xt7kpr7ms81s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7kpr7ms81s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19641023  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 23, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 23, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7kpr7ms81s section xt7kpr7ms81s 1SIE3

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IL

of Kentucky
University FRIDAY, OCT.

Vol. LVI, No. 30

LEXINGTON,

A

--

-

23. 1964

KY.,

"

i

Eight Pages

U. S. Gets More Gold Medals;

Soviets Win In Total Points
By TED SMITS
Associated Press Sports Editor
g
TOKYO (AP)-- A
smooth-workin-

United States

basket-

ball team, stung by reports that
its Olympic dominance was at
an end, crushed the Soviet Un9
in the final game toion
night, and Philadelphia's Joe
Frazier won the heavyweight
boxing title on the
day of the 18th modern Olym-pick73-5-

next-to-la-

There is only one competitive event on thefinal day , equestrian grand prix jumping. Neither
the United States nor Russia is
expected to score heavily. At
present, the United States has
e
36 gold
medals, 26
silver second-plac- e
and28bronze
third. The Soviet Union, which
first-plac-

dominated the

1956

and

1960

s.

Olympic games, has 30 gold,
31 silver and 35 bronze.

The Soviets, however, grabbed off gymnastic and boxing
medals at a pell mell rate, swept
past the United States in the
total medal standings and took
an unbeatable 0 lead.

While the basketball victory
may have been the sweetest triumph, it came on the day that
the Soviets made their greatest
medal harvest.
The United States, leadingall

96-9-

Baptist Students Host
Weekend Convention
Approximately 1,200 students from Kentucky state college campuses are expected to arrive in Lexington for the
Kentucky Baptist Student Convention this weekend.
The three day conference
will be featured speakers at the
which begins today at Calvary
conference.
Dr. Richard Lin. professor of
Baptist Church, wtfl feature several prominent leaders of the
music at the Oklahoma Baptist

denomination from this and other states.
Dr. Franklin Owen, pastor of
Calvary Baptist Church will act
as host to the delegates and
guest speakers.
"When Students ' Meet God"
is the convention theme, which
expects more student participation this year than has previously been the case.
Two University students, Miss
Sue Thomas, outstanding student nurse in Kentucky and
Terry Mobley, UK basketball
player will participate in the
convention.
Dr. John Claypool, pastor of
Crescent Hill Baptist Church,
Louisville; Dr. Keith Parks of
the Department of Missionary
Personnel of the Baptist Foreign Mission Board, Richmond,
Va., and Dr. Jack Noffsingcr,
N.
pastor of the Winston-Salem- ,
C. Knollwood Baptist Church

University, Shawnee, Okla., will
direct the music.
" All"
students who June not
already done so should register
for the conference with Calvin
Zonker, director of the Baotist
Student Union.

the way, went into the day with
a lead of
But the Soviet
gymnasts picked up seven medals, two of them gold, and the
boxers added seven more, three
of them gold. The Soviet men
and women's volleyball teams
took medals, as did their sabre
team. The Russian defending
champion, Sergey Filatov, took
third in individual dressage,
building the day's haul to 19,
including the silver medal for
finishing second in basketball.
The United States got only
two, the gold medals by the
basketball team and by Frazier.
There were many reports that
the U.S. basketball team was
not as strong as in former years.
The United States had never
lost an Olympic basketball game,
compiling a 38-- 0 record in winning five straight championships.
The learn won eight straight
in the games this year, but still
the reports persisted. The Russians, with a tall, veteran team,
also went through their first eight
games without loss and were
supposed to be a match for the
Americans.
But the Yankees quickly took
it out of doubt.
slaughtFrazier, a
erhouse skinner from Philadelphia, used a good left hook to
advantage and took a paper-thi- n
victory. The five judges
split, 2 in the American's favor,
on their vote.

!

13

88-7-

195-pou-

3--

Student Conference

Oswald's
student
will be held in the
President's Room of the Student Center at 2 p.m. Tuesday.
All interested students are invited to attend.

President

conference

Peter Stoner plays the role of Sir Thomas in the Guignol Theatre's
production of "A Man for All Seasons" which opens at 8:30 o'clock,
tonight in Guignol Theatre.

'Man For All Seasons9
Opens Tonight At Guignol
Robert Bolt's production "A Man For All Seasons" will open
at 8:30 o'clock tonight in the Fine Art's Guignol Theatre.
The play also will be presented Saturday night, and next

Friday and Saturday.
Students with ID- cards will be admitted to the production

for 90 cents.
The play is being produced and directed by Wallace N. Briggs,
associate professor of English. In charge of setting and lighting is
Raymond Smith, assistant professor of English.
Members of the cast include: Danny Howell, The Common
Man; Peter Stoner, Sir Thomas More; Howard Enoch, Richard Rich;
Robert Y. Cooke, Duke of Norfolk.
Rene Arena, Lady Alice More; Carolyn Clowes, Lady Margaret
More; James Hazlett, Cardinal Wolsey; Cene Arkle, Thomas Cromwell; Jim Holloway, the Spanish Ambassodor.
Charles Atto; Ambassador's Attendant; David Hurt, William
Roper; Don Schwartz, young King Henry VIII; Jane Lee Forrest,
the Woman and Bryan Harrison, Thomas Cranmer, Archbishop of

Canterbury.

World News Briefs

DR. FRANKLIN OWEN

UK Student Debate Series

Scheduled For Saturday

The University of Kentucky Student Forum's "Debate of the
Month" series will open at 2:30 p.m. Saturday with the defending
champion, Lexington's Henry Clay High School, facing Ilarrods- tive: "Resolved: That Nuclear
burg High School.
Henry Clay will be repreWeapons Should Be Controlled
sented by seniors David Schra-ber- g by an International Organizaand Mark Rosenberg.
tion."
debaters will be Chris
DenoCurris, former UK varsiTrower and Bill Van Arsdall. ty debater, will head a panel of
Saturday's debate will be held seven critic judges who will evalin conjunction with the Fourth uate the debate. The others are
Annual Speech Educators ConDr. Cifford Blyton, Brent Fry,
ference which opened this mornFather Joseph Miller, Dr. Ernest
ing. The debate will be held in the Hall, James Tracy and Mark
UK Student Center Theater.
Lloyd. Randy Capps, director of
forensics at Western Kentucky
Dr. J. W. Patterson, UK associate professor of speech and State College, will moderate the
director of the Forum, sakl that debate.
The Student Forum began the
high school debaters from
throughout Kentucky have been "Debate of the Month" series
invited to atterul. luist year's three years ago to provide experi"Debate of the Year" winners ence and induction in the princifrom Henry Clay, FA llastie ami ples of debating. The winner of
the (Xtober debate will be inviEd Ockerman, both UK freshmen, will be special guests fur ted back to the campus to face a
new challenger in November. The
the debate activities.
The Henry Clay team will rules of the event limit each
debute the affirmative against school to a maximum of three
Harrodsburg's team on the nega
appearances.

Khrushchev Suggested Plans
For U.N. Reorganization

WASHINGTON
(AP- )- Ten
days before he was ousted as
Soviet premier, Nikita khrush
tliev suggested that West Germany. India anil japan would
play key roles in a reorganized
United Nations.
The story ol Kin uslu liev's it
marks was related by Aiichiro
Fujiyama, iornier ioreign minister and a leading contender lor
the Conservative patty leadership
in Japan who said he talked with
the former Soviet premier at a
small town near his Hl.uk Sea
resort.
West (hi many i.s not a member of the United Nations. Fujiyama said Rhrusht ht-- again said
Red China should he admitted
lo the United Nations.
The Japanese said he was surprised by Khrushchev's remarks,
but he thinks the major reason
for Khrushchev's ouster was unpopularity of the tough line he
took against the Red Chinese.
s
Fujiyama said many Fast
did not agree with this
oliey.
Kuro-pt-an-

LFOPOLDVILLL', the Congo
Prime Minister Moist
(AP)
has proposed that the
Tshoml
International Red Cross determine whether it'U ls in his coun

try are holding hostages in violation of the Ceneva ((invention.
Tshombe suggested in a communique Thursday that Red
Cioss observers be sent to the
Congo to ensure proper treatment of prisoners.
Communist-backerebels in
the eastern Congo have indicated they are holding more than
800 whites, including 6T Americans, as hostages to discourage
Congolese air forte strikes. The
which the
Ceneva convention
rebels haven't signed prohibits
the holding of hostages.
The Americans include Consul Michael Hoyt and four others from the U.S. consulate in
Stanleyville, which fell to the
relels in August and became the
capital of the
Congolese People's Republic.
d

Bl.hRTL,

The ruling

Tunisia
Neo-Desto-

(AP)

--

party

gave its full backing Thursday
night to President Habib
policy of progressive
as the only way out of
Tunisia's economic dill unities.
session, the
llndiug a four-da1,200 delegates expressed "profound satisfaction" with
government. The president dominated the congress tie- -

Rour-guiba- 's

y

Bour-guiba- 's

spite widespread dissatisfaction
with his austerity program.
INDKPKNDICNCK. Mo. ( AP)
Harry S. Truman is back home
in Independence alter nine days
in a Kansas City hospital.
The former president, who is
SO, suffered a cut over his right
eye and broke two ribs when he
fell in the bathroom of his home
Oct. 13.
Dr. Wallace Craham said
Truman underwent a long overdue physical checkup while he
was in the hospital. Results of
the examination were not made
public.
MKXICO CU V (AP)-Prin- ce
Philip of Britain, who's making
an official visit to Mexico, called
on the minister of defense, Agus-- t
in Olachca.
Alter an exchange of greetings Thursday, the prince handed a silver cigarette lighter to
the minister.
Olachca, who had not expected the gift, took it and said:
"Thank you very much, but I
don't smoke."
The intci prefer didn't translate the last puit of Olathea's

iem.uk.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. Oct.

2

-

Oft MNT

6
FOR SALE 1956 Chevrolet
cylinder, standard shift. Good
condition $310. Call
9.

20O4t

Austin Healy.

MKII full race.

3000

19C3

1,

20O4t

FOR SALE 1934 TR4. Must sell.
Wife expecting. Will make trade.
2204t
Call
7.

FOR SALE 1962 Alpha Romeo
Spyder, 18,000 miles, excellent
condition. 1959 Mercedes 219.
Top quality car In excellent con2304t
dition. Call
4.

LOST

gold finger ring with
the initial "M." Lost in the
Reward. If found please
contact Jane Melton at Boyd
2304t
Hall.

LOSTThin

DOUBLE

DOSE

RENT
Two rooms, both
double occupancy. One available
now, other Nov. 1st. 347 Linden
Walk
Phone after 5
20O4t
p.m.

OF TERROR
STARTS

PH.

252-449-

5

Xlj j

MISCIUANEOUS

'OR

ADM. 90c

.

ATRIUM TOWN HOUSE
THE ULTIMATE OF MODERN DESIGN WITH A COMPLETELY PRIVATE
EXOTICALLY
INNER
COURTYARD,
2 BEDLANDSCAPED WITH POOL
CARPET,
ROOMS,
AIR CONDITIONED, ETC. NO
AND NO CHILDREN UN-

...

252-07-

DER

ac-

17,500

tual. All extras. Perfect condiask for Clay.
tion. Call

"

-

CLASSIFIED

FOR SALI

FOR SALE

23, 19f4

HELP WANTED

12 PLEASE.

2
'For Information, Phone
Or dial "0" and ask mobile operator for
JL
2104t
277-746-

BOYS WANTED
Part time
work. Apply at circulation desk,
20O4t
King Library.

HORSE FARM eight miles out
offers class A board, also facilities for night training. Boarding
20O4t
$65 a month. Call

HELP WANTED Waitresses
part time work available. Students' wives Ideal opportunity
day and night shift available.
Apply In person LUCAS. 500
Rose St. (The Coffee Shop of
the Campus).
1605t

1.

ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts
and coats for women. Mildred
Cohen, 215 E. Maxwell, Phone

WANTED Boys for drugs clerks.
Clerking experience of some
kind preferred. Sageser Drugs
in Southland.
2104t

tu-fr.-

6.

LARRY'S TENNIS SERVICE,
Expert overnight, machine
Rackets for sale, Wilson, Davis, Dunlop. Liberal
Trade-In- s.
Call

WANTED Girl clerks for cosmetic counter. Every third night
work and some weekends. Sageser Drugs in Southland. 2104t

till

i

11
-

.JOT I.Tji

-

i,,,,,

--

I

faLLW

tu-fr-

7.

WANTtO

Girl to share huge
apartment with three others.
Two blocks from campus. Private room. Reasonable. Phone
1605t

WANTED

PLUS BNO PEATUHI

2.

LJL

WANTED Copy of "Or All The
Seas With Oysters." Borrow or
2202t
buy. Jerry Yung,
8.

- 2ND

HELD OVER

CONTACT

BIG WEEK

A STORY OF THE REVOLUTION IK CAMPUS MORALS
T
"77

LENSES

ifeMfe.

Special Consideration for College Students, Instructors, and
Personnel.

MONFRIED
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EC

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. Oct.

Elections

Phi Delta Theta Tlcdce Class;
president, Sonny Martin; secretary, Buzzy Eaves; treasurer, Tom
Schomeer; and warden, Bill Petit.
Phi Kappa Tan Pledge Class:
president, Oscar Westerfield; vice
president, Mike Kowalsky; secretary, Jim Nimmocks; treasurer,
Danny Ross; reporter, Mark Armstrong; and song leader, Harvey
Basehart.
Pi Kappa Alpha Tledge Class:
president, Jack Grayson; vice
president, Dan Beckman;
reasurer,
R. C. Tapp; historian, Charlie Callenstein; and
chaplain, Larry Peyt.
secretary-t-

Correction

Phi Gam ma Delta Officers for
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity have
been elected. They are Bob Kel-lepresident; Lou Jaquith, treasurer; Ed Schumacher, parliamentarian; Fred Gahr, social
chairman; VVally Norris, projects
chairman; Rich Robbins,

Wesley Foundation
the Wesley Foundation on Sunday, Oct. 25 at 6:00 p.m. The
Reverend Don Welch will be the

PIERCED
EARRINGS

guest speaker.

14 Karat

Alliance Froncaise

gold

The next meeting of the Alliance Francaise will take place
on Sunday, Oct. 25 at 3:00 p.m.
in room 109 Haupt Humanities
Building, Transylvania College.
A group of students will speak
about their trip to Europe last
summer. Refreshments will be
served.

s,

Cosmopolitan Club

The Cosmopolitan Club will
hold a dance and hootennanny
Saturday night in the Student
Center Ballroom from 8:30 to 12
midnight.
There will be a dance band
and the Bramble Bush singers
will entertain.

Larry-Smith-

s,

Florentine, Bright and pierced
gold beads, onyx, green onyx,
cultured pearl, all with popular
friction posts.

from

4.50 to
15.00

You can give without loving, but
you can't love without giving.

Fuller & Wilder

DORM SALES FOR KENTUCKIAN

1

Oct.26-Nov.- 2

1965 YEARBOOK

108 ESPLANADE

Fuy& Wilder

There will be a meeting of

Sigma Phi Epsilon Pledge
Class: president, Bill Brown; vice
president and secretary, Frank
Wessendorf.
Senior Pharmacy Class Officers: president, James Reynolds;
vice president, KenQuire; secretary, Rosemary Moore; treasurer,
Cloyd Johnson; historian, Sally
social chairman,
Rosdeutcher;
Ralph Deitemeyer; and sergeant-at-armDan Salyers.
Junior Panhellcnie: president,
Sue Mclntire, Pi Beta Phi; vice
president, Jane Bayliss, Alpha
Gamma Delta; secretary, Betsy
Keyes, Kappa Kappa Gamma;
treasurer, Nancy Buress, Kappa
Alpha Theta. Their sponsor is
Betty Jo Palmer and advisor is
Connie Mullins.
Sigma Nu Pledge Class: president, Eddie Nicely; vice president, Russ Risdon; secretary.
;
Kirk Russell; treasurer,
chaplain, George Lackey;
Dennis Wilsergeant-of-armliams; and social chairman, Bobby Lakind.

2.1. IM4-- .1

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* Student Football Tickets
tor the past several years,
students have complained about
the distribution of student tickets
at University football games. Steps
have been taken to correct the problem, but it seems at least some
students this year feel there is still
a need for improvement.
The most recent complaints
were voiced at the President's stuAdent conference this week.
13 students were prelthough only
sent at the conference, some said
it did not seem tickets were being
e
distributed on a
basis. A common complaint
last year was that the athletic department should enlarge the student section.
As for the new complaint, one
student said it was possible to be
line an hour
seated on the
before the game, while
and
another student may be seated on
hour beline
the
fore the game. An investigation of
the facts will prove that such is not
the case.
A student committee was established last year to plan the procedure for distribution of student
football tickets. This plan was presented to the athletic department
and is now in use.
y
Harvey Hodges, ticket manager, reports the first students to
enter gates three, four, five and six
receive tickets in Section C, which
line. Tickets
begins at the
are distributed in this section up to
Row 35, then distribution of tickets
in Section B begins. The best tickets in Section B are distributed, :
first.
After all tickets in the latter
section have been distributed, students are seated in Section C from
Row 36 to the top of the stadium.
Tickets then are distributed for all
of Section A, the best seats being
assigned first. The remaining students are seated in the West end
zone. Students with dates from
another school are assigned seats
first-com- e,

one-ha- lf

one-ha- lf

50-ya-

first-serv-

The Melancholy Days Arc Conic

in a section of the East end zone.
such a system is followed,
there is little room for complaint
from the student body. There may
be merit in the complaint that a
larger student section is needed.
In order to have a larger student

section, however, the athletic department would receive less money
from

"paid tickets".

Thus a basic question arises:
Should students receive the best
seats in the stadium, resulting in
less money from paid attendance,
or should the best seats be on sale
to the general public? We feel that
this question always will lack an
answer suitable to both the public
and the students.
A larger football stadium is
not the answer to this problem.
Any stadium will have its best
seat.
On the one hand, students
will contend they are the prime
components of a university and
should be given priority in any
matter concerning the university.
On the other hand, "paying fans"
will say the team represents the
whole state and therefore all persons should have an equal opportunity to attend the games and
have a suitable seat.

Line For The Nonaligned

It is easy to criticize some of
the particular decisions of the conference of nonaligned countries
which has wound up its meetings
in Cairo. Yet on the really big issues,
maturity and reasonableness won
the day. Nevertheless, to even the
most sympathetic observers in the
West, the nonaligned seem to have
a distorted view of the world power
struggle, and are consequently less
then evenhanded in their public
As for the present method of utterances.
ticket distribution, we feel that the
Most of the delegations in Cairo
best possible method isbeingused.
were from countries that have beMuch confusion would be elimicome independent of Western rule
nated if students would use their
only since the end of World War II.
assigned seats. What is more fair Thus the
tendency to speak out still
e
than the
Western "imperialism" is
against
method?
understandable. That is the only
kind of "imperialism" of which the
delegates have personal experience:
The truest eloquence is that which
Taste is, so to speak, the microthe Soviet Union and China are not
holds us too mute for applause. -- scope of judgement. -- Rousseau.
given to divesting themselves of
a
Bulwer.
empire.
a
0
A truth that disheartens because
But for all the sharp words from
I believe that any man's life will
it is true is of far more value than the
some of the delegates, the Cairo
be filled with constant and unexpected
most stimulating
of falsehoods. -conference came out in the end for
encouragement if he makes up his Maeterlinck.
a policy of coexistence between the
0
0
0
mind to do his level best each day,
nonaligned countries and those
and as nearly as possible reaching
Wisdom is to the mind what
whom they call "imperialists"
the highwater mark of pure and usehealth is to the body. - Rochefoucauld
(alias the West). President Sukarno
0
0
0
ful living. -- Hooker T. Washington
of Indonesia with an occasional
Criticism often takes from the tree
encouraging word from the repreHe conquers who endures. -- Vrcaterpillars and blossoms together.
sentatives of Cuinea and Mali
had tried to get the meeting to take
a much tougher line. His argument
was that until the last vestige of
colonialism had been removed, no
peace was possible.
The South's Outstanding College Daily
Marshall Tito had an answer
University of Kentucky
for that. "There can be no peace
ESTABLISHED 1894
FRIDAY, OCT. 23. 1964
without freedom," he said, "but no
William Chant,
David Haute, Executive Editor
Gary IIawkswohth, Managing Editor freedom without peace." And since
Kenneth Cheen, Newi Editor
Dr. Sukarno calls his policy of limiHenhy Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Walteh Chant, Assistant to the Executive Editor
ted aggression against Malaysia
Sam A it ell. Chief Photographer
Cay Cish, Sociul Editor
Sally Atheahn, Women'$ Feature Editor "confrontation," Prime Minister
Business Staff
Shastri of India was even more di1'ace Walkeh, Advertising Manager
John T. Dauchaday, Circulation Manager rect in his rebuke.
Mr. Shastri said:
Editorial Yage Staff
"We must settle disputes by conIlobEHT Staib,
Fhank II. Bailey, Thomas Behsot, Ahthlh Hendeh!on, Claudia Jeekhey,
ciliation, not confrontation."
James Svaha; Sid Wehh, Cartoonist
Dr. Sukarno's failure to carry
Friday News Staff
the conference with him was an in
Fhanc.es Wiught, Assistant
Editor
Liz Vahi,
50-ya- rd

The present system of having
a specific section for the student
body has been in existence for
many years and is used by most
colleges and universities. We feel
that such a system is necessary.
It would be unreasonable and unfair to give all "front-row- "
seats
to students. This would eliminate
an important source of income for
the athletic teams.

first-com-

e,

first-serv-

Kernels

000

The Kentucky Kernel
Editor-in-Chi-

direct defeat for Communist China,
since his views probably came closer to the Chinese line than those of
anybody else in Cairo. The meeting's resolution against the dissemination of nuclear weapons was also
an indirect slap at Peking.

It is aninterestingcommentary

on how the world has changed since
the first nonaligned conference in
Belgrade in 1961 that in Cairo the
delegates probably were more actively troubled by Moscow and
Peking in the context of the schism
between those two capitals than
between the continuing, if muted,
r
struggle between Moscow and Washington. But, as
wherever the shadow of Communist
China looms, the influence was
more felt than mentioned.
Perhaps the most important
trend of all at Cairo was the growing tendency to channel the interest
of nonaligned countries toward the
economic. Most of them are underdevelopedand therefore poor. And
at Cairo there was areemergenceof
that recognized common interest
which brought together in a group
at this spring's United Nations
trade conference in Geneva the 77
underdeveloped countries taking
part in it.
Surely the world is going to
hear more on this issue from them
as a group. And it was significant
that in his keynote speech to the
Cairo meeting, President Nasser
said: "The painful difference in the
standards of living of peoples puts
the world in the mouth of a volcano
that does not calm down or sleep
. . . .We do not want the world to be
divided into blocs of poor and rich,
of advanced and underdeveloped, of
white and colored. Poverty and
wealth cannot live peaceably together, nor can progress and backwardness, or prosperity and deprivation. We live in one and the same
w orld, and we are one and the same
race despite the colors."
The Christian Science Monitor
world-powe-

* THE KENTl'CKY KERNEL.

Oct. 2X

l!Ml- -.r

University Soapbox

Reader Says Johnson 111 Suited For Highest Office

To the Fxlitor of the Kernel
There is an aura of immorality
and scandal surrounding Lyndon
Johnson that ill suits one holding
the high and dignified office of
President of the United States.
All American citizens, whatever
their political affiliation, wish to
have confidence and trust in, and
respect and admiration for, the
man who is head of the American
government and leader fo the
American nation. However, Pres
ident Johnson not only involves
himself in suspicious situations
and with suspicious associates,
but compounds our suspicion by
his refusal of free and open investigation to clear up the nature of
these involvements.
There was a stench of fraud

surrounding Johnson's initial
election to the Senate that could
well have stood the refreshing
wind of a thorough investigation.
Trailing his opponent, then Gov.

Coke Stenenson of Texas by 250
votes four days after a primary
election, Johnson called on his
backers to "do their duty." Now

what new duty could possibly be
done in any election four days
after the polls have closed? The
Texas Election Bureau had already announced that only forty
votes remained uncounted. Imagine Gov. Stevenson's surprise
when the next day a precinct in
Southern Texas suddenly amended its returns to show 203 additional votes, of which 202 were
for Johnson. Along with some
other adjustments in the totals,
this made Johnson the winner of
the election by 87 votes.
The precinct in question was
precinct 13 of the town of Alice,
in Jim Wells County. This county
was part of the territory of political boss George Parr, a Johnson
man. Two of Gov. Stevenson's
lawyers succeeded in learning the
names of several of the 203 voters
in question. Trying to trace them
the lawyers found several of these
names on local tombstones, while
they could find nobody who had
ever heard of some of the others.
However, some of the names belonged to actual living people, a

number of whom said they had
not voted.
A complicated series of legal
actions and political maneuvers
followed, with Johnson and Parr
forces stubbornly resisting all attempts at investigation. At one
point, a court commissioner reported that two copies of the precinct 13 voting list had been stolen. Finally, a United States Supreme Court Justice ruled that if
the Stevenson charges of fraud
were correct, then it was a criminal matter, and could be prosecuted in Texas state courts. In the
meantime, Johnson's name was
allowed on the November ballot
as the bona fide Democratic nominee, where he easily won over his
Republican opponent. A final investigation of the primary election ground to a halt when it was
found that the ballots and voting
list of precinct 13 had been
burned.
Avery detailed account of this
strange election appears in the
April 6 issue of U. S. News &
World Report, page 46.

RALPH McGILL

South Cannot Resist Change

In December, 1955, the late
.
William Faulkner wrote a short
introduction to the nuhlished re
port of the November session of

best one can of one's life within
one's capability, without fear of
injustice or oppression or threat
of violence."

"In

Hon at which he had been a speak
er Th HisHncriiichfvl M icciccirw

1954, as in 1955, a South-

erner writing of his region must
echo what Mr. Faulkner asked,
"Why didn't someone tell us this
yiau vtiuic.
"'The question is no longer of before? Tell us this in good time?"
white against black. Itisnolong- The U.S. Supreme Court, for
Ul
...L:
...l, l
example, is considering protests
shall remain pure; it is whether against an act of Congress conOr not white people shall remain
cerning civil rights. Some Southfree.
erners, caught up in the anger and
"We atVentmntnmelvandthe
resistance that are a part of inevitrisk of violence because we will able change, are eager to hear the
not sit quietly by and see our Congress cursed, the court connative land, the South not just demned. That would be the easier
Mississippi, but all the South-wre- ck way out.
and ruin itself twice in less
But there still is time to accept
with dignity and goodwill the inevitable changes. Certainly, by
Negro question.
"We speak out now against now, it must be plain that this
' the
day when our Southern people great country cannot say that
who will resist to the last these about 162 million citizens may
inevitable changes in social re- have unquestioned use of public
lations, will, vyhen they have been schools and those businesses with
forced to accept what they atone a license to serve the public, but
time might have accepted with that some 20 million others may
dignity and goodwill, will say, not even though these latter mil'Why didn't someone tell us this lions are citizens subject to milibefore? Tell us this in good time?" tary service and all other demands of citizenship.
In his talk, before the historians Mr. Faulkner had said that,
.'Are we prepared to argue that
"To live anywhere in the world foreign visitors of color, or other
of A.D. 1955 and be against nonwhite Americans, may travel
equality because of race or color,, as they please, attend public
is like living in Alaska and being
schools and use public facilities
against snow." He was sure, he with their doors open to public
told the historians, that the Netrade, but that for 20 million
gro "knows there is no .such; .Americans citizenship is a handithing as equality per 'sey but. cap?
Can we, as sensible, logical
only equality TO; equal tight
and opportunity to make- the human beings, expect the Con
1

:

gress and the Courts or even Mr.
Coldwater, to make citizenship a
handicap to some and an asset
to others?

How many will refuse to sit
idly by and see our native land,
the South, wreck and ruin itself
for the second time in less than a
hundred years over the Negro

question?
Who is he who really loves his
region? Is it he who damns the
Congress and the courts? Or is it
he who urges that there is yet time
to accept with dignity and good
will the inevitable changes of our
times?
The Ku Klux Klans have a
booth in the Alabama State Fair.
Organizations of the radical
right are flying Confederate flags.
But it was Ceneral Robert E.
Lee who said to the South,
"Teach your children to be good
We know in our heads and
hearts that Ceneral Lee was right.
(Copyright 1964)

Many people have been led to
believe that there was collusion
between Lyndon Johnson and the
now infamous Iiillie Estes. Lstes
was entangles in shady grain storage, cotton allotment and chattel
mortage deals, all involving the
U.S. Government, lie was arrested by the FBI in 1962 and later
sentenced to 23 years in prison.
The death of a Department of
Agriculture official who had been
investigating Estes was declared
a suicide, although the man had
been shot five times with a
rifle, once in the back.
However, with the helpofone
of Johnson's lawyers, Estes has
managed to avoid serving any of
his time.
Attempts to prove or disprove
anything in the