xt715d8ng019 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt715d8ng019/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19651022  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 22, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 22, 1965 1965 2015 true xt715d8ng019 section xt715d8ng019 Vol. LVII, No.

Inside Todays Kernel

Y&m im ki jju
University of Kentucky
31

Community College' t 'Sweppin' Meet' featured bearded chairmaker:

tdltor

LEXINGTON, KY FRIDAY, OCT. 22, 1965

Eight Pages

and FRANK BROWNING
Student Congress passed a
bill Thursday night designed to
provide summer jobs to University students in places "different
from their homes and academic

A director of the service will
be appointed by Congress.
SC Vice President John
O'Brien, author of the bill, earlier
described it as one whose chief
objectives were especially to provide work experience in areas
outside the local and state
bounds.

Three.

integration and othletict: Poge Four.
football game preriewed: Foge Six.
Dean Ginger soft high commitment needed tor teachers: Poge Seven.
a C'JM
build bridge: Pogt Eight.
discusses

Congress Establishes
Employment Service
By TERENCE HUNT

t oge

......

No other school in the National Student Association has
ever attempted such a service,

,

mlfat)

according to O'Brien.
It has been attempted twice
before here and failed both times
because of a bog down on the
students end, O'Brien said.
environments."
In passing the $10,000 budget,
The Summer Student EmployCongress suspended the bylaws
ment Service Bill was the first
He expressed a hope the bill of its constitution to allow the
of six bills presented in the execwould give qualified UK students budget to pass the same night
utive board's legislative program
it was introduced.
a chance to work in fields related
to be passed by Congress.
According to the bylaws the
to their own special interests or
Congress also unanimously
"U
budget should have been intro'''
:
major areas of study.
v.'',"
accepted the proposed $10,000
duced and then referred to com1965-6- 6
Summer EmThe Congress
school
budget for the
for review and brought
mittee
ployment Committee returned back next week for approval.
year.
from
the original executive bill to the
Garnering information
However, in this instance, the C. T. Vivian,
allegedly the first clergyman to be arrested for taking
assembly with two amendments.
employers and making it availauthors of the budget would be
part in the Civil Rights movement, spoke to University students
well
able to the student body as
The assembly voted down an the same party that reviewed it.
Thursday night. He was sponsored by Students for a Democratic
as working closely with the Office
And, according toWinston Miller,
amendment to abolish the posiSociety.
of School Relations and PlaceCongress president, they had altion of employment service direcment Service for employment potor and replace the director with ready reviewed it.
sitions will embody the EmployThe annual Congress budget
a standing committee.
ment Service's duties.
an is based on a flat allocation of
They accepted, however,
The Service's first job will be
$10,000. Congress is the only camServto make a survey "which would amendment simplifying the
pus agency that does not receive
garner knowledge concerning the ice's duties regarding gathering its allocation on the basis of a
and dissemination of employment
number of students requesting
proposed list of yearly expenses,
assistance in obtaining summer information in relation to the Miller said.
of
placement service and office
employment and types of employ"This is our last year for a
school relations.
ment requested."
flat allocation," Miller said. Congress would then receive a yearly
allotment based on a proposed
By RON HERRON
list of annual expenses.
Kernel Staff Writer
Dr. Lewis Cochran, Univercivil rights movement comA veteran of America's
sity Provost, presented a general
of the Academic Plan pared that movement's principles to Vietnam Thursday night,
description
which should be presented in speaking at Memorial Hall
tween Selma and Saigon. We're
C. T. Vivian, a civil rights
detail to the Faculty Senate early
the big bullies of the world."
worker for more than fifteen years,
of 100 years because it has in November.
The University is wise at the age
As the Negro emerged from
over its century an instinctive understanding of continuity
John Lacky, a law student, spoke on "Selma and Saigon the
acquired
at a session of the introduced a resolution seeking Mirror and the Image". His civil conflict, Vivian said, he had
and change, said Frank Kermode, guest speaker
realize his problem was
Centennial Humanities Conference today.
Congress' backing on the U.S. speech was sponsored by the begun to
part of a larger, international
from the Uni
involvement in Vietnam. The res- Students for Democratic Society.
Mr. Kermode,
we must be sure olution was sent back to a comproblem.
Referring to the "big bullies"
versity of Manchester, spoke at has changed;
"What we've learned in dealsession at Cuignol that the image we have of it is mittee and probably will be who had allegedly beaten Ne-rothe morning
ing with our problem of inner
in the South, he charged,
that we have not brought up for a vote next
Theatre. The panel was composed not eidetic,
"There's not much difference be-- colonialism we should project
of Monroe C. Beardsley of accepted a receipt to deceive."
outside."
NorthSwarthmore College, and
The problem in America, he
of Toronto,
rop Frye, University
claimed, was that we had treated
later
both of whom will speak at
the Negro as a thing, not as a
sessions.
human being.
"The hundred years of this
"Because we wanted what we
wanted in Vietnam, we were willUniversity have been unusally
copious in the provision of lessons
ing to use a nation as a thing,"
on change," Mr. Kermode stated.
he continued.
1
Vl
More pointedly, Vivian charghas done one of
"The University
ed that the United States would
its jobs, its basic humanistic job,
J
not allow an election in Saigon
which is to perpetuate the literary
:
because the outcome could not be
-public."
controlled. Instead, he added, we
He then stated most of the
had set up a long line of puppets
more important work lies in the
'
there.
undergraduate schools.
Ari
The CIA with a budget of
"It may well be that the way
$4 billion a year, he said, is an
to teach the young what they need
"invisible government."
vi 1 TT '
to know Is not what it used to be.
Like the American Negro,
The scientist is concerned with
Vivian said, the Vietnamese are
the growth of organized factual
telling us, "We are going to be
knowledge, but the burden oft
free or we are going to be dead."
facts is becoming insupportable.
Drawing an analogy, he said,
In literature there was a notion'
"Hitler bombed but he did not
that the study of modern as
defeat the British."
opposed to ancient literature
Vivian rejected the idea that
could provide the discipline formi
the Communists were the aggresassociated with difficult
erly
sors in Vietnam. "We are the ones
languages and remote history. So
that have troops there, not the
fell on the learning
the emphasis
Communists," he claimed.
of facts."
from
Vietnam
Withdrawal
Mr. Kermode sees the problem
would not, he said, involve loss of
of the University as teaching the
face. We had, he added, left the
Trotipvm Entertain
lesson of continuity to intelligent
Bay of Pigs without losing face.
"The great danger," Vivian
people who are sceptical about its Two Trouper clowns, Charles Sither and Bill land Pickers. The group, sponsored by the physical
stressed "is that because we try
relevance. The force of change Stevens perforin for patients of Shriner's Children's education department, makes regular visits to
to use the past policies of Selma
needed to be recognized, he said
hospitals and schools. Future plans include shows
Hospital. The UK performers entertained the
in Vietnam, we stand the chance
at Fastein State Hospital and the Veteran's
with six acts Thursday night, including
"The needs of the student are
of losing the free world."
tumblers, clowns, singers, dancers, and the Kef ne- the past of literature
different,

r

rpg
.if

SDS

Speaker Says,

'Selma And Saigon:
Little Difference'

Speaker Notes Force
Of Continuity, Change

non-viole-

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bib.
v.

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* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Ott. 22. 1963

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By KAREN BOYER
Kernel Arts Writer
"Aside from specific areas of
contemporary music, I take the
w hole history' of music as my province," said Robert Palmer, conr-pose-r
and professor of music at
Cornell University in his lecture
to the Centennial Humanities
Seminar Tuesday.
Palmer, the fourth artist to
lecture in a series of Centenniel
events featuring noted scholars
and artists, shared with his audi

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Matinees: Sat., Sun., Wed.
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Sun. Eve at 8

Kentucky Kernel. Untvertty
Station, University ot Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40SO6. Second-vU- s
poUe paid at tune weekly during
Published lour lmngtati. Kentucky.
the school rar except during holidays
nd exam periods, and
the summer semester. weekly during
Publuhed fur the student of the
University of Kentucky by the Hoard
of Student Publications. Prof. Paul
Oberst. chairman and LJnda Uassavkay,
secretary.
ttctfun as the Cadet in 184. became the itecord in 1VjO, and the Idea
in llkia. Published continuously a the
Kernel since 114.

dluc

TUESDAY
ST"EVE

l

At one point while he was
playing he asked the audience,
"Is this A or is this C?" and
then answered, "No one knows,
even I don't know." With this
example he illustrated his belief
that "one should try to expand
the concept of key or thinking to
include more than one source.
This is the new kind of tonality
which contemporary composers
have used," he said.
Commenting on the inspirational aspects of composing. Palmer said, "when you are lucky
enough to get an idea, this is
only the start. Then comes the
hard work of finding a vehicle,
a format, and shaping this idea
into the right form."
Some artists work for years on
the same piece. Palmer said, as he
quoted the statement, "An artist
never really finishes a piece, he
just abandons it."

$WET

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presents

An Associates

a, ,

Palmer also commented on his
feelings toward the rhythm and
tonality of music. "The kind of
rhythm that interests me must be
felt from the inside out," he said.
"It is a kinetic, or visceral type
of rhythm w hich affects me intellectually." Palmer illustrated his
feelings toward rhythm by playing the first movement of his
Piano Quartet which he wrote in

kohhu

SH,

r

cases."

HELD OVER!
"HUSH-HU-

.

technique which is eventually
mastered by the great composers.
I try to make my music do as much
as the older music, and also to include w hat has been lost in some

n

JOSEPH COM!
20th Century-F-

'long melodic span in music,"
Palmer went on. "This is an old

1945.

who scourged all
El Dorado!

Please

JLEI

ence some areas of his early and
recent interests in music.
Palmer said that at first he
was drawn to certain phases of
U.S. contemporary music, currents of contemporary music in
Europe, and the music of Harris
and Copeland. "The line, gesture, movement and melodic
effect found in
as metrical
Harris' music was a primary interest of mine," he commented.
"I was very much interested in
developing the ability to create a

The avenger

with a membership
end detail for

l

?

el JH.9S

RADICKS)

1U ,

Photo by Margaret Bailey

Is it A or is it C? Not even Robert Palmer knows for sure. Palmer
is a composer and Professor of Music at Cornell University. He is
shown lecturing to the Centennial Humanities Seminar Tuesday.

A program of five concerts has
been announced for the 19T06
scries of the Chamber Music Society of Central Kentucky, which Is
affiliated with the University.
Appearing this season will be
the New York Harrxjue Lnscmble,
Oct. 29; Alrna Trio, Nov. 24;
La Salle Quartet, Jan. 16; Nicanor
Zabclcta, harpist, Feb. 9, and the
Iierkshire Quartet, March 18.
All concerts will be at 8:15
p.m. in Memorial Hall. Three
types of admission are being
used-t- he
individual subscription which is $5 for a season
ticket, individual concert tickets
at $3 each and the $25 patron
membership which permits the
holder to invite any number of
guests to the concerts.

GLEAS0:J4cQUEEM

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct. 22,

Co m 111 unity College News

Finjm&WiLDHR

Swappin' Fete Draws Chairmaker

By BRUCE AYERS
Kernel Correspondent
CUMUKKLAND-Clicst- cr
!
.. Cornctt first attended school In a
s
small woixlen structure in Poor Fork, where the town of Cumbert
iff
land is now located.
About 45 years and a long, long beard later, he returned to this
town for the Kindom Come Swappin' Meetin,' a blend of folksong
and folklore trading, which was held recently at the UK Cumber
land Community College.
It
takes about 100
Comett was born in the hills hours normally
or the better part of a
of Letcher County near Roxana
month for Comett to finish one
...- t.
and has lived most of his 50 years
V
of his rockers, starting with the
in and around the same region
of the tree.
"except when I went off to World cutting winter he sold
Last
only two
War II."
He began school near Cum- chairs. His only regular income
berland when he was about 11 consists of a small pension, barely
over $50 a month, from his paryears old and completed liis edutial disability received in the war.
cation nine years later, progressRecently, however, some recr,
VOO
ing to the fourth grade.
ognition has been coming to him.
"I didn't have much time for Indiana
University is documentschools," he says, "anyway I
ing his work methods and will
d
I could hardly
was so
collect samples of his work for
sit in them small seats."
their folklore museum.
His main occupation for supThe Louisville Courier-Journporting his wife and four children
Magazine recently presented a
is chairmaking which he learned
feature story about him and a
from his ancestors.
series of stories on Cornett for
"There were chairmakers on the I lazard Herald was published.
both sides of the family," Comett
As Norman pointed out in one
explained describing the sturdy of his articles, Cornctt is an exlooking structures
ample of a diminishing breed of
He advised that "good wood,
people who make hand-mad- e
pegs and controlled seasoning
furniture.
are the keys to the durability
CHESTER CORNETT
"They would not say," Norof my chairs."
man writes, "a Cornett chair is
It takes him 20 minutes just
'just a chair' any more than they
READ THE KERNEL
to whittle a single peg the way would
say a great painting is
he wants it. A big chair w ill need
"
CLASSIFIED COLUMN DAILY
'just a picture.'
34 or 40 pegs.
Comett .doesn't sell many
HELD OVER! 2ND WEEK
chairs these days. "People just
jjgWWIinillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllOIIIOIDIIIIBIIHWWIIWJA,
ain't willing to pay what they're
Subject: Sex and Stealing 1
worth. They just don't understand how much time it takes to
make them."
He doesn't use nails, unless
For
requested by the customer. A
total of 15 hours is needed to
Continuous from 1 p.m.
weave the hickory bottom with
more hours necessary to prepare
the bark for weaving.

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Freshman representatives chosen were Gary Avery, Larry Ford,
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George Hagan. Sophomores elected were Bobby Caslin, Larry
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UNlTtD ARTISTS

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* The

Lily-Whit-

We back wholeheartedly the

ef-

"How Do You Think This Looks To People Abroad?"

Line

e

cruiting several of the Negro studethroughout the state.
We are glad to see the Human

forts of the Campus Committee on
Human Rights to speed up recruitment of the University's first Negro
Rights committee attempting to
athlete.
rejuvenate the campaign for the first
some of the
Though both the football and Negro athlete. Perhaps
basketball coaching staffs indicated Negro prep stars now will look more
toward breaking the Univague interest last year in "several favorably
athletic color barrier if they
Negro athletes" only one, a basket- versity's
ball player, was brought to Lex- can see members of the student body
such a move.
ington for the traditional tour of the supporting
We are not accusing athletic recampus. This was true despite the
large number of Negro players cruiters of active discrimination.
teams.
The University's teams, though, replaced on
main segregated. To the outer world
We have yet to see the football
perhaps this speaks louder than all
coaching staff escort a Negro ath- the
promises and proclamations.
letic prospect around the campus.
Admirably, the University was
With each additional year of the first Southeastern Conference
white-onl- y
teams fielded by UK,
college to announce its intention to
tfce University's verbal commitment
actively recruit athletes of all races.
looks weaker and weaker. The time But now the
University must back
has come for the University to make its
verbal commitment
a special effort to show the nation it
some different shading to
by adding
means what it said by actively re its
athletic lineups.
nts-athletes

all-sta- te

two-year-o-

ld

lily-whi- te

Congress' Good Record
The 89th Congress, nearingthe
end of its first session, has been
the best Congress since World War
II.
For two decades Congress has
been the object of severe but
justified public criticism for its
failure to face up to the needs of
a highly urbanized national society
undergoing swift economic and
technological change, strained by
the challenge of educating, housing:
and transporting a rapidly growing
population, and beset by the complexities of admitting its Negro
minority to full citizenship.
The country's needs called for
imagination, flexibility, compassion; for vastly increased Federal
spending for schools, hospitals,
housing, and special
for the most impoverished
programs
and disadvantaged. But Congress,
stalemated by a conservative bipartisan coalition drawing its
strength from rural and small-tow- n
constituencies and looking backward to a different America, was
long unresponsive. Its fussy rules
and rigid seniority system helped
inhibit action.
low-inco-

The Congress elected a year ago
broke the. mold. A new majority
coalition of Democrats and liberal
Republicans has emerged. The
seniority system remained, but the
House rules were modified in a
modest way that helped ease the
flow of legislation to the floor.
Rather than making a virtue out of
sulky obstinacy, this Congress has
cooperated with the Executive
Branch to shape a constructive
program.
The great measures were approved relatively early in the
session. The law making the right
to vote effective for Southern
Negroes, the law bringing Federal
financial aid to the elementary and
secondary schools, and the law
adding the protection of Medicare
to the social security system were
historic gains.
But Congress did much more.
It submitted to the states a con

stitutional amendment

Presidency. It passed by the
narrowest of margins a program
of rent subsidies that may provide
a useful approach to the stubborn
problem of good housing for
families. A Cabinet-leve- l
Department of Housing and Urban
Development was finally established.

F life"

iL

providing

for an orderly succession to the

low-inco-

The war on poverty, still in its
early stages, received a vote of
confidence in the form of an increased appropriation. In addition
to Medicare, much was accomplished for the nation's health,
including the establishment of regional medical centers, funds for
staffing community mental-healt- h
centers and training more teachers
for the mentally retarded. Congress
approved a pilot project to rejuvenate railroad passenger service. The
reform of the immigration law and
a pioneering program of Federal
aid for the arts were other high
points.
The Congress had a few black
marks on its record such as the
defeat in the House of the home-rul- e
bill for the District of Columbia and the weakening of the bill
to regulate highway billboards. The
proposal to regulate the shocking
trade in guns made little progress.
Many conservative measures are
needed; and control of water pollution, for example, is going to require a more aggressive and much
more amply financed program despite the passage of this year's bill.
Yet these failings and unfinished
tasks do not destroy the general
excellence and comprehensiveness
of this session's record. At last
the decks have been cleared of
numerous old problems and old
quarrels. At last the nation has
had the benefit of the work of a
modern-mindeCongress that addressed itself to the needs of a
industrial
complicated
society
entering the last third of the
twentieth century.
The New York Times

Fringe On The Top
school discipline. Mr. Tabb says
he has no intention of prescribing
clothing styles but commented
"certain types of attire have no
place in any public school."
We would hope that Mr. Tabb
and other educators like him would
lift the hair from their own eyes
and become a little more concerned
with the education handed out in
their schools and quit worrying
about the passing fancies of their
students.

Schools across the country faced
a new challenge this fall: shaggy
locks on the heads of their male
students. At least they felt it a
challenge.
new
Marquette University's
student handbook says beards and
effeminately long hair will not be
allowed. Father Richard Sherburne,
dean of students, said two bearded
faculty members will remain unshaven. "A privilege of the profession," he called it.
here in Lexington,
Right
Samuel Tabb Jr. of Tates
Principal
Creek Junior High issued a list
of "helpful hints" which, among
other things, said extreme hair
styles including abnormal length
and bleaching are unacceptable.
Mr. Tabb said "offenders have
been negligible. " (The italics are
our own.
What concerns us more than
a schoolboy with a goatee or a
pageboy is a school administrator
forcing him to cut it off. We can
find little justification in the rules
of dress so often enforced in
American high schools and junior
highs (and even at some universities
if Marquette is all typical).
Some educators have argued that
boys with long hair, for example,
create a distraction and impede

Russel Baker of the New York
Times recently remarked in his
column, "Schools should be less
concerned with unorthodox hair
lengths and more concerned with
why they are turning out so many
orthodox minds willing to submit
to the corporate haircut."
We agree. We have long felt
that American schools, especially
the junior highs and the high
schools, were keyed primarily to
the medium student and were
seeking to push, pull, or drag down,
all students to fit into that nice,
comfortable mold decided by the
board of education as "average."
And we feel the fringe on top
of student heads is a lot less important than what the schools are
putting in those heads.

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
UNIVERSITY

ESTABLISHED

OF KENTUCKY

1894

FRIDAY, OCT.

Walter Chant.

d

Editor-in-Chie-

Linda Mills. Executive Editor

Sally Stull, Newt Editor
Gay Cish, Women

,

$

Kenneth Creen,

22. 1965

f

Kenneth Hoskins. Managing Editor

Associate Editor

jUUY Chjsham, Associate News Editor
Henry Rosenthal. Sports Editor
Page Editor
Margaret Bailey. Arts Editor

Tom Finnie, Advertising Manager

Business Stuff

Marvin Huncatk, Circulation Manager

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct. 22,

ETV Network May Bring
UK Classes To All State
initial

By BARBARA CHAMBERS

Kernel Staff Writer
An educational television network connecting
the University to the community colleges, to
every public school in the state, and potentially
to every citizen, is the aim of the committee for
educational television.
This recommended use of educational television
academic
is part of the report on the University-wid- e
change. The committee feels that educational
television can serve as a valuable vehicle for
bringing the University to the people of the state.
This is part of a series of articles regarding
in the October publication of "The University
Academic Program: Curricula, Policies, and Organiza-

pro-jwsa- ls

tion.''

The Kentucky Authority for Educational Television will provide a vast distribution network,
production facilities, and funds for five production
centers throughout the state with one of these
located here at UK. It is hoped that production
on the network will begin by September 1966.
The committee has recommended the following
measures which include the vigorous support of
ETV network, and the appointment
the state-wid- e
of a University coordinator of television at a
high administration level who should be given

charge

and

supported

with

LITTLE

MAN ON CAMPUS

temporary

quarters, a skeleton staff, and anoperatingbudget.
It has also set up some guidelines for the devone should be coerced in any way to

sue TV.
2. Under no circumstances should TV be used
in a manner where quality of instruction is sacrificed for expediency or economy.
3. Compensatory time should be given when
use of TV requires a great expenditure of time
and effort on the part of the teacher.

Jn sjy
H(f m B
I

elopment and use of television:
1. No

1965- -5

105

A

tI
jfer

4. A University-wid- e
information dissemination
program should be initiated so that the people
on the campus (both teachers and students) may
become familiar with the potential uses of TV and
plans to utilize the medium.
5. All efforts should be made to support it
well since it is new.

The report also indicated that there should
be some television production activity already
going on campus so that the experience gained
can be applied to the more demanding challenge
of network television. In this manner the network can be utilized with maxium effectiveness
and minium time lag.

AMP 6CMTIME
WVf CAKKY iOU A
Mr LECTU
VNIINUIt
OK 1VW r Ar7 THB HVUN rUUK."

Pro-Administrati- on

Teach-i- n

Sponsored

one supportWASHINGTON (CPS)-- A different kind of teach-in- ,
ing the administration's policy in Vietnam, drew 500 people here
Saturday in a counter move to the weekend's "National Days of
Protest" demonstrations going on across the country.
Sponsored by a bipartisan
group consisting of the College up but sent an aide to praise the
College gathering for speaking for the
Republicans,
Young
"scores of thousands of students
Young Democrats, Young Americans for Freedom and five stuand academicians across the
dent government presidents, the country who support the adminfor Freedom in
istration's commitment to the
"Symposium
Vietnam" presented a series of freedom of Vietnam." Those who
the administration,
support
strong containment policy advoDodd's statement said, "now uncates to a predominately collederstand that they can no longer
giate audience.
afford the luxury of remaining
The huge ballroom of the International Inn was the setting silent while a minority of pacicold
fists and confused liberals and
for the group of
communists and other extremists
occasionally sporting
legians,
"Beat the Vietcong" buttons, shout their opposition to the administration policy."
but the total number of particiA panel of four students, all
pants fell far short of the 1,500
of whom had spent the summer
the teach-i- n orgapredicted by
in Vietnam, departed from the
nizers.
The climax of the day-lon- g
day's discussion of the war and
affair came with a march to the American foreign policy, calling
South Vietnamese embassy for instead for a "people-to-people- "
an exchange of friendship vows. approach to the conflict. "We
"We've been in touch with the tend to think of Vietnam as a
White House on this," announced
war, not a country," said Donald
the YAF representative in calling Emerson, who represented the
people to the march, and 200 World University Service on his
students responded for an orderly tour of Vietnam.
walk to the emd
The students received the
most enthusiastic response of the
bassy.
The keynote speaker of the day in their plea for bipartisan
economorning session, Sen. Thomas J. campus efforts to reach the
failed to show mically-deprived
Dodd
people.
well-dresse-

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