PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN SATURDAY,JANUARY 14, 1967 Be rlee Politics The Daily Offilcal Bulletin is an official publication of the Univer- sity of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editor- ial responsibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3519 Administration Bldg. be- fore 2 p.m. of the day preceding publication and by 2 p.m. Friday for, Saturday and Sunday. General Notices may be published a maxi- mum of two times on request; Day Calendar items appear once only. Student organization notices are not accepted for publication. For more information call 76i4-8429. SATURDAY, JANUARY 14 .Day Calendar Midwestern Music Conference - Hill Aud., 8:30 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Rack- ham Bldg., 4:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. Student Activities Center - Henry Mancini concert: Hill Aud., 7 and 9:30 p.m. Cinema II - "Charade" with Cary Grant: Aud. A, Angell Hall, 7 and 9 p.m. General Notices The Exhibit Museum-Rotunda: Some Michigan Fungi-Life-size Models Cast from Actual Specimens. Planetarium: "The Sun and Its Family." Planetar- ium open to the public Saturdays and Sundays at 2, 3 and 4 p.m. Museum exhibit hours daily 9 a.m. to. 5 p.m. Sundays 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Kelsey Museum - Collections from Egypt, Greece and Rome; Islamic Art and Coptic Textiles. Burton Tower-Observation Deck of Bellchamber open Wednesdays 4 to. 5 p.m., Saturdays 12m. to 1 p.m. Martha Cook Building: Is receiving applications for fall, 1967. Present freshman and sophomore women may apply. Call 662-3225 for an appointment. TV Center Programs: On Sun., Jan. 15, the following program produced by the TV Center will have its initial tele- cast on Detroit stations: 8:30 a.m., WXYZ-TV, Channel 7 - "Understanding Our World: Who Will Watch the Watchers?: The Innocent Abused." A panel of experts discusses the special problem of protecting in- ACrOss Campus SATURDAY, JAN. 14 7:00 and 9:05 pxit. - Cinema Guild Will present Jean-Luc Go- dard's "Bande a Part" in the Arch. Aud. 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-Cinema II Will present "Charade' in Aud. A. 7:00 and 9:30 p.m.-Henry Man- cini Will perform in Hill Aud. SUNDAY, JAN.15 2:30 p.m.-The University Ac- tivities Center and the Program in American Culture will co-spon- sor a jazz concert featuring Jack Brokenshaw, Charles Moore and Joseph Jarman in Rackham Aud. nocent American citizens against the misuse of police authority. Thomas Spencer Jerome Lectures: Erik Sjoqvist, professor of classical archaeology, Princeton University, will speak on "The Greek Colonization of Sicily: History and Archaeology," at 4:15 p.m., Mon., Jan. 16, in Aud. B, Angell Hall. Senate Assembly Meeting: Aud. A, An- gell Hall, Mon., Jan. 16, 3:30 p.m. Placement ANNOUNCEMENTS: Air Force-Needs college women, Sp. Syst., Math, Communic., Admin., Stat. $erv. and Trans. openings. Excellent travel & social, educational opportuni- ties. Upland Institute of Crozer Founda- tion, Chester, Pa.-One yr. grad study preparing for full-time or volunteer work with social change agencies, some scholarships available. Students Who Took Foreign Service Officer Written Test in Dec.-You will be notified as to whether you passed this exam on Jan. 20. If you pass, you may be eligible for appointment as a 1967 summer intern in the State Dept. If interested please contact Prof. I. L. Claude, Poli. Si. Dept., 764-6394, imme- diately after Jan. 20. POSITION OPENINGS: Armstrong Products Co., Inc., War- saw, Ind.-Asst. Tech. Dir., potential Chief Chemist, BS Ch., some polymer, strong math. Sales Mgmt. Trainee, trng., option of remaining in Warsaw, or Dis- trict Sales Mgmt. territory. A. J. Segal & Soils, Inkster, Mich.- Estimator-expeditor-designer, engineer- ing-business bckd. Detroit Public Schools-Assoc, Land- scape Arch.,min. 35 yrs. old, BA in Lds. Arch, or engrg. 5 plus years ex- per. Sr. Assoc. Archit. Engr., 5 yrs. in Arch. School, 3 yrs, exper. in planning projects, some school des., regist. to practice desirable. Management Consultants, Chicago - Home Service Director for home appl. manuf. Journ., Speech or Engl, major, plus 3 yrs. exper. * * * For further information please call 764-7460, General Division, Bureau ofE Appointments, 3200 SAB. SUMMER PLACEMENT SERVICE. 212 SAB- Summer Joins with the Post Office- Applications at Summer Placement Service, due by Feb. 9, for test on Feb. 25. Appel Farm, N.J.-Co-ed. Interview Sat., Jan. 14, 9-12. Seek counselors & waterfront. RCA Labs., Res. Ctr., Princeton, N.J. -Graduate students for Technical Em- ploye Prog. summer in Math, Phys., Chem., Metall., EE, Acout. & Ceramics. Camp Arbutus, Mich.-Girls camp will interview here Jan. 16 for counselors, 10 to 12 and 1to 5. Camp Chi, Wis.-Coed camp will inter- view for counseliors M or F., Mon., Jan. 16, 1-5 p.m. and Tues., Jan. 17, from 9-12 a.m. & 1-5 p.m. Quality Queen Laundry, Detroit - Good pay, pickup & delivery, May 1- mid Aug. Openings on June 28 also. Retail Credit Co.-National firm can use men in 300 branch offices through- out the U.S. Must be 21, having typing ability and automobile for local travel. Contact N. R. Bates, 662-2517, Ann Ar- bor, Harris Trust of Chicago-Interviewing Thurs., Jan. 19, Jr. & Sr. for banking. Camp Tanuga, Mich.-Coed. Counse- lors & spec. In riding, arts & crafts, * * * For further information stop in at 212 SAB, Lower Level, Summer Place- ment Service. Hours 8:30-12 and 1 :30- 4:30. By ROBERT HIPPLER BERKELEY -- Scheer Lives!" That's the message on the door of an otherwise unimposing store- front here. It's Scheer Headquar- ters, which was the nerve center of the recent radical effort to' grab the Berkeley-Oakland Dem- - elected city wide= two. years ago - is composed entirely of mem- bers from the richer section of the city - "the hill." The poorer section of the city, known as "the flatlands," has none of its residents on the coun- cil. CNP wants to enlarge the coun- CENTER OF CONTROVERSY-Some sessions of the SDS National C keley campus. This is the Sather Gate, southern entrance to the ca Hall, where 1400 protestors sat in two years ago, the Student Union for two days this fall, and Sproul Hall Plaza, where University regu sparked student rebellion. SDS. Says No to t By ROBERT HIPPLER BERKELEY - Debate on the1 draft and proposals for politicalI action dominated the . National Conference of Students for a Democratic Society here Dec. 27- S31. A two day meeting of the Na- tional Council - composed of de-! legates from SDS chapters around the country-was followed by two days of smaller workshops, which covered subjects including elec- toral politics, student power, edu- cational changes, white radicalsj and black, student syndicalism, the hippy revolt, and the high schools and junior colleges, The schedule for the National Council had originally called for first taking up procedural and organizational issues, such as the set up of the national office, and later ideological issues, such as the draft. But a determined group of delegates, including Eric Ches- ter from Voice, the local SOS2 chapter, campaigned for and won a reversal of the agenda. Ideologi- cal issues came first. Itturned out that the draft proposals took so long that proce- dural and organizational issues were entirely crowded off the agenda. By a vote of 53 to 10, the Na-1 tional Council passed probably the most militant anti-draft pro- gram any major student group has yet approved. The draft resolution commits SDS to the "organization of unions of draft resisters, united by the common basic principle that un- der no circumstances will they al- The Resoluti Following are portions of the anti-draft resolution adopt- ed by the SDS National Coun- cil in Berkeley Dec. 28. 1) SDS reaffirms its opposi- tion to the U.S. government's immoral, illegal, and genocidal war against the Vietnamese people in their struggle for self- determination. 2) SDS reaffirms its opposi- tion to conscription in any form . . . 3) SDS recognizes that the draft is intimately connected with the requirements .of the economic system and the for- eign policy of the U.S. 4) SDS opposes and will or- ganize against any attempt to legitimize the Selective Service System by reforms. The pro- posals for a lottery or for com- pulsory national service would not change the essential pur- pose of the draft-to abduct young men to fight in aggres- sive wars. 5) SDS believes that a sense or urgency must be developed that will-move people to leave the campus and organize a movement of resistance to the draft and the war, with its base in poor, working class, and middle lass communities. 6) SDS therefore encourages all young men to resist the draft. Sinse individual protest cannot develop the movement 1 1 I t f k c 1 R . 1 1 i 1 . i i 1 ocratic Congressional nomination ci to more than the present four from the local party apparatus. membersand hold elections in Though that campaign is long separate districts instead of city- over, the headquarters seems about wide. as busy as ever. It's now the cen- So, minority elements can get ter of the Committee for New Pol- representatives on council. itics, (CNP) a continuation of the Salary increases for council Scheer organization, which is co- members, so people of modest ordinating many radical cam- can more easily serve, and a Viet paigns and projects in the Ber- Nam referendum like the one re- keley-San Francisco Bay area. cently held in Dearborn are other The stacks of literature on CNP projects. tables and shelves tell part of CNP is on the side of students CNP's story. "Tell It Like It Is, in the conflicts which constantly and Do What Needs to be Done" flare with the city administration. is the motto of "The Flatlands," According to the elections dec- h ,a community paper for the low- laration, "We cannot depend on income, partly Negro area of Ber- the men who have to run Berkeley keley. There CNP is helping to to defend the student community. organize electoral politics and pro- We must depend on ourselves." test actions over rents and living Last year the city was pushing -Daily-Thomas R. Copi conditions. a plan for urban renewal of the onvention were held on the Ber- An impressive collection of Telegraph Street District south of impus. Just beyond are Sproul strike leaflets testifies to the fran- campus, which is a chief hangout , which demonstrators occupied tic week last fall when CNP served for student radicals, hippies and lations on political activity have as "Strike Central" for the As- assorted other denizens. Protests sociated §tudents of the University before the council with CNP help of California. It may resume that plans. role, depending on developments Students and others in the area in the next few weeks. have also complained of "police "The Communique for New Pol- harrassment." For a while, ac- itics and Left-Ou News" is the cording to Austen, "Police patrols eight-page bi-weekly through were intensified, people were con- !which CNP publicizes itself and Istantly stopped for jaywalking, reaches its members. On its front cars with Scheer stickers were : xtpage is a picture of Bertrand Rus- stopped . . "The city and the po- on. Excerp s sell at a recent International War lice department pointed to a ris- needed to end the draft and Crimes Tribunal press conference(Ing crime rate as justification for the war, SDS adopts the fol- -and the blaring headline, ELEC- lowing program: .TIONS DECLARATION, announ- -SDS members will organize cing CNP's tentative program for Aa unions of draft resisters. The the upcoming Berkeley city elec- members of these unions will be tions. united by the common principle The April 15th elections are If the present City Council utytha ne nom c nane fast becoming the top priority faces us, they are not talking ab will they allow themselves to here, say staffers. Already CNP the fact that more than 25 pe be drafted. The local unions members are busy mulling over Negroes are unemployed, or ab will reach out to all young men candidates. The declaration will families currently living below of draft age' by organizing in be finalized later on in January n(income). thehig scool, uivesites~ a mass meeting. icm) the high schools, universities, e Nasserts that two The closest they come toa and communities. Cour'ses of TeCPasrsta w groups - low income residents the people is to get rid of thei action will include a) direct and students are ill-represented in will not allow the problem of p action during pre-induction the city government. It says that out the poor, nor the problems physical and at the time of in- the present City Council, in its to be "solved" by pushing the duction, (b) anti-draft and an- city planning, urban renewal pro- from student non-conformity t ti-war education among poten- jgrams to draw middle class resi- the student community. tial inductees and their fam- dentshe tryungnt "poshmunity, iles () emntrtinsce- dents is trying to push out poor1 We consider every in~ivid ilies, (c) demonstrations cen-~pople and many members of min-', osdrevr nii tering on draft boards and re- oity groups ' this city to be our most preci cruiting stations, (d) encour- a .t hold feared. aging young men already in the Berkeley is being made saf military to oppose the war, and d eaiiauin n ubt of becoming merely a city of ta and rehabilitation business, both o eoigmrl iyo a (e) circulating petitions stating for low income and for revenue ing the tax base and servicing that the signer will refuge to producing housing. Bold planning the people who run this city in serve in Vietnam or submit to and the use of existing federal commercial, conservative and p conscription in any form. Na- assistance programs would make We reject that road. tional SDS wil coordinate the it possible to create an abundance Berkeley can be a diverse a local 'union on a regional and of housing and, coupled with rent city. This it not an idle dream national level ..ct.Ti tnta dedemo -Nationael SD. wil ascontrol, could effect a reduction in Berkeley and what the pr -National SDS will assist all in the high cost of housing." not come even close to what is efforts to organize, within the I The declaration goes on: "Space ledgeendstohavile armed forces, resistance to U.S. should be utilized for com- ledge and resources available. foreign policy. Toward this end munity centers, child care facil- Most of that knowledge i we will publish a periodical ities, low cost cafeterias. for the most part, the conne newspaper and other literature "Berkeley needs a city hospital. the University and the needso directed to those already in the There should be improved ambul- drawn or exploited. armed forces . . . ance service. The city should pro- There are unemployed pe vide. public insurance. Working We should be concerned with larger society if it is to achieve its mothers should be guaranteed used hands and minds. The i radical aims: "Our constituency cost this community should be put isn't in Europe, or Asia, or the "The city should aid consumers izing it-(froriA the CNP Decla East-its here" said one partici- by publishing comparisons of pant. prices on goods sold in different the patrols and have denied the The recent Berkeley-Oakhand stores." CNP also calls for ex- charges of harrassment. campaign, in which Robert Scheer panded public recreation facilit- Cm came very close to winning the ies, water-front development, and CNP has also set p a commit-h Democratic Congressional nom- city-sponsored cultural activities. tee to study reconversion of the ination from the local party in- To finance all these projects, Bay Area economy to a peacetime cumbent, was a frequent topic of CNP says, the city should be more area if defense spending drops, discussion. bold and imaginative than in the ara indeeneosendin ops said. "Part of tils is our fault. We feel we haven't really learned to talk to them." One of CNP's main problems now is financial - to pay off the sizable debt run up by the Scheer campaign. The campaign cost $12,000, easily twice as much as Scheer's opponent, Jeffery Cohelan. The debt has been trimmed to just under $8,000: staffers say paying it off is" a prerequisite to future effective functioning of the CNP." Once its paid off, "at least we'll be able to concentrate on doing something again, not just fund raising." Staff members differ somewhat on CNP chances in the upcoming election but all agree that it will be an uphill fight. CNP will run at least three candidates for open council seats, and according to Haley has a fair chance of elect- ing one or more members to the council, which now has a Demo- cratic majority. "The Democratic organization is' weaker now than it was two years ago," partly as a result of the Scheer campaign, he says. In the Democratic primary Scheer lost the Berkeley-Oakland area by a 52-48 percentage, but he got 57 per cent of the Berkeley vote." Austen stressed that "much de- pends on how hard people work organizing the campaign and reg- istering student voters. Thousands have been dropped from the regis- tration rolls recently, she said. "In the Reagan-Brown campaign there was a boycott the polls major election you can lose your registration." CNP members know it will not 1 Critique really understands the crisis that out it. They are not talking about r cent of Berkeley's young male ut the more than 6000 Berkeley the poverty level ($4000 annual a "solution" of the problems of people who suffer most, But we overty to be "solved" by pushing arising from racial differences Negro, nor the problems arising o be "solved" by destruction of ual and every diverse group in ous resources, to be valued, not e for mediocrity. It is in danger ,xpayers and consumers - build- business. It is to be remade by their own image; homogenous, redominantly white. and exciting city, a truly human or utopian nonsense. What exists esent planners are planning do possible with the technical know- s stored in the University. Yet ction between the resources of of the community has not been ople in Berkeley - a lot of them. creatively employing these un- latent and human resources of to work rebuilding and revital- ration). be easy trying to wrest control of the city from the Democrats, who have governed it for years and in the past have had a strong or- ganization. The Bay Area is by far the center of radical activity on the West Coast, but CNP is building 4-1 A 1 Dept. of Comparative Literature presents: THE EMPEROR JONES by Eugene ONeill and Le Roi Jone s DUTCHMAN Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre WED.-SAT., JAN.b18-21 $2.00,$1.50, $1.00 Box office opens 10 a.m. Monday before performance * i i low themselves to be drafted." dious and tangled up in parlia- In addition, SDS will seek to mentary procedure, debates and organize "resistance to U.S. for- roadblocks. At the start there were eign policy" in the armed forces, over a dozen separate draft pro- Debating in favor of this section, posals to be debated and acted on. one delegate said "General Her-# Many delegates fell by the way- shey was on a TV interview once. side during the day-long meetings He was cool and calm when he to see the sights in the Bay Area talked anout student protest. or confer elsewhere. Thin somebody mentioned organ- The distribution of delegates at izing protest in the armed forces. the conference was heavily weight- He wentfpale."n ed in favor of the West Coast. Delegates at the conferenc While each SDS chapter was sup- lspent much time on probems of posed to send delegates in pro- 'One of.SDS's major worries was portion to its membership, there often touched upon-it needs more was a thin distribution of dele- fulltime workers. The undepend- gates from east of the rockies. ability of part-time student help Voice proved an exception toj was repeatedly mentioned. this, however. It sent its maximum As of now SDS has several full allowable contingent of six dele-{ time workers such as vice-pres- gates. . *(, 4.X ry .: ".., ': t t7 ,j,; 4 FOCUS: SYM POSIUM AMERICA L ITERA TU Prof. Fiedler Prof. Felheim Prof. Powers Prof. Stew N 4 I ON . RE vart Idridge : I I Questions raised included: -How far right should a cam-} paign like Scheer's go? The Berke- ley Viet Nam Day Committee, which was at first was a driving force in the campaign, was near the end called "extremist" by Scheer people. The bitterness caused by this has far from sub- sided. -Should a radical campaign try to grab the Democratic nomina- tion, like Scheer did, or run a past: "The city should not be afraid to proceed on some of the preceding activities on adrevenue- producing basis, financed by rev- enue bonds." In addition, the declaration as- serts the city should take advan- tage of a provision in the city charter and take over the pres- ent private power facilities in Berkeley. According to staffer Michael Haley, "the price of pow- er could be lowered and another $2000 a year could go into the ident Carl Davidson and presi- and aepenuec ,iota for the area's sustenance, a statewide organization. It lob- CNP council candidates will bies in Sacramento, the state cap- S ital and plans this spring "to prooi rou iff""rs arond th driv of.wlfar There were delegates from Michigan, Minnesota, Antioch, Oklahoma, Columbia and Harvard, among others. California dele- gates included many from high schools, particularly in Oakland, Los Angeles and Riverside. High school students from Riv- erside told of the organization of a new "free high school" as an alternative to the public school system. Copies of a high school newspaper, It, which students said was banned at the high schools, were distributed at the confer- ence. One high school student began an article: "The thing I remem- ber about my high school is the fence around it topped with barbed wire. That's to keep the real world out and me in." Another described ,the schools as compounds "inside fences, cy- clone or otherwise. We're con- scripted when we're about five or six and we stay there till we're 18." Two of the best attended work- shops were on internal education and electoral politics. National President Nick Egelson character- ized the trend in internal educa- tion technioues as a shift from r r c f c C t proabl prpos azernua ua fousaround he drive of welfare rates which go easier on indust- rights organizations to prevent rines having no connection with restrictive legislation from passing defense productrion.,the State Assesmbly and Senate." Most of CNP's support comes Regional conferences and a from students and professors, State Conference are planned for others associated with the univer- the coming months. These will sity, and low-income areas in the concentrate on state and nation- city. While Scheer had some wide economic prospects "should union support in his campaign, in peace break out" and will review general CNP has little rapport "the development of a national with unions. ;CNP, and relationships with ex- "A longshoremen's local and an isting organizations of all kinds- electrical workers local supported from the Democratic party us in the Scheer drive, but the through the SDS, the California AFL-CIO Central Labor Council;Democratic Councils, and all the supported our opponent," Austen rest." V third party candidate? Some par-! city treasury." shpa didatwen Smer- Another goal of CNP is to sec- ticipants said that when Scleerlure better representation for the bent over backward to get support city's low income groups on the from local Democrats, he sold out I city council. According to staffer his leftist supporters. Jan Austen, the present, council NICK EGELSON Prof. A dent Nick Egelson, who tour the country coordinating activities and circulating information, but dele- gates stressed that SDS needs many more such workers. Also discussed were "cliquish" leadership tendencies in the past. I 1 ,..! : T ............ .........._ ____ ___ ____...NO W