THE MICHIGAN DAILY TH TR ,iIAY. A1I(.i1ST Ril 1gtll «.H IC I A I A t .__*StItt4_5,S4SA. xUjl S1, 1001 IN CIA AFTERMATH: IVSA Congress Gropes f By ST H ISHEI AN F S N and JOHN LOTTIER Special to the Daily. First of Two Parts Vhat would you think if I ran out of funds, Vould you stand up nd walkout on me? ive me some pay from the of CIA nd I'll try not to sell out on thee. get by with a little help from my friends, Iride the pie with a little help from my friends, spy with a little help from my friends-... COLLEGE PARK, Md. So ent the theme song of the dis- dents at the end of the National udent Congress and so ran the micism voiced here five months ter the NSA-CIA funding-fiasco as revealed. Housed at the tree-shaded, niversity of Maryland, some 1100 rticipants- spent 13 days im- ersed in a carnival-like con- omeration of meetings, speeches, W'kshops, bulI-sessions, and late- ur entertainment. In the aftermath of the CIA fair NSA has emerged as a con- sed organization, unsure of its st and future effectiveness its vn internal structure, and even s constituency and legitimacy. espite optimistic predictions om NSA staff officers 'before e ranks were divided over most, Lic policy issues, including Viet- m, civil rights, black power and er the immediate "focus" of *e organization - whether it ild be nationally or campus dented. Before the throngs re- .ed to their 326 member bools, there were radical, lib- al; moderate and conservative uciuses; also called "counter- nvention" sponsoreed by the udents for a Democratic So- ty; and, then; a walkout by the sappointed radical delegates. Headline Grabbers This was,din.a sense, partica ly bmerged by the headline grab- !r: the first National Student nference on Drugs funded by aY deral grant and featuring LSD ru Timothy Leary; a birth con- D1 exhibit (free-samples) in the ning hail run by Bill Baird, esently under indictment in assachusetts for violating that ate's bir t h control laws; eeches by AssistantSecretary of ,ate William Bundy, economist ihn Kenneth Galbraith, and veral U'.S. Senators and a call to ganize a "dump LBJ" move- ent for 1968. To preclude any possible crisis] over the February disclosures in; "Ramparts Magazine" concern- ing the' link with the CIA, the NSA staff had been doing ground- work long before the Congress officially'convened on August 13. Several days' earlier, NSA Presi- dent- and former Rhodes scholar., W. 'Eugene Groves had announced the transfer of the remaining mortgage payments on the' NSA offices in downtown Washington from -the CIA, --.thereby breaking the last financial ties hbetween the two organizations. Moreover, the opening administrative plenary session was expressly 'devoted. to a free-wheelingdebate on the entanglement. Symbiotic Relationship - Iobert Armory Jr., past Deputy Director of the CIA, defended the symbiotic relationship "in the latex forties and early fifties, there- was1 a threat to free institutions." The! CIA had acted, he contended, as1 a 'benefactor to' a struggling, fi- ancially unstable NSA, and in fact, he went on, during the Mc- Carthy hate campaign, it was the1 CIA that covertly funded liberal projects which . nobody in the State Department would touch.f Groves added that NSA was "not tainted," and that the "tellingt point is the actions that one takes that determine the morality."' But Carey McWilliams Jr., a professor a t Oberlin College strongly disagreed, arguing that the "decision to accept'CIA money considerally mal-oriented the as-t sociation . . The object of philosophy is to sell out," he wryly continued. "The question is for what price. Did NSA get a good price? No" In fact, SDS upstaged the as- sociation by inviting writers Sol Stern, a "Ramparts" editor and the writer of the original NSA- CIA story; Andrew Kopkind for- merly of "The New Republic; and James Ridgeway, an associate editor of The New Republic. Bill Gerson, a University of Maryland grad, and acting local SDS chief argued that "NSA is thoroughly corrupted, tainted, and beyond; redemption." Stern then launched into a blistering attack on the mo- tives of the officers, and the dan- ger of secrecy and subversion. 'Cold War Games' "The NSA didn't need the CIA to play cold war games. It had always played cold war games... For over 15 years more than 100 idealistic young people knew the organization was being used in a monstrous war. Why, after 15 years, did it take a staff member 'to call it a lie... The game will have to be changed," Stern as- serted. Kopkind challenged the set-up of the Congress: "They know it doesn't matter what they say up there. It's all a charade. We all know the foolishness and irrelevance of speeches given at conventions . . The fact that all of us are contributing to this alternative, the SDS counter-con- vention, someway undermines NSA - that's what we're here for." He continued: "The question 'What is the role of secrecy in a free society' is meaningless. There is no role of secrecy in a free so- ciety." Ridgeway attacked what many many consider another of NSA's weaknesses its inability to carry out its programs effectively. "If you want to have a student power movement you're going to start from scratch," he noted. "What's the use of taking $50,000 to run a conference on poty why don't you spend, the money keep- ing people out jail? Why aren't there any blacks around here?" The radicals were upset by the current resolution on Vietnam, which calls for negotiations, but fails to advocate unilateral with- drawal by the United States. But beyond this, they argue that since the NSA has a dubious consti- tuency, any pronouncement is in fact meaningless and unconvin- cing. The focus should be shifted from the "codification of policy" which contains over 100 "BPD's" -basic policy declarations-to a nationwide activist program. For example, last year, the delegates mandated all member schools to hold draft ranking referenda- only four schools participated. For these reasons, there were early stirrings to abolish the or- ganization completely, and to cre- ate in its ashes a student union composed of local campus chap- ters. Groves himself, perhaps in an effort to divert criticism of this nature, announced at a press con- ference early in the week, that he favored a 50 cent levy on every college student, as well as the divi- sion of NSA into two bodies-one a campus educational-oriented, tax exempt branch, the other a non-exempt political arm which could; for example, work to end the Vietnam war and to aid the civil rights movement. Groves' proposals were in a sense by-products of an umbilical cord relationshiphwith the govern- ment. In fact he revealed that over a 15 year period, the CIA had poured $3 million into the NSA coffers-some years, over 70 per cent of the organization's bud- get came from the agency. Even after the CIA only $18,000 of the NSA's $700,000 yearly budget comes from member dues - the vast majority of NSA's capital flowing in from federal agencies,, private foundations, and unions. Aside from the covert CIA fund- ing, some delegates questioned whether even these ties should be severed. From this framework, the dele-' )r Nee gates fractionalized , into several camps: the radicals who wanted to completely do away with NSA and to begin to organize students on the campus level; the liberals who were obsessed with the Viet- nam war and next year's presiden- tial elections; the conservatives intent on preserving the present foundation status, by diverting ene;gies from national politics to campus issues such as student housing, etc.; and the bulk of the delegates known condescendingly as "the great confused," who ap- peared to be attending the two- week Congress with the sole in- tent of enjoying their paid "vaca- tion," and who chose to let NSA. staff officers do all the thinking. The radical caucus at the con- vention, led by Wayne State and the University, could muster to- gether only about '50 delegates, who found themselves greatly out- numbered bytthe more complacent members on the plenary votes. On a motion to forego the usual time- consuming debate on this year's set of resolutions-broadly re- fered to as "issue area legislation" -the radicals were defeated by} more than a two-to-one margin, One Wayne State delegate bit- terly remarked that "this place is like a church. The officers are the -~ Directions Phone434-0130 OPEN 7:30 P.M. NOW SHOWING LEE MARVIN-ERNEST BORONINE Shown at 8:40 Only deacons and the members say 'Amen' to everything from the po- dium." The vote, however, did reveal a distinct geographical pat- tern: the Michigan, Metropolitan New York, and Wisconsin regions were the most critical of the cur- rent NSA structure, while the South, Minnesota, New England, New York State, and the great Western regions generally sup- ported the present set-up. The Michigan region, composed of the University, Wayne State, Michigan State, Eastern Michigan, and other state colleges voted to pass up votes on legislation as a form of protest, condemning "paper" legislation as action taken without any backbone. But the sessions still continued, and eventually a series of resolu- tions were approved for this year's codification: a strong call for stu- dent power at the individual uni- versities steered through the plenary by Edward Schwartz, na. tional affairs vice president; a call for the abolition of the compulsory military draft, and an attendant program of draft education and aid to draft dissenters; and a pro- black power statement, that rec- ognized that the Negroes should attempt to gain their liberties "by any means necessary." The latter resolution was initially defeated on the floor, but in later recon- sideration, passed by slim major- ity. On the Vietnam war no con- sensus could be reached, and last year's statement remains on the books. Despite the high sounding words, the NSA congress was disturbing- ly similar to another Congress less than 15 miles away in the Na- tion's Capital. TOMORROW: Towards a National Student Union 'I 1 Also-Shown at 11:30 Only Plus-"DJLUCK FWZW' r COLOR CARTOON Daily Classifieds Bring Quick Results ENDING TODAY r DIAL 5 -6290 i An on-site inspection of love, marriage, family counselng, s-e-p-a-r-a-ti-o-n, hollering a lot, friends of the husband, friends of the wife, lawyers, DIVORCE, second marriages, third marriages, and the whole confuted scene. DIII VAN DYKE DEBIE REYNOlOS JASON B ARS JEAN SIMMONS VAN JOHNSON w^* " 5 CINEMA I PRESENTS Peter Sellers in A %lHOT IN I lJ DARK ('Scope, Color) FRIDAY and SATURDAY 7 & 9:15 P.M. A t 3 U t t $1 -Judith Crist, N.Y. Herald Tribune orm starring Jarl Kulle and Christina choilin ' - WINNER AWARD! Including "BEST ACTRES" JOSEPH E LEVINE PRESENTS IAVREEHEYff-IRXOGR CAMPUS DIAL -6416AN EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE - - -- -- -- -- 4 4 I SEE IT WITH SOMEONE YOU LOVE' JO FLYNN *' SHELW LPMBE '/AfK UABK.II Friday: "UP THE DOWN STAIRCASE" I I AUDITORIUM A ANGELL HALL _ 50c 41 I I F' Ry I)oUSE HELD OVER -1 RECORD- th BREAKING WEEK! Al happens again in the guise of PRESENTS THEa REPERTORY COMPANY A COFFEE HOUSE FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY: 7:30 P.M.- opening Friday, Sept. 8, with JIM KWESKIN AND THE JUG BAND- free coffee, cider, and goodies-also this semester: TOM RUSH, JONI MITCHELL-THE NEW LOST CITY RAMBLERS ... AND OTHERS! oil "The Nation's Finest Company" IN A 6th FALL FESTIVAL 3 NEW PRODUCTIONS A DAYTIME PLACE MONDAY THRU FRIDAY: 10:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.- LUNCH TIME MOVIES-bring a lunch-bring a friend . coffee and doughnuts-a ten-cent Coke machine!-conversation, counseling for and against.. A NIGHTTIME PLACE WEDNESDAY NIGHTS: light shows--bands-experimental film- guest speakers-hootenannies--drama: experimental, contemporary, classical. W"fl 19.24, SWf, 26.0CT. 1 sa K.TA sL.1111 s The bri liant Belgian dramatist Michel de Ghelderode's OCT. M-IS, 17-22 The AM PREMIERE of Eugene IOnesCO's OCT. 24-", OCT 31NOV. One of the damic camn emwd eL the Twenties, by Pulitzer Prize-Playwright George Keller A SUNDAY PLACE 0i BEGINNING THIS SUNDAY, September 3-11:00 A.M.- Contemporary worship-jazz, folk, rock, classical setting. A superb, harroking, nostalgic drama of the death of Everyman, Distinguished success of the 1967 Paris Season. for more information . . drop in or call-we're at Tr-ated by Donald Wats 7zT'iOrnnr my wi~ SEPTEMBER 19-NOVEMBER 5 I Au00=0 ++[ [ r[ r uchr nC r[cr u[nur++_.. 6.: DAV PUAD[ CO