PAGE= Two THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1962' PACE TWO TUE MiCHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1962 Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES New Books If You Prefer STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY I S haul Chosen NSA President In Election of New Officers NSA MEETING: Delegates Analyze Issues (Continued from Page 1) r Dennis Shaul of Notre Dame University was overwhelmingly elected president of the United States National Student Associa- tion at the 15th National Student Congress at the Ohio State Uni- versity this summer. Other newly elected officers in- clude Tim Manring of the Uni- versity of Washington, National Affairs Vice President, Don Smith of the University of Texas, Inter- national Affairs Vice President and Steve Brockbank of the Uni- versity of Utah and Richard Yea- ger of Loyola University of the South. Program Vice Presidents. campuses and be able to make the NSA affiliation a beneficial one." After two ballots, Tim Manring was elected National Affairs Vice President over Renard Davis of Oberlin College. Manring was stu- dent body president at the Uni- versity of Washington, attended the 10th International Student Relations Seminar and was active as a regional program chairman. Must Organize The NAVP as Manring sees him must "organize and develop ideas and plans which will involve stu- dents in the issues of higher edu- cation, civil rights and civil lib- erties, community involvement and cultural affairs." He desired to see programs on civil rights in both the north and south. "The Association should in- volve students in work in slums and areas of heavy minority group concentration, working with young people, changing attitudes and in- creasing reading habits and abili- ties," Manring said. Don Smith defeated Robert Backoff of the University of Illi- nois for the International Affairs Vice Presidency. Smith, who had served as a Program Vice Presi- dent two years ago, was eager to try a new approach in interna- tional student relations. Puerto Rican Have your Prescriptions Rhodes Scholar *I J1I .11 I I directly or indirectly by any Com- munist controlled government." Opposition to the amendment was grounded on the principle that "any act of restricting, suppress- ing or censoring the flow of any material for political reasons in- terferes with the citizen's right of free access to information and with academic freedom and places in jeopardy the foundations of an informed democratic society." HUAC, the major issue of debate at the 14th NSA Congress flared up briefly at this year's session. The 14th Congress called for the abolition of the committee and the 15th was asked to support a mo- tion mandating the national offi- cers to initiate a petition to the House of Representatives asking abolition. The amended motion which passed the plenary by a show of hands substituted "to sup- port renewed effort to abolish the committee" for the petition re- quest. Judie Rules The basic policy declaration on procedural and substantive due process delineates the minimum requirements the congress thought necessary for a just and fair pro- cedure in adjucating alleged in- fractions of university rules by students. Assembly Association President Mary Beth Norton, '64, contributed major efforts to the framing of the declaration which calls upon universities to establish student- faculty judicial councils to hear cases which might result in dis- missals or expulsions. It asks for a clear statement of regulations, what constitutes violations of them and what pen- alties could be imposed. It also asserts the student's right to offer testimony, to call witnesses, to have choice of counsel, to be tried by an impartial body and given access to all relevant testimony, including that of his accusers, Due Process In the section on substantive due process, the declaration asserts that regulations should not in- fringe upon student rights to par- ticipate in controversial . action groups, to express opinions and to pursue knowledge through "free and open inquiry." International student action held a prominent spot in the congress. The International Student Con- ference in Quebec, the Interna- tional Union of Students meeting in Leningrad and the World Youth Festival for Peace and Friendship staged in Helsinki intensified dele- gate concern with this area. Heading the priority list of res- olutions" considered by the con- gress was a motion on Algeria congratulating the students of that nation for "the courageous role they played, often at great risk, in contributing to the strug- gle for independence waged by the Algerian people." Cite UGEMA The motion singled out the na- tional student union of Algeria, the Union General des Etudiants Mus- ulmans Algeriens for its role in the fight for independence and pledged cooperation and support for the Algerian students. A drive to collect books for the University of Algiers was initiated. The coqgress also approved a basic policy declaration on condi- tions of oppression condemning colonialism, imperialism, dictator- ship, totalitarianism, discrimina- tion and economic deprivation, with special reference to their ef- fect on the student. Representatives from several national unions of students in at- tendance at the congress addressed the delgeates, including an officer of the Zengakuren, a Japanese student organization. Beyond Opinion NSA President Edward Garvey opened the congress with an ad- dress urging the delegates to go beyond statements of opinion. "We have reached a stage in our de- velopment where the mere adop- tion of resolutions is simply not enough. It is now necessary that these resolutions be coherent and complete and that they point to methods of real solution," he said, "We must begin to ask ourselves what our necessary moral re- sponse must be in respect to our necessarily moral politic policies." To implement this suggestion, the congress adopted two separate calendars of legislation. The first was devoted to program mandates directed toward setting up proj- ects, conferences and other pro- grams to- implement NSA policy. The second dealt with the more controversial resolutions on new policyr stands. In previous congresses, the plen- ary sessions have had time to han- dle only a handful of the scores of motionsadopted by its legisla- tive committees, and program mandates were seldom given high enough priority to be discussed by all the assembled delegates. Refer to NEC With the two calendars, the con- gress was able to take action on 27 separate items. They referred another 70 items for action to the 35 member National Executive Committee. The NEC is made up of representatives from the 22 geo- graphical regions into which the NSA is divided. Turning inwardly to its own structure, the NSA adopted a con- stitutional amendment which stat- ed that membership in the asso- ciation "should not necessarily be interpreted to imply agreement with policies of the National Stu- dent Congress, the National Exec- utive Committee or actions of its elected officers; however, member student governments should make every effort to participate In the decision making processes of the NSA and support its policies and programs to the extent of their agreement with them." Passage of the motion was con- sidered a conservative victory; lib- eral delegates argued against it, claiming that this was implicit in the nature of membership and had always been NSA policy and thus unnecessary andthat such a "dis- claimer" was a negative and de- feating statement and thus harm- ful to the association. Conservative Low Conservative delegates applaud- ed the addition, claiming that NSA is unrepresentative and that lo- cal member student governments should not be held responsible for views which they might not share. Conservative activity was low in comparison to the 14th Congress where the Young Americans for Freedom joined forces with stu- dent groups desiring NSA reforms and tried to temper or defeat the usually liberal legislation adopted by congresses. Their efforts were largely repulsed in 1961 and ro organized right wing group made major efforts to influence legis- lation this August. An ad hoc Conservative Confer- ence sprang up during the con- gress to promote discussion and legislation, but its moderate lead- ers dropped out in opposition to the views of the more extremist participants, w e a k e n i n g the group's effectiveness. 400 Schools NSA is a confederation of 400 student governments at American colleges and universities which, in turn, represent 1.5 million stu- dents. A school's delegation is de- termined by the size of its student body. SGC sent eight delegates and eight alternates. NSA SESSION - Four hundred collegiate delegates convened in sub-committee, committee and plenary sessions to discuss issues of vital interest to students at the 15th National Student Congress, the governing body of the United States National Student Asso- ciation. The NSC was held in Columbus, Ohio. I 4 1 I I i 1A F' U I MOST POPULAR SHOE ON CAMPUS White (Ked) Sneakers MICHIGAN girls wear KEDS and they make RANDALL'S their first stop for this foot comfort! StpeicajI\ wrn Y A!; C,*ctuoo cu~e4- Hw either tot TAPEREE or modifier _47 ' C I, , I,, tt e :D tOO0K FOR THE BLUE LABELS 1EwiiM 1~~fipN.'' r f5'j~o d F9 31/2to II11 narrow or med.'i' I I I