xt7c2f7jsq3j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7c2f7jsq3j/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19651008  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  8, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  8, 1965 1965 2015 true xt7c2f7jsq3j section xt7c2f7jsq3j Inside Today's Kernel
French play to be presented in Memorial Holt: toge Two.
Nile Spencer Art Show begins in Fine
Arts Gallery Sunday: Pog Two.
Kentucky Babes hold organizational
meeting: toqe Three.

Wildcats want "revenge" against Florida State at Saturday's game: Page
Sii.
YAF constitution questioned by stote
organization: Page Seven.
Editor discusses "continuing hazard"

Northern Community College students
will carry a football to UK to present
to Coach Bradshaw: Foge Eight.

of King Library: Page Four.
concerned about
Doctors or
market drug sale: Foge Five.

black

Vol. LVII, No. 23

University of Kentucky
1965
OCT.
KY.,
LEXINGTON,

Faculty Senate To View
South Campus Proposal;
Housing Complexes Cited
Establishment of a complex of
residential
colleges
known as the South Campus is a
proposal coming before the University
Faculty Senate this
this month.
two-yea- r

The proposal is put forth by
the South Campus Committee,
one of ten committees making
proiosals in the October publication of "The University Academic
Curricula,
Program:
Policies, and Organization."
Such a plan, if enacted, w ould
establish a complex of residential
1,500
colleges
housing
students where the student w ould
live during his first two years
at the University.

On entering, the freshman
would be assigned a room in a
residence unit of 250 students,
which would compose half of the
residential college, the other half
housing women students.
Two other pairs of residence
units would be combined to form
a 1,500 student complex sharing
a common student service area
and academic building.
e
About 20
faculty and
10 part-tim- e
faculty as well as
35 graduate students would teach
the 1,500 students.
Approximately SO percent of
freshman class w ork and as much
as 50 percent of sophomore work
would be in resident college
full-tim-

Committee Suggests
A&S Reorganization

The Committee on the Reorganization of the College of Arts
and Sciences has proposed improvement through "enhancing (its)
cohesiv eness" rather than splintering it into several smaller colleges.
The challenge given the com
mittee when it was organized Department of English, Speech,
last spring was that of studying and Dramatic Arts would con"ways by which the College stitute the core of the Departcould be improved through re- ment of Theater Arts.
organization."
3. That a
Department of
Although splitting Arts and Speech be created.
Sciences up into several smaller
4. That an arrangement
be
colleges had often been hinted worked out
whereby the present
at, the committee felt "the col- - faculty of the School of JourTlUs is the first of a series of nalism and the faculty of the
articles outlining jiroposals in the Department of
be combined into a single adUniversity publication, "Beginning
A Second Century."
ministrative unit.
5. That courses in the Departlege is not so large. . . to justify
ment of Microbiology having
for the sake of anticisplintering
pated administrative effective- directly to do with medical techness."
nology be transferred to the
College of Medicine.
Proposals made by the committee include:
6. That more joint appointof
1. "That the Department
ments in the field of economics
Physical Education, exclusive of be made between the Colleges
courses in aesthetic dancing, be of
Commerce and Arts and
transferred to the College of EduSciences.
cation.
"The division of the College
2. That a School of Fine Arts
within the College of Arts and would decay the very nature of
a liberal education at a time
Sciences be created. The departments of Art, Music and Theater when
specialization,
already
Arts as well as aesthetic dancing
creeping, into the freshman and
courses would be here included.
sophomore years, threatens libPresent courses having to do eral education," the committee
directly with the theater in the reported.
Radio-TV-Fil-

As the committee has proposed it, each residential college
would be under the general direction of a dean or master who
should be a faculty member from
one of the basic disciplines.
"In some ways the dean of
a residential college could resemble a small college president
free from many of the financial,
housekeeping and public relations obligations of a college
president.

Elements influencing a restructuring of lower division setup was a prospective enrollment
of 9,000 lower dividion students
by 1975.
Four points the committee
felt must be provided in lower
division education are:
1. An academic community of
identifiable character.
2. An atmosphere promoting
individual identity.
3. A thorough academic orientation by encouraging increasstudent-faculty
ed
contact
focused on broad intellectual interests.
4. The possibility of a transition from the paternalistic high
school atmosphere to the independence of higher education.

the Student Congress president
and the legislative assembly has
been added to the student government body by order of Winston
Miller, Congress president.
Miller made the announcement Thursday night at the first
meeting of the newly elected
Congress representatives. He said
the new board would advise the
president and the legislative body
of actions for consideration and
would help the president carry
out the dictates of the legislature.
Until now the president has
been charged with final responsibility for actions recommended

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Dr. James Silver, top left, Prof. W. R. Taylor, Dr. Lionel H.
Newsom, and Prof. Gladys Kammcrer, bottom right, will participate
in the AAUP Centennial Conference "Academic Freedom in the
South" to be held at the University beginning Oct. 15.

AAUP Centennial Program
Features Dr. James Silver,

In addition to Dr. Silver, guest
Dr. James W. Silver, award-winnin- g
author and professor, conference speakers also will inwill be the featured speaker for clude Prof. V. R. Taylor, Dethe American Association of Unipartment of History, University
of Wisconsin, and Prof. William
versity Professors Centennial
P. Fidlcr,
Conference on the University
general secretary,
AAUP.
campus Oct.
"Academic Freedom in the
The conference will open at
South" is the theme for the two-da- y 3 p.m. Friday with a welcome
event. Delegates are expected
by UK President John Oswald.
from most of the AAUP chapters
Dr. Silver, currently a visiting
throughout the South.
professor at the University of
Dr. Silver, history professor Notre Dame, has received worldg
wide acclaim' for his 1964
at the University of Mississippi,
will address the conference at
book, "Mississippi: The
8 p.m., Oct 15, on "Revolution
Closed Society." He received the
Hillman
Foundation
in the Closed Society." The Sidney
speech will be presented in the special prize, the Anisfield-Wol- f
award for race relations, and
new Commerce Building auditorium and will be open to the awards from the national organization of B'nai B'rith and the
public.
National Association of Independent Schools for his work.
Dr. Silver is a graduate of
the University of North Carolina.
He received his M.S. degree from
The new board gress is not determined by the Peabody College, Nashville, and
by the legislature.
will share this responsibility with constitution or the bylaws of the a doctorate from Vanderbilt University.
the president and will serve as body but by the indiv iduals comThe opening lecture will be
an auxiliary to carry out the prising it," Miller told them.
given by Prof. W. R. Taylor,
Miller said.
prescribed actions,
He said an interim committee
Official board appointments elected to meet over the summer whose speciality is history of
the South, American intellectual
will be made at a later date, he to discuss the
goals and functions
history, and the history of Ameradded.
of the Congress reported it would
ican religion. He will speak on
All but three of the 23 new
take the interest of the elected "The Making of an Intellectual
were
Congress representatives
representatives to elevate the
in the Old South."
present to be sworn in by Johnt image of Congress before the Establishment
Dr. Fidler will speak on
vice president,
O'Brien, Congress
student body, "list year's Con"Academic Freedom in the South
who presided over the meeting.
gress was evidence that it (ConToday" Saturday at 9 a.m.
Miller then addressed the new
gress) can improve," Miller said
Dr. Fidler, a graduate of the
assembly and charged them with as lie acquainted them with prethe responsibility of the office vious
University of Alabama, Harvard
Congress work.
University, and the University
they now hold.
of Chicago, is the author of
Continued on Page I
"The effectiveness of the Con
15-1- 6.

Congress Adds Executive Unit
An executive board to assist

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The conference will conclude
Saturday afternoon with a panel
discussion by conference observers.
Panelists are Prof. Gladys
M. Kammerer, Department of
UniverPublic Administration,
sity of Florida; Professor Daniel
H. Pollitt, School of Law, University of North Carolina; and
Dr. Lioenl II . Newsom, president,
Barber-Scoti- a
College, Concord,
N.C.

Johnson's
Operation
Successful
WASHINGTON
(AP) -President Johnson's gall bladder was removed Kxlay and
the operation, in the words
of one of his doctors, went
"beautifully and as expected."
During (he two hours and
15 minutes of surgery, the operating team also located and
removed a kidney stone.
A "complete success" and a
prognosis of normal recovery
was the pronouncement after
ward.
A general anesthetic was
used,

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct. 8, ,19ft 3

Major Works Displayed
The Kentucky Kernel

!

Spencer Art Show Set

Tne Kentucky Kernel. University
of Kentucky,
Station, University 4u506. Second-clas- s Lexington, Kentucky,
poftaire paid at Lexington, Kentucky,
published four times weekly during
t,e school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the student of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
oi Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Stephen Palmer,
secretary. as
the Cadet in IBM. beBegun
came the Hecord in 1900, and the Idea
in 1VJ8. Published continuously as the
Kernel since IBIS.

A major exhibition of the works of the American painter Miles
Spencer will be presented by the University of Kentucky Department
of Art Sunday through Nov. 7 in the Fine Arts Gallery.
Mies Spencer s importance
in American painting during the Still, there were some individuals who noted the elegant
first half of this century is beand the momumental
coming increasingly clear," said simplicity
Richard B. Freeman, chairman of grandeur of this classicist," he
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
the UK Department of Art and added.
Yearly, by mall $7.00
The collection will include
Per copy, from files $ .10
planner for the Spencer show. loans from
KERNEL TELEPHONES
major museums and
"Although he never lacked
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing 2321
Editor
his art did not have collections, including The Muserecognition,
News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
um of Modern Art, the Metrothe crowd appeal or the dazzle
2320
Socials
Circulation 2319 of
politan Museum of Art, New
Advertising, Business,
many of his contemporaries.
York, and The Whitney Museum
of American Art.
Many universities and private
owners also will lend art works,
including the artist's widow,
Brett Spencer, and
Catherine
Spencer's dealer, Mrs. Edith Gre-gON THIS:
Hal pert of the Downtown
Gallery, New York. The colleck Powerful Compact 9 Transistor
tion will contain 67 paintings
FMAM Pocket Size Portable
and more than 12 drawings.
ResisDynamic 8 ohm
An illustrated monograph will
tance Speaker for Tone Clarity
be published in conjunction with
Attractive Slide Rule Dial for Easy
the exhibition and will contain
Tuning
essays by Freeman and a tribute
by Ralston Crawford, New York
High Impact Plastic Cabinet With
artist. The monograph will inFinished Grill
Spun
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clude a checklist of Spencer's
k Genuine Top Grain Matching Ebony
paintings and a selected

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Jock Mahoney in "WALLS OF HELL"

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"Feu la mere de Madame"
(Madamc's Late Mother) takes
an ironic look at late 19th century
French married life. Playwright
called
Feydeau,
by Marcel
Achard "the greatest French comic author since Molicrc," penetrates the relationship between
a weak man and a dominating,
beautiful woman.
In "Poil de Carotte" (carrot
top) author Jules Renard describes
his own childhood spent between
a beloved father and a hated,
bitter mother.
Tickets to this year's plays
arc $1.25 in advance for students
and groups. Tickets at the door
and reserved seats arc $2.
Advance tickets and information are available at the Modern
Foreign Languages Department.

An Evening

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French theater comes to Lexington next Thursday evening
with the Treteau de Paris' production of two one-aplays,
"Feu la mere de Madame" and
"Poil de Carotte."
The plays, by prominent playwrights Ceorges Feydeau and
Jules Renard, will be presented
in French at 8:30 p.m. in Memorial Hall.
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Nilcs Spencer's "Dormer Window" will be among the paintings
in the American artist's exhibit which will be on display in the
Fine Arts Gallery Sunday through Nov. 7. The collection will
include loans from major museums and private collections.

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Thct's it in o nutshell.
The evening Kernel de-

livers more news to you

a full fourteen hours faster than the old morning
paper did. News is freshand
er, more
served up with supper instead of breakfast. You
get Tuesday's news on
Tuesday . . . not Wednesday morning. So you
don't pick up a paper until

the next

morning.

What have you lost?

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Ott.'S,

IDW-- .H

CLASSIFIED ADS
FOB SALf

MISCIUANIOUS

FOR SALE 1964 Corvette convertible. Two tops, fuel Injection, four speed,
power brokes, less than 20.000
actual miles. Call
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agents. Must be 21 and
have own transportation. Call
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Aslc for personnel manager. 105
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Fashion Shoiv Plann crs

The law wives will present a dessert-fashioshow Saturday in the
Student Center Ballroom from 2 until 4 p.m. The fashions arc being
shown in conjunction with Four Seasons and Baynham's. A $.75
admission fee will be charged and there will be a door prize.
n

Kentucky Babes Organize
The Kentucky Babes, marching group newly affiliated with
the Pershing Rifles, held their
first meeting Tuesday in the Student Center.
The purpose of this meeting
was to acquaint the women of
the University with the forthcoming duties of the new Kentucky Babe drill corps. Approximately 200 women attended to
hear Colonel Alcorn, Captain
Stien, Miss Batchelder, advisor,
and the officers of the Kentucky
Babes present the program for
this year.
Captain Stien, advisor to the
Pershing Rifles, began with a
brief sketch of what the organization will do this school year.
He told the women that the corps
will represent the University at
drill meets at the University of
Illinois, Purdue, Eastern Kentucky and here at UK.
Cwynne Deal, captain of the
Kentucky Babes, welcomed the
interested women and introduced
her staff: Donna Deitrich, vice
president; Jennifer Sabin, secretary; Pam Williams, public information officer, and Marcia
Winell, first sargeant.
Bruce Coleman, commander

of the Pershing Rifles, went over
the social events and drill meets
of the Pershing Rifles and Kentucky Babes. He then presented
a color film of the drill meet at
Illinois, which showed other
women drill corps from different
universities.
The women filled out applications and were told of other
meetings of the Kentucky Babes.
This week's meetings are scheduled for Thursday at 4 and 5
p.m., Sunday at 3 p.m., and
next Monday and Wednesday at
3 p.m. These meetings will be
held at Buell Armory.
Women who were unable to
attend Tuesday night may receive information at the Pershing
Rifles office at Buell Armory.

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dorms, fraternities, sororities,
and for married, grad., and
students. Contact VISA,
P.O. Box 7127 or call
504t
266-249- 6.

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interested in his future. Requirements: must realize value of starting life insurance program at young age;
must be willing to deal with
insurance industry's current net
cost leader
Mutual of New
York; must be willing to deal
with recent UK grad; must realize importance of continuous
service from a Louisville agent
after college years. Write: J. E.
"Tuffy" Home, 1501 Heyburn
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LARGE NEWSPAPER ROUTES
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Also a few part-tim- e
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Fashion Tips
The last days of Indian
summer are fading and many
coed closets are now crammed
full of both summer and winter
clothes.
Before packing away those
cotton skirts, jumpers and suits,
have them cleaned! Although
these garments will not be worn
again until spring, a cleaning now
will eliminate the possibility of
stains setting into the fabric
during winter storage.
A quick press on the ironing
board next spring will restore all
freshness needed for a well
groomed look.

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GEORGE MAHARIS
IS THE FUSE

* Continuing Hazard

"Don't Look Now, But Don't He Surprised If You Get
A 1'Jione Call From The White House Tonight"

Still the green door remains before they were permitted to exit.
double
The perenially-locke- d
locked.
doors on the west side of
Still students are fooled by the green
the building remained closed.
fake entrance to the Margaret I.
Aside from being an acute
King Library.
safety hazard, the single exit is
Still users of the library would a
great inconvenience to library
have only one exit in case of any
users, who often must walk the
emergency other than fire.
full length of the building from
Last year's two bomb scares the new stacks to the North exit.
pointed out vividly the dangers Countless persons have tugged uninvolved in locking all library exits successfully at the deceptive
on the building's
except the doors to the North side pseudo-entranc-e
students must file out before west side.
where
a checker. Though the other doors
Perhaps with a new director
would open automatically in case of the
library our renewed pleas
of fire, they would not open in any will not
go unheard.
other emergency.
Surely an extra bookchecker at
Last year when a bomb threat another exit would not be too great
was reported to library officials, a financial burden on the library
library users were forced to stand department.
in a long line inside the building,
It should be provided for conbooks and parcels checked venience as well as safety.
having

Telephone Trauma
It is encouraging to note that
someone is at least "studying" the
telephone system at the University.
It is also interesting to note that
the study is being spearheaded by
a General Telephone worker who
is a UK graduate and who has
suffered through it all personally.
We might suggest that the interested parties also survey long
distance calls into the University.
An out of town switchboard operator complained she had to try all
day to reach one of the Kernel
extentions, as all lines into the
University were busy throughout
the day. She found this true at
none of the several other colleges

Kernel
"I do not give you posterity as
pattern to imitate, but as an
example to deter."
Anonymous

a

and universities she had phoned
that day.
So apparently the phone system
is a pain to the entire University
community as well as the college
men seeking to phone into a dormitory.
We have also heard frequent
complaints of poor connections on
long distance calls from students
receiving them on University lines
or placing them on city phones.
We suggest that the telephone
company expand its "study" to
cover other deficiencies than too
frequent busy signals on internal
lines.
Though one telephone for every
12 students is not a very good ratio,
that perhaps is not the major
problem the company needs to
study.
The quality, as well as the
quantity, of their service needs
attention.

Letters To The Editor

Reader Criticizes Editorial
To The Editor:

The author of the Kentucky
Kernel's editorial "The Right to be
Heard" (Wednesday, Sept. 15, 1965)
should be complimented on the
beautiful hatchet job he performed
on the Young Americans for Freedom. The editorial contained all of
the classical words and phrases that
are listed in basic Speech I texts
under "How to Defame by Inference." YAF is "naive;" acts "naively;" perhaps sees a "Communist-Jewis- h
plot;" may "want(s) the
stage to itself;" hopes to "deny
the same right" to others; is "unaware;" will "try to close the ears
of the campus to an opposite point
of view;" and is taken in by the
"Cods of the extreme right." The
Kernel added that Fulton Lewis, Jr.
is worthy of producing only "prop-

aganda."

Perhaps the Kernel would rather
not discuss the meatier subjects of
the basic philosophies of YAF and
the Students for a Democratic Society. Perhaps the Kernel would
rather not discuss the Faculty Sen

ate's rejection of its moral responsibility toward the student body
and the citizens of Kentucky when
it voted, in effect, to continue
University recognition of an organization which advocates breaking
federal law. Perhaps the Kernel
would rather not discuss the Espionage Act or the recent lawmaking
it a crime to destroy draft cards.
Perhaps the Kernel would rather
not discuss the measures advocated
by SDS which would lead directly
to social disorganization and anarchy.
The Kernel could have presented some good arguments and made
a few points here and there even
in favor of the SDS. Instead, the
Kernel chose to stick to the surface
fad, the smear and the blur as it
has in the past. One might be led
to believe that the Kentucky Kernel
is not "The South's Outstanding
College Daily" but is instead the
South's outrageous college mouthpiece for the political left.
STFVKN ANDHACHEK
Graduate Student in Sociology

Science And Sales
"I am an individual human wait
being. Please do not fold, spindle,
or mutilate."
We are not wearing such identification tags yet. But the more
we become mere numbers in the
innards
of electronic
machines, the more we
dial a phone and talk only to a
recording machine, the more the
marvelous accuracy of computers
is accompanied by flaws owing
to their impersonality the more
such things happen, the more we
may be tempted to think that we
are being thought of as a faceless
mass.
But, stay. The
world has its eye on you. Not
but as you, James
as a punch-car495 Warren Avenue, one
Ingoldsby,
car, one wife, two children, early-modtelevision, late model mortgage.
It's not that your "profile" is
just stored somewhere, waiting to
trip you up over an unpaid bill
or a mistaken tax report. Rather,
individuality
your
is being promoted by marketing
consultants as a means of restoring
personal service to the art of consumption in an age of big business
and big markets.
We keep hearing that the United
States is changing from an industrial to a service economy. According to recent advertisements, here
are new ways machines could do
their bit:
With taped patron profiles, a
large bank could establish "en
masse . . . personal relationships
comparable to those of small-towbanks in the good old days." Why
data-processi-

data-process-

d,

el

data-process-

n

for the customer to ask for

a loan? When the tape shows that
his car is two years old, "send

the financially sound customer, unsolicited as as service a loan
authorization card which certifies
his approved credit on any new
car he buys within a certain
period of time."
Or when the tape shows a customer's children are ready for college, don't wait for him to call.
Invite him in to discuss an education loan.
"After all, your customers are
your friends. Seek a sale flat out,
and understandably they tend to
be a little miffed. But cloak the
sale in an offer of special advantage to them as friends, and what
a transformation can take place!"
This is part of a theory that
past customers are excellent prospects for being sold more. The
quoted consultant says the "basic
experience is subject to infinite
refinement."
Are we individuals ready for
this? Ready to have our every wish
electronically anticipated a salesman at the door with what we
need just as we thought we were
going out to get it?
Speaking for ourselves, we find
a certain piquancy in the notion
of faceless machines considering us
as unspindled human individuals
while philosophers tell us that mankind's own view of itself is becoming sadly depersonalized.
But if we don't want what that
salesman's tape says we want, we're
going to politely ask him to take
his foot from the door.
The Christian Science Monitor

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

FRIDAY, OCT.

1894

Walt

eh

Chant,

8, 1965

Editor-in-Chi-

Kenneth IIoshns, Munaging Editor
Associate Editor
Judy Ciusham, Assmiate Neut Editor
Sally Stull, Neus Editor
IIenhy Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Mahcahet Dailey, Art$ Editor
Cay Cish, Women Vage Editor
Linda 'Miixv, Executive Editor

Kenneth Gheen,

IS

Tom Finnie, Advertising Manager

mines

Staff

Makvin IIuncaie, Circulation Manager

* "Imulc Report"

By

,.,,,

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. friday, On. 8.

Frans md

W;

Rofcpf

Help Indicated In Revolt Against Patman
WASHINGTON (AY) AnKry
Democrats on the House Hankini'
Committee probably couldn't
have carried out their coup
d'etat against the committee
chairman, crusty old Hep. Wright
Pat man of Texas, without inside
help from the Johnson administration.
The revolt succeeded this
week when nine
Democrats, joined by the committee's full slate of 11 Republicans, signed a letter forcing the
Democratic chairman of the committee to call a meeting on bank-merglegislation.
What convinced the Democrats to take this extraordinary
step against the chairman was
their discovery that Attorney
Ceneral Nicholas Katzenbach
had written Patman a letter
giving the Administration's position on the legislation. But they
didn't learn about the letter from
Patman.
Patman called a closed-doo- r
session of committee Democrats
last Monday to get their approval
anti-Patma- n

for

his own bill ("a can of (now scheduled for this
coming
Demworms," one
week).
ocrat described the bill) and
Although the bank-mergconcealed theinterestingfact that issue is highly technical and
Katzenbach had written.
legalistic, it boils down to this:
The letter was vital to the Patman opposes (and a majority
committee's consideration of the of the committee supports) a new
bill. Hut because law that would ease present court
it conflicted with Patman's ideas, restrictions
on certain bank
the chairman hid the letter.
mergers.
A footnote: Last January PatWritten Sept. IS, it was stamped "9:30 a.m..," indicating that man tried to undercut
the
it had been rushed to Patman
autonomy of the Housing Subby special messenger. It concommittee, which gets its approtaine