Help wanted Student Activities needs volunteers for the following projects: ...Students to work on committees for the Walk for Development. This project is a campaign against the causes of domestic and international poverty. ...Six persons per weekend to work with Indians on Macy Project, to help staff recreation center, ...Speech therapist for Lincoln Child Care Center. ...Two teachers aids in different levels of English and math for adult education. Anyone interested can phone Zoya Zeman, Student Activities, 472-2484. MARINE CORPS SELECTION INTERVIEWS A United States Marine Corps Officer Selection Team will visit the University of Nebraska campus on Feb. 23, 24 & 25 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Captain B. V. Taylor, Officer Selection Officer from Omaha, will be inter viewing in the Placement Office Room 225 Nebraska. The Marine Corps has officer programs available for freshmen through seniors.AII lead to a second lieutenant's commission upon graduation. While attending college, the student attends no meetings or drills, is draft deferred, and receives longevity which results in much higher pay (as much as $150 extra per month). Free University Issues and Confrontations Topic: Is war moral Time: s P.m. Or immoral TuesdaV' February 23 Place: Nebraska Union (room to be posted) twaxissMMMnm CLEANING CENTERS Skirts Slacks- Sweate Offer good until Feb. 27 1250 No. 48th 13th ot "P 21st & "0" ONE-HOUR DRY CLEANING SERVICE Free Doorside Parking Open 7 to 7 Mon.-Fri.; 7 to 5:30 Sat. Country Club Quality at Neighborhood Prices 32! P,4 Di?nv . SALE; 190 39 690 m fecial Sejation counts up to 7n BOOKSTORE call Senate meeting Although the Faculty Senate Liaison committee decided last week not to convene another special faculty meeting to consider resolutions concerning the Stephen Rozman case, it appears an extra Faculty Senate meeting will be called. President Joseph Soshnik said Sunday that he has seen a petition signed by "slightly under" 25 members of the Senate requesting a special meeting of that body. The Regents' by-laws state that the president may call special meetings "upon such notice as he deems necessary, or upon a written petition signed by at least 25 members of the Senate." Soshnik said the petition asks the meeting be convened no later than March 4 which is five days prior to the next regularly scheduled Senate meeting March 9. The meeting would allow resolutions similar to those read at the Feb. 15 special faculty meeting to be Petitions try to block Nebraska State Fair In protest of the "anti-rock festival bill" recently signed into law by Gov. J. J. Lxon, about 75 University students have signed a petition to prohibit the 1971 Nebraska State Fair. LB63, sponsored by State Sen. Terry Carpenter of Scottsbluff, permits 50 people to petition a county board if they believe a public gathering may endanger public health or welfare. The county board may then hold a hearing or seek a court injunction. It is not required to take either action. State Fair board secretary Henry Brandt said he realizes the protest is symbolic, but added: "It is too bad that they must pick on the state fair, a state-wide activity that has been going on tor 101 years. In answer to some of the petition's charges against the fair, Brandt said: "All animals must pass a vet's inspection, and have health papers. Trouble at the fair has been a minimum and security is considered excellent. "And entertainment has been family oriented, such as Liberace, Tennessee KrnieFord or Lawrence Welk and Buck Owens." Gov. J. J. hxon said LB63 does little to change the present authority of county commissioners to prevent public gatherings. There might have been cause for concern, he said, had action of county commissioners been made mandatory. The students haven't dfcciJed if they will take the petition to the Lancaster County Board. nnciAtriA hp ariHp.H Timft ran out at that meeting before all resolutions were considered. The resolutions at the Feb. 15 meeting were concerned generally with either a direct expression of faculty sentiment on the Regents' dismissal of Rozman or the establishment of codes and procedures governing grievances and dismissals. Soshnik advised that if the meeting is called, it is "quite important" that all resolutions are submitted to his office or to assistant professor of English Robert D. Narveson, Faculty Senate secretary, for distribution before the meeting. If convened, the special Senate meeting will be the first called by petition in Soshnik's experience as president of the Senate. Black professor sees change in race values Many young black men and women describe George Sinklcr as an Uncle Tom or an Oreo cookie- black on the outside; whie inside. And the Morgan State College faculty member freely admits it, but not without a little sadness. "Maybe it's because I feel blacks in the United States are making headway in their search for equality," he suggested to a Centennial College audience. Sinkler was in Lincoln in co-operation with the history department to lecture in several classes. "1 grew up with rigid segregation and called people 'sir,' and they called me 'boy,'" Sinkler said. "Coming out of those circumstances and surviving, and now being able to look at present conditions, I feel a heavy burden has been lifted." Sinkler admitted that his views often conflict with the doctrines of young, more militant blacks. "He, (the black militant) doesn't see any change. ..coming from the south I can compare the past with the present, whereas a THE DAILY NEBRASKAN northern black never experienced southern segregation." Although blacks have come far, Sinkler said: "We are still subject to certain injustices, but when I encounter them I no longer feel anger, I am just greatly saddened." . The alienation of all culture includes shedding old racial values, he said. This comes at a time when young blacks have racial consciousness which clashes whith white racial unconsciousness. The professor repeated that blacks have more options today, more routes to turn to, in their quest for equality and justice. Said Sinkler: "When I think of opportunities for young blacks today, this is why I say things are changing." He counseled young blacks to stay "within the law" and there will be no problem. "Even I can go for days without feeling the man's boot on my neck." The racial problem is a problem common to all human beings, regardless of color, Sinkler said. Snow job . . . Continued from page 1 and some even studied. About two dozen students took time for a swim in the dorm's enclosed pool, while outside men got up a football game. At the Cather-Pound-WRH cafeteria, 1,137 students dined on breakfast cooked by students under the direction of Helen Faig, supervisor of food service. None of Faig's 20 full-time helpers showed up, so the students pitched in. Milk was immediately rationed, and the bread supply was scheduled to run out Tuesday morning during breakfast, but Faig speculated she could feed the students on an emergency basis for as long as four days if necessary. Many Women's Residence Hall girls spent the morning peering out at snowbound 16th Street. But by afternoon they, and fraternity men from across the street, were enjoying games of "bury the nearest girl in the snow." UNIVERSITY MAINTENANCE MEN, under the direction of Roy Rasmussen, superintendent of grounds, went to work immediately Monday morning. But the snow was heavy and set, at least as deep as during the January blizzard, and the wind would not let up. Progress was barely discernable as of Monday night. PAGE 2 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1971