WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1968 The Daily Nebraskan Page 5 dentists from ivy-tower Washington (CPS) - A group of rebel political scien tists has succeeded In getting the American Political Faience Association to of ficially encourage concern for controversial social and political problems. The Caucus for a New Political Science had challenged the association to replace its traditional scholarly detachment with "a radically critical spirit" about contemporary "crises" and "inherent weaknesses" in the American political system. THE AMENDMENT and the success of Caucus panel at the APSA's convention represents a victory for the rebellious offshoot. It was formed last year after the association refused to even discuss certain controversial subjects, including opposition to universities' revealing membership lists of radical campus groups to HUAC. Caucus leaders feel their work is not done, they are seeking members, will con tinue the push for relevancy, and will publish a journal. Plans for a program at next year's convention on "prospects for revolution in America" are being made. Panels arranged by the Caucus at this session ex plored urban politics, the 1968 elections, student unrest at Columbia University, Viet nam, Czechoslovakia, radical political thought and the Chicago Democratic Conven tion. Selective Service Chief Lewis Hershey held forth at a session on "the draft and the rights of conscripted citizens." Caucus members also pushed through a motion prohibiting APSA officers and employes from "engaging in intelligence and cover ac tivities." The decision was an apparent slap at two former leaders whose research firm had received CIA funds. The association approved a declaration that it will "not remain silent on threats to academic freedom" and voted to move its 1970 convention from Chicago to another city with . "an atmosphere con ducive to free discussion." A stronger resolution condemn ing Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and his police for their suppression and brutality wei Centers to focus on integration A film on the mutual re sponsibilities of blacks and white will be the focus of the Newman Center - United Methodist Chapel discussion on race relations, Thursday. After the film, resource people Jerome Drakeford, Hugh Shanks and Lucy Ne ville will lead a discussion on racism, according to Mel Luetchens, associate director of the Methodist Chapel. "No man Is an Island" will portray two friends, a black and a white, after their dis charge from the army, Luet chens said. The film shows the respon sibility of the white to open the door to the black and the responsibility of the black to walk through that door. The discussion will begin at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Methodist chapel. Abel-Sandoz to rally spirit for Big Red Abel-Sandoz is sponsoring a "Go Big Red" week. Within the complex there will be a dance and special dinner on Thursday. The all-University Yell Like Hell pep rally will be across from Abel-Sandoz on Friday. After the game on Saturday, there will be an open house when the floors will display their decorations that parti cipated in dorm competition, according to Bob Brandt, ASRA president. ATTENTION FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES SNOOKER It available lor year private aartlei. 10WLINO, GOLF AND BILIARCS CALL 434-9822 for special jroip rates descend iefeated after heated debate. In the Caucus session on the draft, Lt. Gen. Hershey managed to avoid or misunderstand most of the political scientists' pointed Questions. His brief nrespn- tation dealt with a history of selective service. Several times Hershey was booed and hissed, as when he implied that conscientious objectors were "undesirables." He refused to answer questions concerning the length of tenure as SSS chief. IN THE session on the up coming presidential elections, professors Clinton Rossiter and James MacGregor Burns disagreed on whether a real choice exists. Burns said there is a difference between the candidates, "but not a decisive one." Rossiter said no real choice exists, partly because the candidates are ignoring "cries" in the en vironment, economy, war, t e chnology, constitutional government, and culture. One APSA-arranged panel dealt with the relationship between "government, the foundations, and universities." President James A. Perkins of Cornell said the ties binding the three must be loosened so they can function best as critics of one another. Rep. John Brademas (D-Ind.), a member of the House Education Committee, predicted that federal support of colleges will rise substan tially in the next decade, re quiring "more thought about the nature, conditions and shape of this support" and to national planning for balanced development of higher education. McGeorge Bundy, Ford Foundation president, com pared the role of private philanthropic institutons to higher learning as an oil can to a very large piece of machinery no large role, but at times very important. He said "the requiremtnts of freedom and the inevitability of diversity on the campus, when considered with the growing dependence of the American University upon national political decisions, creates a major dilemma." The amount of government aid now, he added, exceeds popular commitment to fede ral support and has been based on "good will and trust." "There will be much hard work before a truly solid basis is laid for the kind of relationship in which one side pays and the other raise hell." slffsost twice ths per ctiarge is worth some study. Our Rechargeable 45CT (below) gives you 3 weeks of close shaves on a single charge. (Which is nearly twice as much as any other rechargeable.) And it gives you the choice of using the cord, or not. It also has a lot of things in common with our new Tripleheader Speedshaver 35T. Both shavers have 18 rotary blades set in three new 'floating' Microgroove'" heads, that follow the contours of your face. And thev both shave you as close or closer than a blade in 2 out of 3 shaves. (As tested in an independent lab by some very in dependent men.) I9es Horft mrten Php Company, Inc., 100 Cast 4?nd Strut, Htm Boulder. Colo. (CPS) Amid the reddish-gold tailing leaves, Students for a Democratic Society foretold the fall of the university and the society sustaining it when they met in Boulder last weekend for one of their four annual National Council (NO meetings. As they have been doing across the country, the 450 SDS members did more than talk ideology and strategy. They acted and reacted to the University of Colorado in ways the school is likely to feel for a long time. A battle over press coverage of the SDS meetings may yet spawn a call by con servative Regent Joseph Coors (of the Coors beer family) for the resignation of the University's president. IT WAS the New Left in microcosm. The confrontation portrayed SDS better than the two major resolutions ap proved during the three-day NC. There was SDS, there were the students, the Re gents, the administration, the police and the press who somehow all got sucked into the controversy over whether tape recorders and cameras should be barred from SDS meetings. Although the university didn't come close to falling and no outside police were called in, there was a polarization of administra tion, students and virtually all the press against the Regents. The controversy stemmed from the Regents' decision to allow SDS use of university facilities if their meetings were "public and open to the press." The vote on whether to allow on campus what one Regent termed "this anarch istic, nihilistic, organization responsible for Columbia disruptions" was part of the "red" carpet treatment reserved for SDS throughout the country. Another question arose on Injured lineman recovering Tom Linstroth, Nebraskan defensive lineman who jam med his neck in the third quarter of the Missouri game Saturday, is now recovering in a neck brace. Sunday, the athlete had been able to walk but still had some pain, according to a Lincoln General Hospital spokesman. They also you I Foretelling end of universities, society . . . DS gathers Friday, the first day of the NC were cameras and tape recorders (barred from Regents' meetings) included in th vague university-SDS contract for open meetings? As in Chicago, the coalitions were a bit strange. The press agreed with SDS that press relations were outside tie appropriate concern of the university Regents. The administration originally sided with the SDS request that meetings be open only to the written press, not the disruptive lights of television cameras. The antagonists were the Regents, two of whom let it be known they wanted elec tronic media admitted to Vhi NC. A local radio station reported that Regent Coors said he would ask for the "immediate resignation" of University President Joseph fa ivas the New Left in microcosm. The SDS members did more than talk . . . Smiley if the intent of the call for open meetings was not enforced. SMILY THEN reversed the earlier stand of his al ministration and decided to admit Tilm and recorders. SDS thought and acted - otherwise. A reporter from a Denver radio station, enraged by l.hs decision of his colleagues who announced they would work out press relations with SDS rather than the university, armed himself with a tape recorder and entered tin ballroom where SDS was meeting. SDS members swarmed the newsmen, who couldnt get further than a foot inside the doorway. He nervously questioned them: "Are you a member of SDS?" "What do you think of their violent tac tics?" "Why aren't you saying anything?" "Why d) you keep nodding your head?" "What's so funny?" Finally the persistent newsman did get a vocal response from SDS members One of them opened up with a bar from "Silent Night," and 50 persons gathered around the tape recorder to render their version of the Christmas carol. The biggest smiles sh&v&s have some extras that make shaving a lot easier. A separate pop-up trim mer, snap-open clean ing, a handy onoff switch, and a 110220 voltage selector for travel use. Whichever you choose, you can't get a closer shave. loreco cani get any closer York, Hrm Yoffc 10017 : I were those of the campus police. One more confrontation oc curred early Saturday morn ing when a security area was roped off for the press Another campus policeman allowed SDS members t enter the press area, anJ a brief scuffle between SDS and the press, flanked by police, ensued. The press was pushed out of the meeting room. There were no injuries, although an ice-cream cone was smashed against a television camera. Shaken by the near violence, the administration reversed itself again and decided to bar film and recorders "except by prior arrangement with SDS." It was the administration which convinced four of the six Regents to avoid un neccessary violence rather than attempt to oust the meeting with the help of police force. SDS REJOICED that the university had "capitulated." The issue of the press dramatized the character of SDS better than the drawn-out debates on resolutions. SDS showed itself capable of vic tory in a limited struggle where the action of the established power is arbitrary. The confrontation tended to push strategic and ideological questions into the background, although SDS did ask itself about the press, labor, elections, high schools, GIs, campus organizing, draft resistance, liberation o f women and internationalism in its workshops Saturday afternoon. Members gathered outside on the leaf-covered campus in groups of about 30. Oc casionally, University of Col orado students would cluster not have thought off a on the outskirts of a discussion to hear and lege, on an elementary level, the SDS ideas. There was no neat con sensus at the meetings, nor did the sessions attempt a more up-to-date statement of ideology. Their only concrete residue were resolutions on elections and on organizing within the high schools. Members seemed to agree on the need to attract and radicalize other disenchanted elements like high school students, GI's, factory workers, and (Through con version) Wallace fans,. STUDENT consciousness, members said again and again, can be radicalized by redefining issues. University research on biological warfare should not be at tacked primarily on the grounds that secrecy violates academic freedom; victory on that basis merely means the research is continued some where off campus. Instead, such research should be vitiated in itself by exposing the inhuman theoretical and financial stance of a government ra tionalizing death through courtship with "national defense." Some of the SDSers saw disruptive strategy as a means of de-legitimizing the society's institutions the electoral process, the schools, the entire government. National secretary Mike. Klonsky said the NC meeting clearly showed that "SDS is embarking on a pre-election program." One of the ap proved resolutions, enuuea 'Boulder and Boulder, calls for a nationwide strike of high school and college students on Nov. 4 and 5, regional demonstrations in major cities, and support of National GI week Nov. 1-5. GI Week is a project of the National Mobilization Com mittee to End the War in Vietnam, whose pupose Is to show support for GIs who don't support the war. Another resolution provided for organizing in high schools to move students to otherthrow the system by confronting the issues that Boulder directly affect them. There was also some talk of the organization's internal problems. Although some msmhrs deny it, others rea 'ib' a'mit the existence of factiorls'm within SDS. A National Labor Action Project calling for an SDS alliance with "working people in sharp struggle against im perialism" was defeated by a two-to-one margin. SDS showed Itself this weekend to be, In the words of one of the national officers, "a fighting organization," battling society and one another. The search for a slogan (The one finally adopted: 'Vote With Your Feet; Go to the Streets') rather than an ideology, and the sparseness of resolutions, indicate that organization is likely to re main undisciplined and most potent on a local level. t top What's your number, student? If you're tired of being one of 10,000, better think twice about who you take a job with. Take a look at a different kind of company where you'll be more than a number. We'll give you a job situation, and you'll make your -own position. We're interviewing soon on campus. See your school or placement office today. jSmJ' KANSAS CITY. MtSSQURI An Equal Opportunity Employer where there's room to move around .. . and oj The CPA has become a key man in financial and business affairs. Deci sion makers lean on him because his advice can often determine whether an enterprise goes or blows. That's why the demand for CPAs is growing so fast. In fact, there is a shortage of CPAs. That's why we're sponsoring this ad. What type of man makes a good CPA? He should be able to work con structively with all kinds of people. He should be able to analyze situa tions and come up with original solu tions and stick his neck out when he thinks he's right. And, very im portant, he should be the type of nun whom people can trust and put their confidence in. You can take courses that could help you get a CPA certificate soon after graduation. Or you can do grad uate work. Ask your faculty advisor about it. A special booklet has been pre-: pared with the whole CPA story. Just drop a card or note to us: Dept. A10, AICPA, 666 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10019 and we'll send itontoyou; American Institute of Certified Public Accountants The evolution of a radical SDS concept of the new society seems as unlikely in the near future as mass disruptions at Columbia this year. Small-scale disruptions, felling a university president or killing a ROTC program will probably spread to even more campuses. But one, two, three more Columbias, if they are to be inspired by SDS, don't appear imminent as long as SDS is loosely-defined and faction-alized. WUUf 0 S ll Mw it e 3 J I- r 1 I t .1 1 ' I,, s I