VI 'I f X A f I - J. t 'UK !; -Wg I "ill ; jSf- I MMM " 1 iiW iiniwum ii nil..... inn ! .1,, , mi,, nminipiiw m I WESLEY FOUNDATION President Supports Electoral Proposals A change in the electoral procedures of AWS has the backing of Pam Hedgecock, president of AWS. Speaking before a meeting of the ASUN Student Conduct Committee meeting, Miss Hedgecock said that "as an individual, I would like to see the procedure changed." She spoke of the proposal for a change in the electoral procedures made to the AWS Board by Candy May. There was much discussion on the proposal, according to Miss Hedgecock, and that it was jforwarded to the Constitu tutional committee. Miss Hedgecock stated that the autonomy of the A W S Board was hard to define, be cause "the character of AWS is changing. It has been dur ing the past few years that AWS has become more of a government than an activ ity." "However, the board does have more power than I imagined," Miss Hedgecock stated. "But I feel that its power should definitely be better clarified." Miss Hedgcock suggested Dorm Dwellers Vote On Interdorm Constitution By Nancy Henrickson Senior Staff Writer A constitution creating an Interdorm Council will be pre sented on a ballot to students in University residence halls Monday, Nov. 7. All dormitory residents liv ing on city and East campus will have the opportunity to vote for or against the con stitution. The constitution was written by the Interdorm Coordinating Committee (IDCC) during a three month period beginning last March. Ideas for the Interdorm Council were initiated by Marv Almy, past RAM presi dent, Tony Redman, past president of Cather and Tom Holeman, past president of Abel. IDCC Formed A temporary coordinating Estate Of $15,200 Willed To Nil A retired Army sergeant who lived most of his life outside the State of Nebras ka willed his entire estate of $15,200 to the University Foundation for use in as sisting "in the improve ment of educational stand ards." Daniel Bestor, who died last year at El Paso, Tex as, was a native of Platts mouth. The bequest, which was received this week, will be Invested and the income will be ' used in Mr. Bes tor's name "to meet the greatest needs" of the Uni versity, Harry R. Haynie, Foundation president, said. In 1953, Mr. Bestor established a scholar ship fund in the Foundation with a donation of common stock valued at $2,767. With additional donations and through careful investments by the Foundation, the Bes tor Scholarship Fund now has grown to a valuation of $56,982, Haynie said. This present school year, income from the perman ent Bestor Fund supported $3,422 in scholarships for College of Agriculture and Home Economics students, Haynie said. on campus. that if the Student Conduct committee decides to draw upOCT a Bill of Rights, they include a statement that women have the right to govern for them selves. When questioned as to the rationale behind the reason ing that women but not men should have hours, Miss Hedgecock stated that men are looked upon by society in a different light. "Women are under different cultural limitations than men." Dick Shulze, chairman of the committee, announced that a symposium on total ed ucation has been organized for Tuesday afternoon. Susie Phelps, a member of the committee, reported on Publications Board. She stated that the specific pow ers of the board are vague. "For instance it is not clear where the permission corr.ps from on whether it is all right to permit a certain pub lication. A clarification of the powers of the board and the steps involved in obtaining permission for a new publica tion should be made," she concluded. body, the IDCC, was formed by the presidents and repre sentatives of nine University residence halls last February. Jim Ludwig, chairman of the IDCC, said that the pro posed Council will provide a medium of communication be tween the dorms where prob lems of the dorms can be in vestigated. The Council wiil be con cerned with all methods of housing, he said. For instance it is his opinion that it is not best to group all freshmen women together, as in the Women's Residence Hall. New Programs The Council will also try to initiate new programs, such as a dormitory leadership workshop, he said. The effect of the Council on students will depend on the actions of the officers in pow er," Ludwig said, "and if they choose to take immediate action to affect the students or the residence hall system as a whole." The Council will have judi cial powers to enforce its de cisions, but the Council Court will serve mostly as an ap pellate body, he added. Council Court The use of the Council Court will depend on the dormi tories and individuals in volved. The dormitories do not have many judicial de cisions in need of appeal, Ludwig stated. Marv Almy, last semester's IDCC chairman, said that the Council will be a figurehead and spokesman agency and will primarily have a unify ing effect on the dorms. Instead of having four or five separate dorms the coun cil will serve as a basis of common interests, Almy said. Effect Long Term "The total effect of the Council is long term, not im mediate," he said. More planning of over-all policies will result and the Council will probably make some individual decisions that could best be bandied by an interdorm body, lie added. Whether the council stays weak or strong will depend on the people on the Council, Almy stated. He added that he did not think the Council should get so strong that it overrides the Individual de Campus Religious Centers Emphasize 'Same Gospel But Different Application' Campus chapels to some people would seem different from churches in other parts of town. For one thing, the ministers often seem more concerned with issues such as civil rights, black power and sex than do other ministers. The Rev. Mr. James Reed of the Wesley Foundation on campus explained that pas tors "regardless of where they speak, speak in the language" of their congregations. College students, he con tinued, simply place a differ ent emphasis on world affairs than do other congregations "and desire to do something about it." "They want to find where the action is," he added. "We apply the gospel to their questions. The gospel stays the same no matter wnat tne congregation only the ap plication changes." The sermons delivered at the various religious houses on campus Sunday gave evidence ARCHIVES Monday, October 31, 1966 Black Power Teach-In . . . 'Power Structures' By Toni Victor Senior Staff Writer "You can stop black power by doing what your country tells you to do," stated panel ist Mike James at the Black Power Teach-in Sunday night in the Nebraska Union. An audience of over 500 heard the need for Black Power and poor white power explained in terms of "inval id American mores and val- cisions and actions of the dorms. Coordinate Activities The constitution states that the purpose of the Interdorm Council will be to provide a self-governing body to coor dinate the activities of the residence halls. It will discuss and regulate matters of general interest to the whole residence hall sys tem and serve as an agency through which relations be tween administration and res idents may be maintained. All students living in the University residence halls which have approved the con stitution will be members of the Interdorm Council. Residents whose halls ap prove the constitution by a majority of the hall residents voting will become fully ac credited members of the Council. Residents from halls that have not approved the cos stitution may be represented in all Council proceedings by a non-voting delegate. Audubon Lecture Held This Week The first of five Audubon wildlife films and lectures scheduled for the 1966-67 school year will be held at 4:30 and 8 p.m. Monday in Love Library. The film, "Tidewater Trails," will be shown by Charles T. Hotchkiss, who has attempted to capture the "wild beauty of Tide water, Virginia as it ap peared to the Colonial na turalist Mark Catesby." ; Many of the sights that Inspired Catesby in his life's work of recording the natural history of North America remain un changed. Nesting orchard orioles, - an amusing opos sum family and courting wood ducks inhabit this scenic area, along with clapper rails and snapping turtles. Tickets for the film series may be obtained at the Ex tension Division of the Uni versity, at the University State Museum, or the Miller and Paine store service desk. of this attitude of application to collegiate concerns. 'New Ideas' At St. Thomas Aquinas Church and Catholic Student Center, students were urged both to read writers such as Karl Marx and Teilhard d' Chardin and to attend the Black Power, teach-in spon sored by SDS Sunday night. The Rev. Mr. Immig stressed that Christians have an obligation to encourage so cial reform tnd that the teach in would provide them with the opportunity to realize the obligation. At an earlier service, the Rev. Mr. Raymond Hain in structed students that Cath olics should "embrace the world" in areas of both sci ence and religion, since "both are true." He added that to achieve this end, the student must be come totally educated by read ing authors who have advo cated new ideas. Previous topics of sermons rs j ) est i ues," according to one of the ten speakers, Hughes Shanks, an ex-Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) worker in Kansas City. Though definitions of t h e term "black power" varied according to each individual panelist, all speakers levelled blows at the existing "power structures" in society. The press, school systems, w e 1 fare programs, political sys tems, police departments and ministry received varying de grees of criticism as stumbl ing blocks in the civil rights and radical movements. A view of "America, the country that lies", "school systems that don't teach people to think" and a "press that interprets for its own ends," was presented by two panels of Negro civil rights workers and white radicals, as they termed themselves. "Black power is not a racist threat. It's a deeply human challenge to stand up and say "no" to the system," declared Greg Calvert, na tional Students for a Demo cratic Society (SDS) secre tary. Calvert continued to say that black power is a chal lenge that must be pondered as it could mean the "possi bility of a new America or a deep and tragic catastrophe for all of us." The panelists generally agreed that black power is a call for Negro identity and political - economic power, though according to the or ganization they represented, the speakers had different in terpretations of the concept's implications and how it should be put into action. Dr. Patrick Wells, a mem ber of the National Associa tion for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and Rev. Tom Rehorn, the write- SPOOKY? NOT A BIT. Nancy Aronson's jack o' lantern puts on a happy face, maybe he's chuckling at his flowery neighbor. at the Center concerned sex and various racial problems on the University campus. Jonah, Monroe, Birch The Rev. Mr. Duane Hutch inson of Wesley Foundation re lated the Bible tale of Jonah and the whale in connection with a Marilyn Monroe movie, the John Birch Society and the war in Viet Nam. Jesus was the leader of the leader of the zealot un derground, Rev. Hutchinson said, and yet he preached a message of compassion for one's enemies. He also compared the story of Jonah being sent by God to Ninevah to save the' city from sin to civil right efforts and the war in Viet Nam. "Jonah hated the people of Ninevah," he said, "yet God sent him on a mission of re demption saying, 'Should I not pity Ninevah?" "Everyone has his Nin eveh," he continued, "a n d everyone knows people that he can't stand, but we should The Daily Nebraskan in peace candidate from Ne braska to the U.S. Senate, disclaimed either the need for black power as the Student Non-violent Coordinating Com mittee (SNCC) has inter preted it, or denied its exis tence and possibility. Wells, though not officially authorized as a representa tive of NAACP said his group advocates supporting legisla tion as the means to civil rights for Negroes. "We do not condone vio lence. Riots have done nothing to help. Black power has precipitated some riots," claimed Wells. W7ells stated that the con cept of black power cannot work because it teaches Ne gro youths to shout the slo gan before they know what it means. He said that if black power can be defined as power to get a better edu cation in order to vote wisely, he would be in favor of it. "Black power is not a fact and it won't be for a long time," stated Rehorn. Rehorn said that Negroes should start talking in terms of economic power exclusive ly. He explained that there is no chance for the Negro to come up by himself without dollars allocated by existing agencies in the field of pover ty programs. The SNCC and Core repre sentatives took a stand on black power that seemed sim ilar in the concept's implica tions. Both representatives stated that if in the course of demonstrations, self-defense was called for, they would al low physical violence. This is a change from the former CORE ruling that there should be no retaliation in direct ac tion by a CORE demonstra tor, according to Shanks. Ernest Chambers, a mem 7V ' J i (' . have pity and compassion for our enemies." Types Of Murder He alluded to the Viet Nam situation, the rising cost of food prices, and Black Pow er as he spoke of three types of murder in practice today. Escape and cutting oneself off is, according to Rev. Hutchinson, a form of mur der. He said it happens in marriages when the two part ners cannot relate to each oth er. A scene from a Marilyn Monroe movie was used as an example of this type of murder. The second type of murder, and "the most economical way of destroying one's ene mies," is physical violence, the minister declared. "Twenty pounds of flesh for one pound of TNT," stated Rev. Hutchinson in referring to the economical way t h e United States is getting rid of its enemies in Viet Nam. The John Birch Society's Criticized ber of no civil rights organi zation, stated that "violence is justified" as a means to ob tain black power. Hec laimed that under the present police system in such places as Omaha, violence on the spot is the only way to get satis faction. Chambers stated that revenge is something that white people must consider. "The police force in Omaha has no educational require ment and no morals," claimed Chambers as he related his experience with "sham in vestigations" by the police department in the killing of a young city Negro by a po liceman. "In Omaha they tell police men that if a Negro is in volved in a case, the police are authoriezd to kill him," Chambers declared. Calvert stated that SDS has passed the point of is suing resolutions concerning integration, "because integra tion implies the integrity of the system." Stokely Carmichael, chair man of SNCC, has stated many times that white civil rights workers should "go bom e." According to Bob Smith, SNCC panelist at the teach-in, Carmichael meant to "go home and work." "As long as you come from an all-white sorority or fra ternity to work in black neighborhoods, you are con tributing to the s y s t e m," stated Shanks. "Black power is addressed to the poor Negro and no one else. Black power will help me understand myself and my people," stated Shanks. According to Shanks, one of the concept's four aims is to make Negroes "stop being ashamed of being black." He stated that when a people deny themselves it does ugly methods for ferreting oat Communists was used as an example of the third type of murder killing of t h e spirit by defamation. "This is the modern form of murder. Brainwashing was something Jonah didn't know about," said Rev. Hutchinson. He concluded by saying that when a person opens the doors of compassion to his enemies, his enemies will enter, but God will also be among them. Vicar David Dressel spoke at the University Luth ran Chapel on "Living Under the Blessings of the Reforma tion". Vicar Dressel emphasized that Luther was an instru ment of God and was not a revolutionary as such. Luther posted his 95 theses for the scholars and "thinking men of his society," he con tinued. Vicar Dressel explained to Cont. on Pg. 3, Col. 7 Vol. 90, No. 28 things inside. After Negroes face each other as part of a united minority group, a power base for political ac tion in the civil rights move ment will be initiated, said. Shanks. He called black power a "setting out on a journey to human values." "It's a hope that says black identity through political and economic power," stated Bob Smith. James McCarty of Southern Christian Leadership Council (SCLC) noted that. ..all Amer ican minority groups have striven for political power in blocks, and that this is what black power will try to do. The crowd of students par ticipated in the discussion by asking questions of the panel ists during the two and a half hour teach-in. The teach in was sponsored by SDS at the University and drew peo ple from Kansas, Chicago and areas in between. Quiz Bowl Will Match 124 Teams A total of 124 Quiz Bowl teams, an increase of 28 teams over last year, regis tered at the captains' meeting Thursday night. Upperclass and graduate tfeams numbered 84, while there were 40 freshman teams. No more team regis trations will be accepted. A double elimination tourna ment will be used. If time runs out at the end of the sea son before competition is com pleted, a switch may be made to single elimination. Two sets of Quiz Bowl equipment will be used this year. In this manner, two matches can run simultan eously in different rooms in the Union. Freshman competition will not begin for about three weeks. Regular team compe tition will begin Thursday night at 7 p.m. Teams competing on Thurs day include Abel IV ATO Actives; Chi Phi A Fair field Etc.; Love Memorial I Phi Psi Whiz Kids; Sigma Chi III Theta Xi I; Abel VII Chi Omega Actives; Ag Men Theta Chi Oxymorons; Pangouros SAE Aces; Al pha Ohi Omega Beta Sigma Psi I. East Union Holds Pool Tournament East Campus Union is sponsoring a ping pong and pool tournament, according to Jan Binger, publicity chairman for the East Un ion. Students who wish to par ticipate should sign up at the East Union by Nov. 1 at 4 p.m. Thve is a $.50 entry fee. ? 7 t t v V t. I 14 1 it ! S I I ! I 1 K it v Tr