,t twW spccMum m owcK...Powr rot PDOPuisioN-Powm re timtMur srsttus. CttMRtMr HTlUZJITIOHf IMCLUDC AlKHArT. MISSILES. SPACE VfHICI CS. MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL A P PI ICATiOltS. - -J jj i toil u - fleets o. Free? yourself from shaving's tyranny with th new Norelco Tripleheader Speedshaver 35T. It has mor features than any other shaver on the market. 1 8 rotary blades whip away whiskers at 77 miles an hourl And so close, we dare to match shaves with a blade. Yet comfortable. Rotary blades and very thin Microgroov floating heads can't nick or cut. With pop-up trimmer, onoff switch, 110220 volts and coil cord, this ner Norelco gives you oil you need to ban tht beard! -Ail -9 Morels Eyes right (or the economically priced 'Flip-Top' Spetdshover 20. Two heads give you tht famous rotary blade shave. Easy flip-top cleaning too. welCOthe fast, close, comfortable electric shave 9 Km Noiih AiMiiuw FtuiiM Cn,(i,, Inc. ISO Lull mUU Keik. Naw luik IWi;