ISP-ACT in coalition (Continued from page 1) "Campus politics up until this time have been bullshit," he said. "But, I think student government can be made relevant." Hansen said that KU is "like a fool's paradise in the eye of a hurricane." He expressed the belief, however, that student politics, if made relevant, could make a better life for people in Kansas. He said this was the goal of the ISP-ACT party. Echoing this opinion, Awbrey said, "Students must take power and use it on ourselves and stop having it used on us from above—in other words, run our own lives." After the speech from the candidate, Collene Collins, Quanah, Tex., junior and campaign manager for Awbrey, called for volunteers from the audience who wanted to run for office on the ISP-ACT ticket. "This is not a free ride," she stressed. "Everyone running and using our name must believe in our platform and be able to think as an individual." About seven persons in the audience raised their hands, indicating a willingness to join the party. Hansen read the platform on which he thought the election could be won. The platform is divided into two parts, the first part of which denounces the Vietnam war as illegal, immoral and inhuman, calls for an elimination of the draft, and demands that Huey Newton, Los Angeles Black Panther, be freed from jail. "Newton symbolizes the impisonment of the black man by white society," Hansen said. In the second part of the platform, the party lists changes which should be made in the University. Included in the platform was the elimination of credit for ROTC courses and that all military recruiting be done in the military building; investigation of federal grants; inspection service to investigate housing discrimination against foreign students and blacks; and a boycott of the new tunnel from the Kansas Union to X-zone as symbolic of money wastage by the administration. Foreign students knock paternalistic aid program American foreign aid drew severe criticism from foreign students during a panel discussion yesterday in the Kansas Union Jayhawk Room. Members of the panel, sponsored by the International Club, were Clifford Ketzel, professor of political science; Walter Kollmorgan, professor of geography; Jose Fonseca, Brazil graduate student, and Katsuaki Terasawa, Japan graduate student. The common complaint with the foreign aid program was that it fostered paternalism between the donor and recipient states. Business managers convene for seminar The room was full of men in dark suits, some wearing horn-rimmed glasses, others sporting multi-colored wide ties. Sprinkled within the crowd were a few well-dressed women in plaid suits or gray dresses. Their attention centered on a small, neatly dressed man who stood on a raised platform. As the crowd of professional men and women listened, the speaker, L. Jackson Stanley, a manager development specialist from Fiber Industries, Inc., Greenville, S.C., explained the desirability of motivating young intellectuals to industry. The crowd gathered in the Kansas Union Forum Room was part of the Supervisory Seminar held each year for business managers from all parts of Kansas. Interested companies sent representatives to hear Stanbery examine the role of supervisory leadership to the 1970's. Commenting on the need to motivate intellectual people, "Foreign aid from America is followed by American presence," Fonseca said. "America does not give the country a chance to do by itself. It is therefore kept in a state of permanent underdevelopment." 24 KANSAN Mar.14 1969 especially those coming out of colleges, Stanbery challenged his audience to define better supervisory roles. He said to lead people in industry intelligently, managers must plan, organize, delegate, coordinate and control. "People can't live without an object. They can't work without one either," Stanbery said. "That's why we must plan for the upcoming generations." "Today's young people aren't looking for benefits in work but rather for recognition and challenge." Ketzel agreed that a loan rather than a grant would be better psychologically for the recipient state. "This is not effective, however," he said. "Loans are used to pay interest and principle on loans already made." Criticizing foreign aid which he termed "dollar diplomacy," Terasawa said that "the need of the aspiring nation is the second consideration." "The first consideration is to use the foreign aid to fight the cold war," Terasawa said. "The magic words (to get aid) are the Communists are coming." obligation to give aid to underdeveloped countries. Dr. Kollmeyer opposed foreign aid because he said the U.S. has no "moral or ethical" "It is presumptuous to assume that a country which can't effectively apply domestic aid can apply aid abroad," he said. Forenza viewed corruption as the main problem of foreign aid. He told about Brazil receiving powdered milk, but having no water to mix it with. Although he stressed that he was not defending corruption, Ketzel said, "a certain amount of waste and corruption has to be accepted." Offering suggestions to improve the foreign aid program, Terasawa said "The United States should avoid direct grants, but give through the United Nations. The aid should also be free from cold war motivation. Above all, it should get to the people." KU Navy ROTC team competes in Illinois This weekend the KU Navy ROTC Drill Team will compete in one of the largest drill meets in the country. Midshipman Ensign Peter Shirey, a Norridge, Ill., junior will command the platoon when it takes the floor of the University of Illinois Assembly Hall for the twenty-first annual "Echo Taps" Invitational Drill Meet. The meet is sponsored by the Pershing Rifles organization at the Campaign-Urbana campus. 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