xt75x63b2f0b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt75x63b2f0b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1968-03-14  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 14, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 14, 1968 1968 1968-03-14 2015 true xt75x63b2f0b section xt75x63b2f0b Tl
Thursday Evening, March

11, 19o8

K

MTUCKY
The South' s Outstanding College Daily
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. L1X, No. 119

Hershey Warns
Undergraduates
M ay Be Tapped

College Pren Service
WASHINGTON
Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey
said this week that some undergraduate college students may be
drafted if President Johnson decides to send 200,000 more troops
to Vietnam.
Gen. Hershey said if a deciboys that are candidates for
Gen. Hershey
sion is made to enlarge the
baccalaureates,"
war the President will have to said. He emphasized the Selecdecide whether to call up the tive Service System presently
has no plans to determine which
Reserves or to enlarge the draft
calls. If the Reserves are not
undergraduates would be drafted.
called up, Gen. Hershey said,
"We've abolished this
"we would have to contrive
idea of thinking that
some way" to draft undergraduates in order to meet the inpeople who pass high examinations know any more than peocreased draft calls.
Recent reports have indicated
ple who can't pass them at all,"
Gen. Hershey said, referring to
the administration is considering
Three faculty members discussed the relation of standing, was moderator. The speakers, seated, a
the new draft law which defers
major escalation of the Vietthe sciences to other areas of human thought from left to right, are Thomas Olshewsky, Philosoall undergraduates doing satisnam war. The Washington Post
last night in a biological seminar entitled, "Three phy; Guy M. Davenport, English; and Louis
factory work. Previously, local
reported that one recommendaPerspectives One Culture?" The discussion was L. Boyarsky, Physiology and Biophysics. (See tion before the President calls
draft boards could examine stufrank, often complimentary and often critical. Dr. story on page 7.)
dents' college grades and their
for 206,000 additional troops in
William II. J an sen, of the English Department,
scores on a special examination
Vietnam. The current authorin deciding which ones to defer.
ized number of troops for the
At one point in a discussion
war is 525,000. The White
about training young people for
House said this week that no
the military. Gen. Hershey said,
decision to enlarge the war has
"I wish we could take everybeen made.
Gen. Hershey 's remarks about
body, but I haven't much hope
that we'll ever sell Congress that
drafting undergraduates were
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Se- n.
divided it can't be hurt much made during a question-and-answagainst President Johnson," the
we'll train people when we
Robert Kennedy said WednesNew York Senator
more?"
don't know what we're trainsession follwing a speech
"It's my impression that's he delivered to The National
day he is thinking of running said in the second of two rapid
ing them for."
against President Johnson for fire statements on his return to
true," Kennedy said after leav- Press Club. He said the number
Asked if a declaration of war
the Democratic nomination be- Washington from New York
ing a meeting of a Senate Labor of students drafted "would deby Congress wolud make his
cause of the strong showing of the day after the New HampSubcommittee on Manpower.
job easier, Gen. Hershey repend upon whether they're goshire voting.
In New Hampshire's
peace candidate Eugene Mcto send them this year, next
plied, "I'm not so sure in the
ing
Reporters asked Kennedy if
Carthy in New Hampshire's priprimary, McCarthy year, or some other time. And future we're going to declare
he believed the New Hampshire
received 42 percent of the Dem- the quicker they'd have to send
mary.
any war. We've been able to be
results showed the Democratic
"I am reassessing the possiocratic votes to 49 percent for them, the larger the calls would
flexible enough to kill people
Johnson. McCarthy was on the have to be."
bility of whether I will run party already was "so seriously
very handily without war. We
ballot while Johnson's backers
don't even have to have enePresident Johnson is authorconducted a write-i- n campaign ized by law to declare "that mies; we kill our friends when
for him.
we've got to have some of those
we run out of somebody to kill."
result
Kennedy said thesizeable
"clearly indicates that a
group of democrats are concerned about the direction in
which the country is going both
By DARK ELL RICE
.i the fields of foreign and doThree separate committees at Eastern Kentucky University are
mestic policy."
code which is to be built on much
working on a student rights
Four Reasons Cited
the same base as the code adopted last spring at UK.
By CHUCK KOEIILER
But the brother of John F.
EKU Student Council Pres
Would you pay the plane fare from South Bend, Ind., to Chicago
said there were four
ident Steve Wilborn said UK's
Kennedy
code gave the initiative to a Council motion before the Uniother reasons that caused him for a 48 by 20 inch trophy?
facTho UK debate team did last
Dr. Blyton rated the national
around last versity Senate, composed of
to reconsider his position in the
passed
petition
weekend
after winning first tournament as near the level of
favormembers, for additional
ulty
1968 Presidential campaign:
spring at Eastern, which
the Notre Dame tournament and
The two days of Senate place in a national debate toured formulating a code to do
support, but the motion has
nament held at South Bend,
said that UK's chances of winbeen placed in a committee
loco parForeign Relations Committee
away with the "in
there and the group will not hearings on Vietnam in which Ind. Individually, UK debaters ning were "good."
entis" concept.
Bob Valentine
And if the UK students win
meet until April 1.
Wilborn is chairman of the
Secretary of State Dean Rusk Rodney Page and
won first and seventh places reTo go into effect, the
in Georgia and New York, may"indicated that the administrastudent committee, which along
ROTC motion must
be they'll be able to bring home
spectively in that tournament.
tion has no intention of changwith another advisory commitOverall, Page and Valentine
an even larger trophy and this
tee under the Student Affairs get final approval from the ing or modifying the direction
finished first as a team.
Board of Regents, which will of our Southeast Asia policy."
time without paying the plane
Office will submit recommendaThe debate
tions to the third group, the probably meet later this month.
The administration's re- direction of Dr.team, under the fare.
Gilford Blyton,
Wilborn said EKU's Presiexecutive committee.
sponse to the Commission on
will now go on to the national
dent, Dr. Robert Martin, had Civil' Disorders' recommenda"What we are going to prohe will introduce the tions seems to show that Presdebating tournament in Georgia
pose at first," Wilborn said of indicated
(regional) and, hopefully, to the
the student committee, "will not proposal at the board's next ident Johnson has no intention
finals at Brooklyn College in
But Wilborn said he of implementing programs to
code of rules, but a statemeeting.
le a
New York City.
expects it to be placed under combat unrest in the cities.
ment of proposals we feel should
According to Dr. Blyton, UK
or should not be a lxard committee lefore it
le on campus
Republican results in the
has a good chance in the finals
comes up for vote.
on campus- -a general overview
Continued on Pace 7. Col. 1 since it will meet some of the
He is hoping that the Uniof student rights."
teams it already has defeated
Senate will act on the
versity
He said he has been "drawat South Bend.
from the UK code."
proposal lefore it is brought beIt was erroneously rejoried
ing freely
The only thing that might
"But most of the actual rules fore the lx)ard for passage. "I
in Wednesday's Kernel that
hurt is "if the judge didn't like
will probably Ik drawn up by am cautiously optimistic about
students lobbying against the
people with red hair," said Dr.
the executive committee or by the senate's passing the motion,"
jroHsed increase to $2,000
Blyton. Rodney Page has red
Willoin said.
the University Senate," WilUirn
would
tuition
for
hair.
"Enthusiasm hasn't died," he
said.
with another amendgo along
Overall, UK's debate team is
Another issue that has stirred said. "It's just one of those
ed bill which would up the
rated among the top ten in the
where you sit on the edge
is an
things
lee to $1,500. This is incorup interest at Eastern
country, according to Page. Dr.
ROTC motion of your chair waiting.
rect. The bill they do consid"More is accomplished here
Blyton said although Page won
Villxrn introduced)
er acceptable is the unamend(which
first place as top debater in the
at a Feb. 20 meeting through established means than
which would raise tuied bill
passed
South Bend tournament, Valenthrough demonstrations or riots,"
of the Student Council.
tion to only about $980.
tine out rated Page twice.
Willxmi took the Student Wilborn said.

Comparison and Criticism

'I Am Reassessing The Possibility'

RFK Considers Candidacy

EKU Student Code
Following UK Model

UK Debate Team Aims

For

e

U.S.

Championship

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, March 14,

r rrTri

CTTI';,

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19C.8-

Bowling's To Their Credit

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sport of their choosing. Wildcat Bowling lanes on Euclid Ave.
is the classroom. The object of the game, as demonstrated in the
picture at the upper left, is fine form. And medical excuses are
not accepted, as evidenced by the lady lower right.

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� 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,

Thursday, March 14,

19G8

Men And Women: How They Really Differ

NEW YORK (NAPS)-- Is
it
fact or fancy that women general-

picks up low notes readily, his
wife's hearing is often keener
ly are the "weaker" and "softer" than his in the higher frequency
sex? Do "feminine" emotion, inranges which may account for
tuition and intelligence actually those frequent headaches. Her
exist?
sharp sense of taste and smell
are
Psychologists,
physiologists
"something's burning!"
and other scientists, exploring probably developed traits.
the diverse characteristics, have
"feminine intuition" may
been coming up with some sur- be attributed to more acutely
prising findings. For instance a attuned senses.
woman's, heart beats eight to
Though a man's brain is
ten times more a minute than slightly heavier than that of a
that of her mate, and her head- woman, there's no tangible difache hurts more. According to ference in IQ. And when it comes
researchers for an aspirin comto the charge that women conpany, seven times as many wom- stantly change their minds well,
en as men suffer from emotional-typ- e that's untrue according to reheadaches and that "headsearchers. Women take a longer
ache pain" is more severe in wom- time than men to make up their
en, brought on by a greater variety minds, but once they have formed
of tensions and pressures.
opinions they stick to them. AcHere's a rundown of other cording to surveys made at Northbasic distinctions, other than the western by Dr. KarlF. Robinson,
obvious physical appearances,
men change their minds two or
that scientists have lately re- three times as often as women.
Ever watch the way a woman
ported:
Confirming what most parents throws a ball? She's clumsy behave noticed, starting in infancy cause the "carrying angle" of
girls mature earlier and faster the female arm is out of whack
than boys and baby boys are. for a good overhand toss. The
more subject to infection. So arms of the average woman are
boys are "weaker" to start with. more bent at the elbow than a
As she grows up, however, a man's, which results in a stiff,
e
woman's general
downward motion. Also, a womstrength doesn't match that of a an's legs are often built in the
man's, in golf, for example, even same bent angle as her arms.
a
woman golfer can't Men's legs are straighter, like
drive a ball as far as a good male their arms, so they can run
golfer can.
straight and faster. As women
Cenerally, a woman's skeletal run, they throw their legs in an
structure, proportion and size lead arc. They also have a harder
her to a more passive life, comtime with balance and are more
pared to the active life of the prone to tumbles.
male. The distaff figure is padded
Says Prof. Ethel M. Alber
(her greater avoirdupois is around of the University of California:
the hips) so she is comfortable "Women are by nature less stable
sitting. In contrast, a man is emotionally than men. It's natwith his maximum ural for women to cry easily
weight around his chest and and otherwise show their feel-- ,
shoulders; hence, he's built for ings, whereas men are more easily
able to control and conceal
action.
Physically, a man's hands and them."
Other scientists observe that
legs are proportionately larger
than a woman's. Thus, a woman "females are higher on anxiety
commands greater skills in tasks than males" and that women"
that need fine muscle control, have "greater inner turmoil, feel
such as crocheting. Her five a greater rage and tend to be
senses are more acute: her sight more fearful."
is unusually sharp. While a man
Though a man's vocal cords
body-muscl-

ht

top-flig-

top-heav- y,

STRAND
Evenings
OSfLZNICKS

pain.

Reviewing 1,000 patients with
nervous tension headaches, Dr.
Arnold P. Friedman, w1k heads
the famous Headache Clinic at
New York's Montefiore Hospital,
concluded that "emotional factors are present in 100 percent
of these cases." Two out of every
three of these cases are women.
In the opinion of Dr.
Critchley, a British authority, men are less sensitive
to pain. That's another reason
why women are more vulnerable
Mac-dona-

A People's

By LINDA HARRINGTON
Dr. Doris Seward, dean of
student planning, told UK coeds
not to "buy that business about
this being a man's world" in
an informal gathering in Patterson Hall last night.
"It's a people's world," said
Dean Seward.
She advised her audience to
"have a serious view of yourselves, not just as a woman,
but as a person with something

to give."
Dean Seward doesn't believe
the majority of women today
are doing this. She says women
are underestimating themselves
and underachieving in relation
to their abilities and opportunities.
This is the world's loss as
well as the loss of the woman
herself, according to Dr. Seward.
"The great demands of our time
are in the area of human relations,
not in technical or military areas.
The world needs the woman's
touch."
"Too many women are busy
putting ribbons in their own
children's hair while children outside the gate are screaming in
agony."

ld

Socially, a man is more likely
to be gregarious but his spouse
is more restless. As "only a liouse-wife- ,"
she tliinks her role lacks
prestige and glamour. She's also
exposed to group pressures, from
neighbors, civic groups, PTA's
and the like. In her multiple
role as mother, shopper, cook,
housekeeper and nurse, she meets
with a wide variety of frustrations and anxieties. Her husband's frustrations and worries
are usually tied to his work.'

-

World'

She said theopportunities wo
men have today are much more
"than a legal right they present a need and an obligation."
Dean Seward said she has
met many women over 40 who
are frustrated, neurotic and a
problem to themselves and their
families. She described these as
a "sorry lot" and said today's
young woman can join a "new
breed of woman who participates
in the total contribution of a

family."
She said there are several differences between the "sorry lot"
and the woman who is young
in the last half of the 20th century.
The biggest difference, accord

red

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It's the emotional differences to headaches and why at least
between the sexes that account three times as many women as
for more female headaches, either men buy aspirin for relief. It
the migraine or "nervous ten- may be, too, that many women
sion" type. When people tense reach for aspirin because their
up, they often experience that headaches are more excruciating
and unbearable.
throbbing, splitting or "head-in-a-vis-

ing to the dean, is in the longer
life span of the modem woman-extend- ing
to "about 10 decades."
"What are you going to do
with the greater part of your
life after you have reached your
fifth decade and have raised your
family?" she asked the assembled
coeds.
Other differences named by
the dean were in the areas of
opportunity and the need in the
world for the talents and abilities of women who previously
have "wasted" their assets.
Dean Seward ended by expressing hope that the world of
the "new breed of women" will
extend "beyond the threshold
where they turn their keys."

WARREN KING'S

at 8:00

MATS.: WED., SAT., SUN.

are longer and thicker than a
woman's, she apparently gets in
not only the "last word," but
the first one, too. Girl babies
tend to speak a little earlier
than boys, and to titter words
more comprehensively to their
doting parents. Studying children in the same social brackets,
psychologists find that little girls
use longer sentences than little
boys.
Psychologically, women appear to have an inward type
of mind, creating imaginative
worlds. They look at life personally, translating everything
into what it means to them.
Men are less sensitive to criticism and don't have as great
a need for reassurance and

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Capitol Annex, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601
Pleat tend, without obligation, information on Kentucky'
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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, March

At First He Was Just A Symbol, But Now

14, 19f8- -5

...

Graying McCarthy Wields 'Student Power9
BEDFORD, N.H., (UPI)-- A
professional Eugene McCarthy,
30 years their senior, has become the new idol for thousands
of college students.
With many feeling they have
been deserted by New York's
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, the
younger generation has exerted
a new kind of power one divorced from
antiwar protests and demonstrations which
has given the Minnesota senator
a big boost in his quest for
the presidency.
Senate Republican leader
Everett M. Dirksen of Illinois
has tagged it "student power."
It has become a viable, positive
force in national politics as demonstrated in Tuesday's New
Hampshire presidential primary.
For 25 minutes at campaign
headquarters in the Sheaton-Wayfarmotel early Wednesday,
200 clean-shaveneatly cropped
students chanted, "We want
Cene, We want Gene" until the
n
smiling,
candidate appeared to address
them.
Then they sang "On Wisconsin," and Eugene McCarthy told
them he would go on to Wisconsin and that he would carry
their hopes with him beyond
the frigid snows of New Hampshire which received him warmly
with 42 percent of the Democratic vote.
The youths said they needed
something, someone to fill the
sit-in- s,

er

n,

gray-haire-

d,

soft-spoke-

gap

when Robert

Kronedy

showed reluctance to run for the
presidency, and perhaps they
needed something to fill the void
created since November, 1963.
"Bobby Kennedy wasn't there
when we needed himGene McCarthy was," said Sam Brown,
one of the organizers of the student movement for the senator.
Sen. McCarthy's forces estimate between 4,000 and 5,000
college students came into the
mountains and valleys of New
Hampshire to work for the senator. They usually come to ski.
David Hoeh, Sen. McCarthy's
campaign manager in New Hampshire, said student enthusiasm
has "given new life and vitality
to a campaign which was conceived to utilize this resource
(the students). Mr. McCarthy
feels young people need to be
included in the system as opposed to some kind of exploita-

Conn., until she decided to take
a leave of absence to work for
Sen. McCarthy. She plans to
go to Wisconsin and Oregon.
A friendly redhead, she is
devoted to the senator. "A lot
of young people began campaigning for McCarthy because of the
war. At first he was just a symbol, but since I've been working
for him I now think of him as
a president," she said.

f

Susan Solenberger of Smith
College in Nthampton, Mass.,
felt much the same way. "It
would be a sicker country if McCarthy wasn't around," she said.
A classmate, Nikki Sauvage,
partially described the senator
"Half of what McCarthy is in

teacher at the City College of
New York, made it sound as
if the college generation had an
intangible something to be grateful for in Sen. McCarthy and his
candidacy.
"The press thinks McCarthy
has brought the students back
into the system, but we think
the students have brought the
country back into the system,"
he said.

idealism."

Lowen stein of New

Allard
York

City,

Concerned

Democrats

of the
and a

4

k

p

Kin7T

?i

tion."

Joan Entmacher of Wellesley
College in Wellesley, Mass.: "We
respect his (McCarthy's) courage
to do what's right and just not
engage in acts of political opportunism. We didn't calculate
the odds and we don't like politicians who do, either."
Many of the senator's New
Hampshire campaign workers
plan to work for him in Wisconsin.
Chris Howells was a freshman at the Connecticut College
for Women in New London,

n

jr

,

.

'1)4

:'

V1

t

0
UPI Telephoto

Sen. Eugene McCarthy implored some 1,000 college
students in Cambridge, Mass., late last year to
involve themselves in the 1968 presidential cam--

paign. Judging from the senator's success in New
Hampshire, such student audiences have been
receptive indeed.

Looking Toward Wisconsin
By ARNOLD B. SAWISLAK

United Press International
New Hampshire put the spot-

light on Sen.

Eugene J. McCarthy, but the shadow Wednesday was being cast by Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy.
"I am reassessing the possibility of whether I will run against
President Johnson," Mr. Kennedy said after a hard look at
Sen. McCarthy's 42 percent share
of the New Hampshire Democratic vote.
Although Mr. Johnson scoffed
at the interpretation of a 40 percent vote as a victory, the Minnesota senator's showing obviously
impressed more than his partisans. Sen. Kennedy's statement
was ample evidence of that.
Mr. McCarthy took the news
of Sen. Kennedy's statement with
aplomb. He said "a lot of politicians are reassessing in view of
last night's vote."
President Johnson and Sen.
McCarthy meet next asofficially-liste- d
candidates in the Wisconsin primary April 2. Mr. McCarthy was on the New Hampshire ballot, but the President was
a write-ia situation that gave
some solace to his backers.
But Mr. Kennedy's announcement took some of the edge off
the impending confrontation in
Wisconsin. It is too late for the
New York Democratic senator to
get on the Wisconsin ballot, but
if he decides to oppose Mr. Johnson, the gathering of Vietnam war
critics around Sen. McCarthy obviously would be shaken.
The next ballot on which Sen.
Kennedy's name could appear
would be for the Nebraska "all
star" test May 14. Mr. Kennedy
earlier asked state officials to keep
him off that ballot, but the secretary of state has until March 15
to arbitrarily list the senator as
a candidate. That is also the
last date on which Sen. Kennedy could formally disclaim his
candidacy in Nebraska.
He is in a somewhat different
losition in the May 28Oregon
primary. As of now, Sen. Kennedy is listed as a candidate
n,

and has until March

22 to file a
disclaimer removing it.
As Mr. McCarthy's New
Hampshire feat introduced anew
ferment into the Democratic presidential situation, Richard M.
Nixon got a tighter grip on the
leadership for the Republican
nomination.
As a formal and active candidate, he ran up an eight to one
margin over Cov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, a write-i- n
candidate whose supporters had
hoped their man's name would
make up in part for a tardy,
sketchy campaign.
The COP outcome put more
pressure on Gov. Rockefeller to
decide whether he will continue
to rely on a draft to beat Mr.
Nixon or enter full force into
the campaign.
Mr. Rockefeller's most crucial
decision falls due on the same'
date as Sen. Kennedy's whether
to let his name remain on the
Oregon ballot. Gov. Rockefeller
already has withdrawn from Nebraska.
Behind the Kennedy move was
the element that most impressed
politicians observing the New
Hampshire results. Republicans
as well as Democrats interpreted
Sen. McCarthy's draw as a protest against Mr. Johnson's conduct of the Vietnam war.
Suggestions that the vote was
a "signal" to the White House
came from such widely separated sources as Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield of
Montana and House Republican
leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan.
Rep. Ford, referring to Mr.
Johnson's joking reference to New
Hampshire that "anybody can
nm and everybody can win,"
said "President Johnson can pretend to laugh off the results,
but the President has reason to
be concerned."
Mr. Nixon's partisans found
much to cheer about in the primary results, announcing that the
former vice president had conclusively shucked the "loser"
image tied to 1dm by his 1000

presidential defeat and his 1962
loss in the California's governor's
race.

The Wisconsin primary may
give results somewhat muddier
in meaning than New Hampshire.
First, Mr. Nixon again will have
no formal opposition from major
contenders, and Wisconsin voters,
who register without party designation, are famous for crossing
into opposition primaries to make
mischief.
In this case, the way is open
for Republicans to get into the
battle

Johnson-McCarth- y

UNITARIAN
CHURCH

of Lexington
Clays Mill Pike
8
Phone
277-624-

THIS SUNDAY:
SERVICE

AMD

A Touch of Suede

CHURCH SCHOOL

10:45 a.m.
Panel Discussion
led by

jj(

on a jacket imported from Spain.

) pockets and

stand-u- p

rn Arln ArlAnA
Willi OUlUt, I

uritVi

The
collar arf trimmed
4miVi. micent Vttlr Tn
UdOCI UaiJV. Ait
lUUV.il,

oyster and Spanish gold.

Dr. Judith Archembeau

"Boha 'i: Faith and
Action"

22.50
the Meyers man, first floor

CAMPUS RELIGIOUS
LIBERALS

WILL NOT MEET AGAIN
UNTIL MARCH 31

Open Mondays 9:30 until 9
Tuesdays Thru Saturdays 9:30 until 5:30
Frt

Parking

Ump . . .

prk

nl door

� President Robert F. Kennedy
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy
mean second place on the ticket
(D- -

New York) said yesterday

that he for McCarthy, and Kennedy's

was "reassessing the possibility
of whether he would mn against
President Johnson."
This brings to mind that perhaps it was Kennedy after all that
sent "Clean Gene" our to the
marketplace to ply his anti-wa- r
wares before the peoples of New
Hampshire. If Gene came back
as clean as he left, then the junior senator from New York would,
as he has, reassess his position.
Political chicanery on Kennedy's part only shows his wily
strategy. While this is not all that
admirable, it is a necessary evil
in the game of politics.
In any case, Kennedy's entrance
against Johnson or his support for
McCarthy will bring tremendous
support for the Minnesota Democrat. Kennedy's candidacy would

sup-fxj- rt

would perhaps place McCarthy
well into the picture for a nomination.
Already McCarthy has over 100
first ballot votes in the Democratic
Convention. If further primaries are
as favorable as New Hampshire,
them McCarthy would be a prime
contender to unseat Johnson's bid
for a second term.
Should Robert Kennedy decide
to become a serious candidate for
the Democratic nomination, voters
in the future primaries would swing
to him as they did to McCarthy,
and who knows, maybe a Kennedy-McCarth- y
or a Kennedy-Fulbrigticket could begin to give voters
an alternative come Labor Day.
Anything would be better than
another four years of
And nothing could be
better than Kennedy as President.
ht

Johnson-Humphre-

y.

Book Review

Chairman LBJ
By DICK KIMMINS

It's better to hang a man with his own rope.
Christopher

S. Wren when they began compiling

So thought Jack Shepherd and
the pearls of wisdom that regu-

larly flow from the throat of President Johnson.
"Quotations from Chairman LBJ" is a small (5 14" x3V2"), bright (red) volume
containing six or seven hundred quotes like "Shake, shake, Blanco, shake" when
he introduced his collie to Italian Foreign Minister Amintore Fanfani "May 25,
1965.

Senator

"

B. E

Seriously Says

...

haven't seen or heard anything
tuition!"
against raising
out-of-sta-

te

Or the time when he said to his daughter Luci, "Your daddy may go down in
history as having started World War III."
Or the time during a news conference when he stated "I have never discussed

Benefits Are Soul, Baby
Botch, blunder, and butcher presided together at a state budget
cut meeting some while ago and
decided to make some necessary
alterations concerning higher education. Rather than eliminate some
of the flowery frosting of university life they decided to cut out
a minor ingredient, student dough.
Not every student needs this

"state batter" to get through college. There are thousands of af-

fluent parents who can afford to
set their children up in brotherhood or sisterhood mansions, or for
about the same price, Lexington
owned shanties. But for students
who depend upon the opportunity
to work toward their room and
board at the University, the announced cut in board comes as
a severe disappointment. Certainly there will be no announced
cut by the University in advisor's
duties, nor will his hours be shorter,
or his tasks less difficult.
Miss Rosemary Pond, in charge

QUOTATIONS

FROM CHAIRMAN LBJ, by Jack Shepherd and Christopher S. Wren.
1968. 189 pages, $1.

Simon and Schuster,

with

a human

something he should say or shouldn't say on V